| Literature DB >> 25494488 |
Boadie W Dunlop1, Joanna L Kaye2, Cole Youngner3, Barbara Rothbaum4.
Abstract
Patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) who fail to respond to established treatments are at risk for chronic disability and distress. Although treatment-resistant PTSD (TR-PTSD) is a common clinical problem, there is currently no standard method for evaluating previous treatment outcomes. Development of a tool that could quantify the degree of resistance to previously provided treatments would inform research in patients with PTSD. We conducted a systematic review of PTSD treatment trials to identify medication and psychotherapy interventions proven to be efficacious for PTSD. We then developed a semi-structured clinician interview called the Emory Treatment Resistance Interview for PTSD (E-TRIP). The E-TRIP includes clinician-administered questions to assess the adequacy and benefit derived from past treatment trials. For each adequately delivered treatment to which the patient failed to respond, a score is assigned depending on the strength of evidence supporting the treatment's efficacy. The E-TRIP provides a comprehensive assessment of prior PTSD treatments that should prove valuable for researchers studying TR-PTSD and evaluating the efficacy of new treatments for patients with PTSD. The E-TRIP is not intended to guide treatment; rather, the tool quantifies the level of treatment resistance in patients with PTSD in order to standardize TR-PTSD in the research domain.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25494488 PMCID: PMC4287702 DOI: 10.3390/bs4040511
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Behav Sci (Basel) ISSN: 2076-328X
Study Inclusion Criteria.
| Adults (age ≥ 17) |
| Current PTSD diagnosis |
| Published in English in peer-reviewed journal |
| PTSD outcome measure with high reliability and validity
Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale [ Davidson Trauma Scale [ Impact of Event Scale [ PTSD Checklist [ Posttraumatic Diagnostic Scale [ PTSD Symptom Scale [ |
| Randomized treatment allocation |
| If evaluating a single modality, includes a minimal control group (e.g., placebo, wait-list, or psychotherapy control condition) |
| If an augmentation treatment study (in which an experimental intervention was added to an established treatment), includes a control condition arm that did not employ the experimental intervention |
| Treatment group improves significantly more than the control group on the PTSD outcome measure at a 2-sided alpha < 0.05 for the intent-to-treat sample |
| Adequate sample size (see text) |
Figure 1CONSORT diagram of eligible studies for inclusion in the E-TRIP.
Pharmacotherapy treatments scored by the E-TRIP.
| Treatment | Points | Supporting Studies |
|---|---|---|
| Citalopram | 3 | |
| Escitalopram | 3 | |
| Fluoxetine | 3 | Connor |
| Fluvoxamine | 3 | |
| Paroxetine | 3 | Marshall |
| Sertraline | 3 | Brady |
| Vilazodone | 3 | |
| Venlafaxine | 3 | Davidson |
| Imipramine | 2 | Kosten |
| Phenelzine | 2 | Kosten |
| Nefazodone | 2 | Davis |
| Risperidone | 1 | Bartzokis |
| Eszopiclone | 1 | Pollack |
| Prazosin | 1 | Raskind |
| Topiramate | 1 | Akuchekian and Amanant [ |
Psychotherapy treatments scored by the E-TRIP.
| Treatment | Points | Supporting Studies |
|---|---|---|
| Prolonged Exposure (PE) | 3 | Cloitre |
| Cognitive Processing Therapy (CPT) | 3 | Resick |
| Trauma-Focused Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (TFCBT) | 3 | Ehlers |
| Internet-Based Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy | 3 | Knaevelsrud and Maercker [ |
| Group Interpersonal Therapy (IPT) | 3 | Krupnick |
| Cognitive-Behavioral Conjoint Therapy (CBCT) | 2 | Monson |
| Mindfulness | 2 | Niles |
| Acupuncture | 2 | Hollifield |
| Healing Touch with Guided Imagery | 2 | Jain |
| Resiliency Intervention | 2 | Kent |
| Emotional Freedom Techniques (EFT) | 2 | Church |
| Mind-Body Bridging Program for sleep management | 2 | Nakamura |
| Acupoint Stimulation added to Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy | 1 | Zhang |