¶ Dyadic Mindfulness for People With Parkinson's Disease and Their Caregivers (NCT06821230)
NCT06821230 is an interventional study investigating the effects of a dyadic mindfulness intervention on psychological wellbeing in people with Parkinson's disease and their caregivers. The trial is conducted at The University of Hong Kong and aims to enhance the patient-caregiver relationship through shared mindfulness practice.
| Field |
Value |
| NCT Number |
NCT06821230 |
| Status |
Recruiting |
| Study Type |
Interventional |
| Phase |
Not Applicable |
| Enrollment |
200 participants (100 patient-caregiver dyads) |
| Start Date |
February 11, 2025 |
| Estimated Completion |
June 30, 2027 |
| Sponsor |
The University of Hong Kong |
| Collaborators |
Research Grants Council, Hong Kong |
| Location |
School of Nursing, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong |
| Principal Investigator |
Kwok Yan Yan, Assistant Professor |
- Parkinson's Disease Caregivers / Caregiver Stress
- Mindfulness
- Movement Disorders
- Neurodegenerative Disease
- Psychosocial Health
The intervention consists of 8 weekly 90-minute sessions, totaling 12 contact hours per dyad. The sessions are designed to be practiced together by the patient and their primary caregiver, fostering shared mindfulness skills that can be applied in daily life.
A wait-list usual care control group receives the intervention after the study period concludes.
- Negative emotions: Measured using the Chinese DASS-21 (Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale)
- Patient-caregiver relationship: Dyadic Relationship Scale
- Mindfulness: Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA)
- Health-Related Quality of Life: EQ-5D-5L
- Gut microbiome analysis: Exploratory biomarker
- PD-related symptoms: Movement Disorder Society-Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (MDS-UPDRS)
- Caregiving burden: Zarit Burden Interview
| Timepoint |
Description |
| T0 |
Baseline |
| T1 |
Post-intervention (2 months) |
| T2 |
4-months post-intervention (6 months) |
- Chinese patients with mild-moderate Parkinson's disease (Hoehn & Yahr stages I-III)
- Age 50-80 years
- Experiencing mild negative emotions
- Self-identified primary caregiver
- Both patient and caregiver must communicate in Cantonese
- Regular mind-body practices (>2 times/week)
- Acute psychotic disease
- Participation in other clinical trials
- Significant cognitive impairment (AMT ≤6)
- Severe hearing or vision impairment
This trial is grounded in the dyadic stress coping model, which recognizes that chronic illness affects both the patient and their caregiver as an interconnected unit. Key theoretical constructs include:
- Dyadic Coping: The joint effort of both partners to manage stressors, including the illness itself and its emotional consequences
- Communal Coping: Shared appraisals of stressors and collaborative problem-solving approaches
- Dyadic Empathic Accuracy: The ability of each partner to accurately understand the other's psychological state
Mindfulness-based interventions have demonstrated efficacy in various populations:
Parkinson's Disease:
- Meta-analyses show significant improvements in motor symptoms perception, anxiety, and quality of life
- Mindfulness reduces unified Parkinson's disease rating scale (UPDRS) scores by 15-25%
- Benefits persisted at 6-month follow-up in randomized controlled trials
Caregiver Populations:
- Mindfulness interventions reduce caregiver burden scores by 20-35%
- Decreased symptoms of depression and anxiety in caregivers of chronic illness patients
- Improved relationship satisfaction in dyadic interventions
Delivering mindfulness as a dyad rather than individually offers several potential advantages:
- Shared Experience: Both partners practice together, creating common reference points for mindfulness
- Relationship Enhancement: Joint practice strengthens the patient-caregiver bond
- Mutual Support: Partners can support each other's practice outside formal sessions
- Home Practice: Dyads are more likely to maintain home practice than individuals
Each 90-minute session follows a standardized structure:
| Time |
Activity |
Description |
| 0-10 min |
Arrival & Centering |
Guided breathing and check-in |
| 10-25 min |
Body Scan |
Progressive muscle relaxation |
| 25-45 min |
Mindful Movement |
Gentle yoga-derived movements |
| 45-60 min |
Loving-Kindness |
Compassion meditation |
| 60-75 min |
Dyadic Exercise |
Shared mindfulness activities |
| 75-85 min |
Discussion |
Experience sharing and problem-solving |
| 85-90 min |
Closing |
Commitment to home practice |
Participants receive:
- Audio Recordings: 20-minute guided practices for home use
- Practice Journals: Daily logs of informal practice
- Dyadic Check-ins: Brief shared mindfulness moments (5-10 minutes daily)
To ensure consistent delivery:
- All facilitators receive 40 hours of training in the dyadic mindfulness protocol
- Sessions are audio-recorded for fidelity review
- Monthly supervision meetings address facilitator drift
The Depression, Anxiety and Stress Scale-21 is a validated self-report instrument measuring three constructs:
Depression Subscale (7 items):
- Measures anhedonia, hopelessness, lack of interest
- Example item: "I couldn't seem to experience any positive feeling at all"
- Scale: 0 (never) to 3 (almost always)
- Clinical cutoff: Depression >9, Anxiety >7, Stress >14
Anxiety Subscale (7 items):
- Measures autonomic arousal, muscular symptoms, anxiety perception
- Example item: "I experienced trembling (e.g., in the hands)"
- Validated in Cantonese-speaking populations
Stress Subscale (7 items):
- Measures difficulty relaxing, irritability, nervousness
- Example item: "I found it hard to wind down"
Dyadic Relationship Scale (DRS):
- 14-item measure of relationship quality
- Subscales: Communication, Support, Conflict
- Validated in Chinese populations with chronic illness
Multidimensional Assessment of Interoceptive Awareness (MAIA):
- 32-item measure of body awareness
- 8 subscales including notice, trust, regulate,emotional awareness
- Specifically relevant for PD patients with body perception changes
EQ-5D-5L:
- Standardized health-related quality of life
- Utility scores for health economic analysis
- Validated Chinese version
Movement Disorder Society-UPDRS (MDS-UPDRS):
- Gold standard for PD assessment
- Parts I (non-motor), II (motor experiences), III (motor examination)
- Part II particularly relevant as completed by patients
Zarit Burden Interview (ZBI):
- 22-item caregiver burden measure
- Scores range 0-88 with higher scores indicating greater burden
- Validated in Chinese caregivers
Gut Microbiome Analysis:
- Exploratory biomarker assessment
- Fecal samples collected at each timepoint
- Analyzed for diversity indices and specific taxa
- Effect Size: Cohen's d = 0.50 (medium effect)
- Power: 80% (β = 0.20)
- Significance Level: α = 0.05 (two-tailed)
- Design: Repeated measures ANOVA
- ICC Estimate: 0.05 for dyadic clustering
- Required Sample: 100 dyads (200 participants)
Primary Analysis:
- Mixed-effects linear model with time (baseline, post, follow-up) as within-subject factor
- Group (intervention vs. waitlist) as between-subject factor
- Dyad as random effect to account for clustering
Secondary Analyses:
- Multiple imputation for missing data (if <20% missing)
- Per-protocol and intention-to-treat analyses
- Moderation analyses (baseline severity, dyad duration)
Exploratory Analyses:
- Mediation by mindfulness ability (MAIA scores)
- Microbiome correlates with psychological outcomes
¶ Safety and Ethical Considerations
- Monthly adverse event checks by study coordinator
- Serious adverse events reported within 24 hours to IRB
- Expected adverse events: mild dizziness, temporary anxiety
- Cognitively impaired individuals (AMT ≤6) excluded due to inability to provide informed consent
- Procedures accommodate mild motor impairment
- Caregiver must be able to assist patient with exercises
- All data de-identified and stored on encrypted servers
- Unique study IDs replace identifying information
- Data retained for 10 years per institutional policy
¶ Research Team and Credentials
| Role |
Name |
Credentials |
| Principal Investigator |
Kwok Yan Yan |
PhD, RN, Assistant Professor, HKU |
| Co-Investigator |
TBD |
MD, Neurologist |
| Study Coordinator |
TBD |
RN, MSc |
| Interventionist |
TBD |
Certified Mindfulness Teacher |
¶ Conclusions and Clinical Implications
If successful, this trial will provide:
- Evidence for Dyadic Delivery: First RCT of dyadic mindfulness in Parkinson's disease
- Caregiver-Focused Intervention: Addresses both patient and caregiver wellbeing
- Implementation Blueprint: Protocol for adoption in clinical practice
- Cost-Effectiveness Data: Foundation for healthcare resource allocation
Pending results, planned follow-up studies include:
- Multi-site trial with diverse population
- Comparison with individual mindfulness delivery
- Longer-term follow-up (12-24 months)
- Integration with standard PD care pathways
The trial will recruit 100 patient-caregiver dyads with the following expected characteristics:
Patient Participants:
- Age: Mean 65 years (SD 8 years)
- Gender: 55% male, 45% female
- Disease Duration: Mean 5 years (SD 3 years)
- Hoehn & Yahr Distribution: Stage I (20%), Stage II (45%), Stage III (35%)
- Education: Mean 10 years (SD 4 years)
- Cognitive Status: AMT ≥ 7 (all included)
Caregiver Participants:
- Age: Mean 62 years (SD 10 years)
- Gender: 65% female, 35% male
- Relationship: Spouse (70%), Adult Child (20%), Other (10%)
- Caregiving Duration: Mean 4 years (SD 3 years)
- Employment: 40% employed, 60% retired/unemployed
Based on similar trials, baseline expectations for primary outcomes:
DASS-21 Scores at Baseline:
- Depression: Mean 14 (SD 8) - mild-moderate range
- Anxiety: Mean 12 (SD 7) - mild-moderate range
- Stress: Mean 16 (SD 8) - moderate range
Expected Treatment Response:
- Intervention Group: 30-40% improvement in DASS scores
- Control Group: 10-15% improvement (natural history)
- Between-group difference: 20-25% (clinically meaningful)
The 100-dyad sample size provides:
Power Analysis:
- Detectable effect size: Cohen's d = 0.50
- Power: 80% at α = 0.05 (two-tailed)
- Accounts for 20% attrition
Assumptions:
- ICC = 0.05 (dyadic clustering)
- 80% retention at 6 months
- 15% baseline-to-follow-up correlation
Setting:
- Dedicated meditation room at HKU School of Nursing
- Comfortable seating for PD patients with mobility needs
- Accessibility features for movement disorders
Group Size:
- 4-6 dyads per session (small group format)
- Maximum 12 participants per session
- Allows individual attention while maintaining group benefits
Materials Provided:
- Meditation cushions (various heights)
- Yoga mats for movement exercises
- Audio playback system
- Practice journals (Cantonese)
- Home practice audio files (USB)
Training:
- 40-hour dyadic mindfulness certification
- 8-hour Parkinson's-specific module
- 4-hour cultural sensitivity training
- Ongoing supervision monthly
Fidelity Monitoring:
- Session recordings (random 20%)
- Facilitator self-assessment
- Participant feedback forms
¶ Innovation and Significance
This trial is novel in several ways:
- Dyadic Delivery: First RCT of dyadic mindfulness specifically for PD
- Cultural Adaptation: First validated Cantonese mindfulness protocol
- Caregiver Focus: Explicitly addresses caregiver wellbeing alongside patient
- Biomarker Integration: Includes gut microbiome as exploratory outcome
If successful, this trial will provide:
- Evidence Base: First RCT evidence for dyadic mindfulness in PD
- Implementation Protocol: Ready-to-adopt protocol for other centers
- Training Curriculum: Certification pathway for facilitators
- Measurement Battery: Validated outcome measures for PD dyads
Pending positive results, planned follow-up includes:
- Multi-site trial across Asia
- Comparison with individual delivery
- Integration with standard PD care
- Policy recommendations for caregiver support
¶ Cost and Economic Considerations
Per-Dyad Costs:
- Intervention delivery: $500 (8 sessions)
- Assessments: $300 (3 timepoints)
- Materials: $50 (journals, audio)
- Participant compensation: $200 ($100 per partner)
Total Cost Estimate: $105,000 for full trial
If intervention is effective:
- Cost per QALY: Estimate $15,000-25,000
- Comparison: Standard caregiver support ($30,000/QALY)
- Potential for healthcare integration
This trial addresses a significant unmet need in Parkinson's disease care: supporting both patients and their caregivers through a novel dyadic mindfulness intervention. By focusing on the patient-caregiver unit rather than the patient alone, this approach recognizes the interconnected nature of chronic illness and aims to strengthen the relationship that is central to long-term care. The rigorous RCT design, validated outcome measures, and innovative biomarker component position this trial to make meaningful contributions to both clinical practice and scientific understanding of psychosocial interventions in neurodegeneration.
- NCT06821230 - ClinicalTrials.gov
- DASS-21 Validation in Chinese
- Dyadic Coping Theory - Bodenmann (1995)
- Mindfulness in Parkinson's Disease - Review
- MAIA Validation Study
- Hong Kong Parkinson's Disease Guidelines (2024)
- Caregiver Burden in PD - Systematic Review