| Literature DB >> 30670044 |
Richard Morriss1, Shireen Patel2, Sam Malins2, Boliang Guo2, Fred Higton2, Marilyn James3, Mengjun Wu3, Paula Brown4, Naomi Boycott4, Catherine Kaylor-Hughes2, Martin Morris5, Emma Rowley6, Jayne Simpson4, David Smart7, Michelle Stubley2, Joe Kai8, Helen Tyrer9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is challenging to engage repeat users of unscheduled healthcare with severe health anxiety in psychological help and high service costs are incurred. We investigated whether clinical and economic outcomes were improved by offering remote cognitive behaviour therapy (RCBT) using videoconferencing or telephone compared to treatment as usual (TAU).Entities:
Keywords: Cognitive behaviour therapy; Depression; Digital; Family care; High care costs; Hypochondriasis; Illness anxiety disorder; Remote therapy; Urgent care; Videoconferencing
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30670044 PMCID: PMC6343350 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-019-1253-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Fig. 1Consort diagram: participant flow into randomised controlled trial. *There was one randomization protocol violation. One participant who was allocated into TAU by the randomisation system was accidentally sent the incorrect treatment allocation letter, resulting in them receiving the RCBT therapy. This error was identified following the completion of treatment. The participant completed outcome data only at three months. **There was an enrolment protocol violation. Two participants in the RCBT group did not meet the criteria of ≥18 on the SHAI. This error was not identified until final analysis and as such both participants were included in the analysis
Baseline characteristics of participants
| RCBT ( | TAU ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Age, median (range) years | 31.12 (18.36–79.10) | 33.28 (18.69–82.71) |
| Female, n (%) | 56 (72) | 52 (67) |
| Occupational status | ||
| Employed, n (%) | 32 (41) | 29 (37) |
| Student/training, n (%) | 27 (35) | 24 (31) |
| Homemaker, n (%) | 0 | 2 (3) |
| Retired, n (%) | 7 (9) | 10 (13) |
| Unemployed, n (%) | 12 (15) | 13 (17) |
| Highest qualification | ||
| First degree or higher, n (%) | 24 (31) | 25 (32) |
| A-Level or other higher qualification, n (%) | 28 (36) | 30 (38) |
| O-Level/GCSE or other qualification, n (%) | 19 (24) | 20 (26) |
| No qualifications, n (%) | 7 (9) | 3 (4) |
| Marital status | ||
| Married/partner, n (%) | 32 (41) | 39 (50) |
| Single, n (%) | 34 (45) | 32 (41) |
| Divorced/widowed, n (%) | 10 (13) | 7 (9) |
| Ethnicity | ||
| White British, n (%)a | 58 (74) | 58 (74) |
| Referral type | ||
| GP, n (%) | 63 (81) | 62 (79) |
| Medical specialties, n (%) | 9 (12) | 7 (9) |
| Emergency department, n (%) | 4 (5) | 6 (8) |
| Walk-in centre, n (%) | 2 (3) | 3 (4) |
| Baseline scores | ||
| SHAI, mean (SD) | 27.31 (5.38) | 26.41 (5.13) |
| GAD7, mean (SD) | 12.94 (5.49) | 12.68 (6.13) |
| PHQ9, mean (SD) | 13.35 (6.50) | 13.12 (6.71) |
| PHQ15, mean (SD) | 14.16 (5.63) | 13.90 (6.45) |
| EQ5D-5L Utility Value, mean (SD) | 0.61 (0.28) | 0.60 (0.29) |
| VAS, mean (SD) | 54.76 (21.72) | 56.97 (22.58) |
| WSAS, mean (SD) | 19.33 (11.40) | 20.35 (10.54) |
| SF36 Physical functioning, mean (SD) | 67.29 (30.39) | 64.18 (32.04) |
| Role limitations – physical health, mean (SD) | 29.81 (39.08) | 28.90 (40.77) |
| Role limitations – emotional problems, mean (SD) | 35.47 (42.07) | 27.35 (41.17) |
| Energy/fatigue, mean (SD) | 25.73 (20.39) | 27.05 (22.48) |
| Emotional well-being, mean (SD) | 40.92 (19.88) | 42.54 (24.83) |
| Social functioning, mean (SD) | 45.83 (29.10) | 46.31 (30.82) |
| Pain, mean (SD) | 47.47 (24.83) | 41.38 (26.96) |
| General health, mean (SD) | 28.27 (19.29) | 36.25 (22.89) |
| Unscheduled care attendances in last 12 months, median (range) | 6.5 (2.0–125.0) | 5.0 (2.0–34.0) |
afurther detail provided in Additional file 1
Multilevel modelling of changes in score from baseline to 12 month follow-up for remote cognitive behavioural therapy (RCBT) intervention versus treatment as usual (TAU)
| RCBT | TAU | Comparison | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | Mean change from baseline (95% CI) | N | Mean change from baseline (95% CI) | Difference (95% CI) | ||
| SHAI | ||||||
| 3 months | 53 | –6.08(–7.90 to –4.26) | 48 | –5.97(–7.97 to –3.97) | –0.11(–2.82 to 2.60) | 0.936 |
| 6 months | 56 | –9.48(–11.20 to –7.75) | 56 | –6.67(–8.30 to –5.04) | –2.81(–5.11 to –0.50) | 0.017 |
| 9 months | 46 | –9.58(–11.33 to –7.84) | 50 | –6.78(–8.43 to –5.12) | –2.81(–5.11 to –0.50) | 0.017 |
| 12 months | 47 | –10.60(–12.31 to –8.89) | 47 | –7.79(–9.43 to –6.16) | –2.81(–5.11 to –0.50) | 0.017 |
| GAD 7 | ||||||
| 3 months | 52 | –3.69(–5.09 to –2.28) | 48 | –4.79(–6.17 to –3.41) | 1.10(–0.84 to 3.05) | 0.265 |
| 6 months | 53 | –6.22(–7.62 to –4.82) | 55 | –3.83(–5.21 to –2.44) | –2.39(–4.40 to –0.39) | 0.020 |
| 9 months | 43 | –5.37(–7.05 to –3.69) | 48 | –4.48(–5.97 to –2.99) | –0.89(–3.00 to 1.23) | 0.408 |
| 12 months | 45 | –6.68(–8.14 to –5.21) | 46 | –3.92(–5.40 to –2.45) | –2.75(–4.82 to –0.68) | 0.009 |
| PHQ9 | ||||||
| 3 months | 52 | –3.24(–4.69 to –1.80) | 47 | –3.01(–4.38 to –1.64) | –0.23(–2.15 to 1.68) | 0.812 |
| 6 months | 53 | –4.67(–6.02 to –3.33) | 55 | –3.11(–4.46 to –1.76) | 1.56(–3.45 to 0.33) | 0.105 |
| 9 months | 43 | –4.41(–6.06 to –2.76) | 48 | –3.24(–4.78 to –1.69) | –1.17(–3.18 to 0.83) | 0.250 |
| 12 months | 45 | –5.05(–6.37 to –3.72 | 45 | –2.69(–4.06 to –1.31) | –2.36(–4.22 to –0.50) | 0.013 |
| PHQ15 | ||||||
| 3 months | 52 | –0.35(–1.58 to 0.88) | 48 | –1.68(–3.16 to –0.19) | 1.33(–0.52 to 3.17) | 0.157 |
| 6 months | 54 | –2.95(–4.11 to –1.78) | 55 | –1.62(–2.90 to –0.34) | –1.33(–3.09 to 0.42) | 0.137 |
| 9 months | 45 | –2.62(–4.19 to –1.04) | 49 | –2.20(–3.47 to –0.92) | –0.42(–2.38 to 1.53) | 0.669 |
| 12 months | 46 | –3.33(–4.62 to –2.04) | 47 | –1.77(–2.99 to –0.55) | –1.57(–3.37 to 0.24) | 0.089 |
| EQ5D–5L (VAS) | ||||||
| 3 months | 52 | 8.74 (3.70 to 13.79) | 47 | 2.80(–2.35 to 7.96) | 5.94(–1.22 to 13.11) | 0.103 |
| 6 months | 54 | 13.66 (8.97 to 18.34) | 55 | 11.10 (6.32 to 15.89) | 2.56(–4.03 to 9.14) | 0.446 |
| 9 months | 45 | 10.24 (5.28 to 15.21) | 49 | 2.92 (–2.06 to 7.90) | 7.33(–0.02 to 14.67) | 0.051 |
| 12 months | 46 | 13.80 (8.90 to 18.71) | 47 | 4.25 (–0.87 to 9.37) | 9.56 (2.73 to 16.39) | 0.006 |
| WSAS | ||||||
| 3 months | 51 | –4.45(–6.63 to –2.27) | 48 | –3.36(–5.61 to –1.10) | –1.10(–4.07 to 1.87) | 0.468 |
| 6 months | 53 | –7.52(–9.85 to –5.19) | 55 | –4.89(–7.03 to –2.75) | –2.63(–5.72 to 0.45) | 0.094 |
| 9 months | 44 | –7.31(–9.81 to –4.81) | 56 | –5.77(–8.15 to –3.39) | –1.54(–4.99 to 1.90) | 0.377 |
| 12 months | 45 | –7.89(–10.22 to –5.56) | 56 | –5.40(–7.79 to –3.01) | –2.49(–5.73 to 0.75) | 0.131 |
| RCBT | TAU | Unadjusted difference in change | ||||
|
| Mean (SD) |
| Mean (SD) | Mean (95% CI) ( | ||
| QALYsa at 12 months | 31 | 0.66 (0.22) | 25 | 0.59 (0.31) | 0.07 (0.07 to 0.21) (0.332) | |
aQALYs at 12 months is based on the complete dataset over the 12-month follow-ups
Fig. 2Mean (95% CI) change in 14-item Short Health Anxiety Inventory over 12 months remote cognitive behaviour therapy versus treatment as usual
Costs (£) per participant over 12-month follow-up period remote cognitive behaviour therapy versus treatment as usual
| RCBT | TAU | Unadjusted difference in change | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Mean (SD) |
| Mean (SD) | Mean (95% CI) ( | |
| CBT sessions | 78 | 496 (294) | 78 | 0 (0) | 496 (431 to 562) (0.000) |
| Technology | 78 | 35.8 (0) | 78 | 0 (0) | 35.8 (35.8 to 35.8) (N/A.) |
| Outpatient hospital visits | 35 | 608 (871) | 34 | 728 (706) | –120 (–502 to 261) (0.531) |
| Inpatient hospital visits | 38 | 22 (87) | 37 | 258 (656) | –236 (–450 to –23) (0.031) |
| Primary and community care | 38 | 798 (838) | 35 | 2066 (5224) | –1,268 (–2,981 to 444) (0.144) |
| Travel | 33 | 36 (46) | 35 | 50 (109) | –14 (–55 to 27) (0.495) |
| Medication | 37 | 219 (402) | 34 | 436 (1082) | –217 (–597 to 163) (0.259) |
| Informal care | 36 | 162 (536) | 34 | 293 (1253) | –130 (–586 to 325) (0.569) |
| Total cost | 29 | 2197 (1048) | 26 | 3261 (5010) | –1064 (–2973 to 845) (0.269) |
The net monetary benefit of remote cognitive behaviour therapy versus treatment as usual at various willingness to pay (WTP) thresholds using EQ-5D-5L utilities
| Net monetary benefit | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WTP threshold | £5,000 | £10,000 | £15,000 | £20,000 | £25,000 | £30,000 | £35,000 |
| Observed values | £1,414 | £1,764 | £2,114 | £2,464 | £2,814 | £3,164 | £3,514 |
Fig. 3Plot of bootstrapped samples on the cost-effectiveness plan using EQ-5D-5L utilities