Certain therapies appear
beneficial in reducing PTSD symptoms in some trauma survivors
Prolonged exposure therapy, cognitive therapy,
and delayed prolonged exposure therapy, appear to reduce posttraumatic
stress disorder symptoms in patients who have experienced a recent
traumatic event, according to a report published Online First by
Archives of General Psychiatry, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
"Chronic PTSD is tenacious and disabling. Short-term interventions
without prior assessment or diagnosis have failed to prevent PTSD,"
the authors write as background information in the study. "Preventing
posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a pressing public health
need."
Arieh Y. Shalev, M.D., and colleagues from Hadassah University
Hospital, Jerusalem, Israel, conducted a study to compare early
and delayed exposure-based, cognitive and pharmacological interventions
for preventing PTSD. Study participants were selected from consecutively
admitted survivors of traumatic events at Hadassah Hospital in Jerusalem,
through a telephone-based interview a mean 9.61 days after the traumatic
event occurred. Patients identified as having symptoms of acute
stress disorder during the telephone interview were referred for
clinical assessment, and those who met PTSD symptom criteria during
assessment were invited to receive treatment.
The authors randomly assigned consenting patients to one of four
intervention groups: prolonged exposure (PE), cognitive therapy
(CT), a double-blind comparison of treatment with a selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) vs. placebo, or a waiting list (WL) control
group. The study design allowed participants to decline treatment
options they did not desire, and to be randomly assigned to one
of the remaining treatment groups. Participants in the WL group
who met PTSD criteria at the five-month follow-up received PE at
that time, to compare the effects of a delayed intervention on PTSD
symptoms. Prolonged exposure included psychoeducation, training
in breathing control, prolonged imaginal exposure to traumatic memories
and in vivo exposure to avoided situations. Cognitive therapy included
identifying and challenging negative automatic thoughts and modifying
underlying cognitive schemas. Participants in each of these groups
received 12 weekly 1.5-hour sessions administered by clinical psychologists
with prior PTSD treatment experience. PTSD prevalence was determined
using the Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS).
Following randomization, 63 participants started PE, 40 started
CT, 93 were placed on the waiting list and 46 were in the SSRI and
placebo subgroups (23 in each group). At the five-month follow-up,
the prevalence of PTSD in the PE and CT groups (21.4 percent and
18.2 percent, respectively) were significantly less than in the
WL, SSRI and placebo groups (58.2 percent, 61.9 percent and 55.6
percent, respectively). The analysis showed significant group differences
in CAPS and mean PTSD Symptom Scale-Self Report scores at five months,
showing fewer PTSD symptoms in the PE and CT groups compared with
the WL, SSRI and placebo groups. At the five-month follow-up, 57
WL participants had PTSD and were eligible for delayed PE and 41
started treatment at that time.
At the nine-month follow-up, the prevalence of PTSD in the PE,
CT and WL groups were 21.2 percent, 22.8 percent, and 22.9 percent,
respectively while rates for the SSRI and placebo subgroups (42.1
percent and 47.1 percent, respectively) remained higher. Analysis
also showed significant group differences in CAPS and mean PTSD
Symptom Scale-Self Report scores at nine months, showing fewer PTSD
symptoms in the PE, CT and WL groups compared with the SSRI and
placebo groups. Participants with partial PTSD before treatment
onset did similarly well with and without treatment.
"The results of our study show that there are significant
and similar preventive effects of PE and CT," the authors conclude.
"Our finding suggests that delaying the intervention does not
increase the risk of chronic PTSD…Thus, a delayed intervention is
an acceptable option when early clinical interventions cannot be
provided (e.g., during wars, disasters, or continuous hostilities)."
This study was supported by a contribution from the Jerry Lee Foundation
in Philadelphia, Penn., a service development grant from the Jewish
Federation of New York, a research grant from the National Institute
of Mental Health and an investigator-initiated research grant from
Lundbeck Pharmaceuticals Ltd (Denmark).
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