CBT for Adherence and Depression in Diabetes
The study, sponsored by Massachusetts General Hospital, evaluates the effectiveness of CBT in addressing comorbid depression in patients with poorly controlled type 2 diabetes. Given the high prevalence of depression in diabetic patients (15-20%), successful outcomes could position CBT as a valuable adjunct therapy in diabetes management, potentially leading to increased adherence to diabetes self-care and improved clinical outcomes. The market for diabetes management solutions is substantial, with a growing focus on integrated behavioral health approaches. Competitive implications include the need for existing diabetes therapies to consider psychological comorbidities in their treatment paradigms, while diligence should focus on the scalability of CBT interventions and potential reimbursement pathways.
Indication: Diabetes Mellitus
Modality: behavioral intervention
Target: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for improving adherence and managing depression in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Sponsor: Massachusetts General Hospital
Source URL: ClinicalTrials.gov
Source updated: Detailed source ingestion pending
Ingested: Jun 25, 2026
Model: trialsignal-ai-v1
Validation: validated
Matched by target_normalized: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for improving adherence and managing depression in patients with type 2 diabetes.
View original source fields
Condition raw: Diabetes Mellitus, Depression
Condition normalized: Diabetes Mellitus, Depression
Modality raw: behavioral intervention
Modality normalized: behavioral intervention
Target raw: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for improving adherence and managing depression in patients with type 2 diabetes.
Target normalized: Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) for improving adherence and managing depression in patients with type 2 diabetes.