Combined pharmacotherapy and psychological therapies for post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD)

Background PTSD is an anxiety disorder related to exposure to a severe psychological trauma. Symptoms include re‐experiencing the event, avoidance and arousal as well as distress and impairment resulting from these symptoms. Guidelines suggest a combination of both psychological therapy and pharmaco...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cochrane database of systematic reviews 2010-07, Vol.2010 (7), p.CD007316-CD007316
Hauptverfasser: Hetrick, Sarah E, Purcell, Rosemary, Garner, Belinda, Parslow, Ruth
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Background PTSD is an anxiety disorder related to exposure to a severe psychological trauma. Symptoms include re‐experiencing the event, avoidance and arousal as well as distress and impairment resulting from these symptoms. Guidelines suggest a combination of both psychological therapy and pharmacotherapy may enhance treatment response, especially in those with more severe PTSD or in those who have not responded to either intervention alone. Objectives To assess whether the combination of psychological therapy and pharmacotherapy provides a more efficacious treatment for PTSD than either of these interventions delivered separately. Search methods Searches were conducted on the trial registers kept by the CCDAN group (CCDANCTR‐Studies and CCDANCTR‐References) to June 2010. The reference sections of included studies and several conference s were also scanned. Selection criteria Patients of any age or gender, with chronic or recent onset PTSD arising from any type of event relevant to the diagnostic criteria were included. A combination of any psychological therapy and pharmacotherapy was included and compared to wait list, placebo, standard treatment or either intervention alone. The primary outcome was change in total PTSD symptom severity. Other outcomes included changes in functioning, depression and anxiety symptoms, suicide attempts, substance use, withdrawal and cost. Data collection and analysis Two or three review authors independently selected trials, assessed their 'risk of bias' and extracted trial and outcome data. We used a fixed‐effect model for meta‐analysis. The relative risk was used to summarise dichotomous outcomes and the mean difference and standardised mean difference were used to summarise continuous measures. Main results Four trials were eligible for inclusion, one of these trials (n =24) was on children and adolescents. All used an SSRI and prolonged exposure or a cognitive behavioural intervention. Two trials compared combination treatment with pharmacological treatment and two compared combination treatment with psychological treatment. Only two trials reported a total PTSD symptom score and these data could not be combined. There was no strong evidence to show if there were differences between the group receiving combined interventions compared to the group receiving psychological therapy (mean difference 2.44, 95% CI ‐2.87, 7.35 one study, n=65) or pharmacotherapy (mean difference ‐4.70, 95% CI ‐10.84 to 1.44; one study, n = 25
ISSN:1465-1858
1465-1858
1469-493X
DOI:10.1002/14651858.CD007316.pub2