| Literature DB >> 18801204 |
Hege Kornør1, Dagfinn Winje, Øivind Ekeberg, Lars Weisaeth, Ingvild Kirkehei, Kjell Johansen, Asbjørn Steiro.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Early trauma-focused cognitive-behavioural therapy (TFCBT) holds promise as a preventive intervention for people at risk of developing chronic post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The aim of this review was to provide an updated evaluation of the effectiveness of early TFCBT on the prevention of PTSD in high risk populations.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18801204 PMCID: PMC2559832 DOI: 10.1186/1471-244X-8-81
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Figure 1Flow chart of study inclusion process.
Characteristics of included studies
| First author, publication year and country | Participants randomised/in post-treatment analyses, n | Age, years (s.d.) | Female % | Traumatic events and primary diagnosis | Time since trauma, days (s.d.) | TFCBT technique(s) and comparison intervention |
| Bryant 1998 Australia [ | 24/24 | 32 (12.6) | 58 | MVA Industrial accident ASD | 10 (4.2) | Education, relaxation training, imaginal exposure, cognitive restructuring, in vivo exposure |
| Bryant 1999 Australia [ | 56/41 | 33 (10.9) | 50 | MVA Nonsexual assault ASD | 10 (3.3) | Education, imaginal exposure, cognitive restructuring, in vivo exposure |
| Bryant 2003a Australia [ | 24/24 | 29 (13.9) | 67 | MVA Nonsexual assault ASD | < 14 | Education, relaxation training, imaginal exposure, cognitive restructuring, in vivo exposure |
| Bryant 2003b Australia [ | 80/41 | Follow-up of participants in Bryant 1998 and Bryant 1999 | ||||
| Bryant 2005, Bryant 2006 Australia [ | 87/69/53 | 33 (12.5) | 61 | MVA Nonsexual assault ASD | 16 (8.8) | Imaginal exposure, cognitive restructuring, in vivo exposure |
| Foa 2006 USA [ | 90/57/66 | 34 (11.1) | 100 | Sexual/nonsexual assault PTSD (not duration criterion) | 21 (range: 2–46) | Education, relaxation training, imaginal exposure, cognitive restructuring, in vivo exposure |
ASD, acute stress disorder (DSM-IV); PTSD, posttraumatic stress disorder (DSM-IV, not duration criterion); MVA, motor vehicle accident; TFCBT, trauma-focused cognitive-behavioural therapy; CIDI, Composite International Diagnostic Interview; IES, Impact of Event Scale; BDI, Beck's Depression Inventory; STAI, State/Trait Anxiety Inventory; CAPS-2, Clinician Administered PTSD Scale; BAI, Beck's Anxiety Inventory; PSS-I/-SR, PTSD Symptom Scale-Interview/-Self-Report; ITT, intention to treat; LOCF, last observation carried forward.
Characteristics of included studies (continued)
| First author, publication year and country | Treatment duration and provider competence | Outcome measures | Post-treatment follow-up | ITT analysis |
| Bryant 1998 Australia [ | 5 × 90 minutes Clinical psychologists | CIDI (PTSD diagnosis) | 6 months (post trauma) | Yes |
| Bryant 1999 Australia [ | 5 × 90 minutes Clinical psychologists | CAPS-2 (PTSD diagnosis) | 6 months | No (completers only) |
| Bryant 2003a Australia [ | 5 × 90 minutes Clinical psychologists | CAPS-2 (PTSD diagnosis) | 6 months | Yes |
| Bryant 2003b Australia [ | CAPS (PTSD diagnosis) | 4 years | Yes (LOCF) | |
| Bryant 2005, Bryant 2006 Australia [ | 5 × 90 minutes Clinical psychologists | CAPS-2 (PTSD diagnosis/symptoms) | 6 months 3 years | Yes (LOCF) |
| Foa 2006 USA [ | 4 × 120 minutes Master's and doctoral level therapists | PSS-I/PSS-SR (PTSD diagnosis/severity) | 2, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months | Completers only |
ASD, acute stress disorder (DSM-IV); PTSD, posttraumatic stress disorder (DSM-IV, not duration criterion); MVA, motor vehicle accident; TFCBT, trauma-focused cognitive-behavioural therapy; CIDI, Composite International Diagnostic Interview; IES, Impact of Event Scale; BDI, Beck's Depression Inventory; STAI, State/Trait Anxiety Inventory; CAPS-2, Clinician Administered PTSD Scale; BAI, Beck's Anxiety Inventory; PSS-I/-SR, PTSD Symptom Scale-Interview/-Self-Report; ITT, intention to treat; LOCF, last observation carried forward.
Figure 2Meta-analysis of PTSD diagnosis at 3–6 months, 9 months and 3–4 years.
Summary of meta-analyses
| Outcome | Months post-treatment | Studies | n | Effect estimate (95% CI) | Heterogeneity (I2) |
| PTSD diagnosis | 3–6 | [ | 233 | RR 0.49 (0.25 to 0.94) | 71% |
| 9 | [ | 46 | RR 1.09 (0.46 to 2.61) | --- | |
| 36–48 | [ | 169 | RR 0.73 (0.51 to 1.04) | 0% | |
| Impact of Event Scale: Intrusion | 6 | ||||
| [ | 176 | SMD -0.63 (-0.95 to -0.30) | 0% | ||
| Avoidance | [ | 176 | SMD -0.87 (-1.47 to -0.27) | 65% | |
| Interviewer-rated PTSD severity | 3 | [ | 42 | SMD -0.22 (-0.83 to 0.38) | --- |
| 9 | [ | 46 | SMD 0.11 (-0.47 to 0.69) | --- | |
| Self-rated PTSD severity | 3 | [ | 38 | SMD -0.35 (-0.99 to 0.30) | --- |
| 9 | [ | 46 | SMD -0.18 (-0.76 to 0.40) | --- | |
| Anxiety | 3–6 | [ | 214 | SMD -0.56 (-0.85 to -0.27) | 0% |
| 9 | [ | 45 | SMD -0.42 (-1.01 to 0.17) | --- | |
| Depression | 3–6 | [ | 217 | SMD -0.34 (-0.62 to -0.05) | 20% |
| 9 | [ | 45 | SMD -0.08 (-0.66 to 0.50) | --- | |
| 36 | [ | 53 | SMD -0.97 (-1.59 to -0.35) | --- |
PTSD, post-traumatic stress syndrome; RR, risk ratio; SMD, standardised mean difference; TFCBT, trauma-focused cognitive-behavioural therapy; SC, supportive counselling