Is Exposure Therapy Necessary to Treat PTSD?
11
the Quality of Life Measure, and the IIP), we used the Markov chain Monte
Carlo technique to obtain a monotone missing data pattern. We then applied
a predictive mean- matching regression method separately for the three treat-
ment groups. To increase the likelihood that the missing- at- random assump-
tion was valid, in addition to the previous values of the variable being imputed,
we used all other symptom variables and baseline
major depression status as
predictors in predictive mean- matching regression. Fifty imputed data sets
were generated.
We modeled the post- randomization values as functions of treatment, time,
and their interaction, controlling for baseline values of the outcome and major
depression status. If the time- by- treatment interaction reached statistical sig-
nificance, differences between treatments were estimated separately at mid-
treatment (week 7) and at end of treatment (week 14); otherwise, the model
was refitted with only main effects for treatment and time, and the differences
were assessed from a model postulating similar
relationships between the
treatments at all times.
Response and remission rates were estimated based on the observed data
using pre- specified criteria: response was defined as a decrease of > 30% from
baseline CAPS score, and remission was defined as a CAPS score of < 20 (Blake
et al., 1995; Weathers et al., 2001; Davidson et al., 2002). Participants for whom
these data were missing were categorized as “nonresponders” and “nonremit-
ters.” Statistical significance was assessed throughout at an alpha of 0.05 (two-
sided). We reported
p
values without adjustment for multiple testing, as the
reported results pertain to pre- specified hypotheses and tests. All analyses
used Statistical Analysis Software (SAS/ STAT), version 9.2.
We randomly assigned 110 patients who were
not taking any psychotropic
medication to 14 weeks during which they received either 14 50- minute ses-
sions of IPT (Weissman et al., 2007), ten 90- minute sessions of Prolonged
Exposure (Foa & Rothbaum, 1998), or nine 90- minute and one 30- minute
session of Relaxation Therapy (Jacobsen, 1938). Treatments were run at their
standard lengths, amounting to 700 minutes of IPT, 900 minutes of Prolonged
Exposure, and 840 minutes of Relaxation Therapy. Figure 1. 1 is a Consolidated
Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) diagram illustrating the flow of
the study.
Therapists were trained by expert supervisors, followed treatment manu-
als, and conducted pilot cases to develop expertise before beginning the study.
The
Prolonged Exposure supervisor, Elizabeth Hembree had been involved in
numerous randomized trials of Prolonged Exposure and was perhaps the pri-
mary trainer of therapists, in collaboration with Edna Foa, who invented the
treatment. Karina Lovell, who had supervised therapists in two prior stud-
ies comparing Relaxation Therapy to Prolonged Exposure, supervised our
12
I P T F O R P T S D
Relaxation Therapy therapists. I supervised the IPT therapists. All sessions
were
recorded on audiotape, and reliable, trained raters blind to treatment and
session number rated a sub- sample of treatment sessions using instruments
that included the best available discriminator of IPT and cognitive behavioral
treatments, the Collaborative Study Psychotherapy Rating Scale (CSPRS- 6;
Hollon, 1984).
Study therapists were Ph.D./ Psy.D. psychologists or psychiatrists, who each
treated a minimum of two pilot cases to ensure their competence and adher-
ence to treatment. The study included two Prolonged Exposure therapists ex-
perienced in a previous PTSD study (Schneier et al., 2012);
four IPT therapists;
and four Relaxation Therapy therapists. Therapists reported primary allegiance
to their study therapy, an important guard against bias in a treatment trial
(Falkenström et al., 2013). Therapy teams did not differ significantly in mean
age (Prolonged Exposure 47.5 years [SD = 10.6], IPT 41.0 years [SD = 9.1], and
Relaxation Therapy 34.8 years [SD = 5.1]) or in years of modality- specific psy-
chotherapy experience (Prolonged Exposure 7.5 years [SD = 0.7], IPT 9.0 years
Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: