Clinical Psychological Science, Maastricht University, Maastricht, Netherlands.
Lancet. 2012 May 26;379(9830):1951-9. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60469-3.
Up to 21% of adults will develop tinnitus, which is one of the most distressing and debilitating audiological problems. The absence of medical cures and standardised practice can lead to costly and prolonged treatment. We aimed to assess effectiveness of a stepped-care approach, based on cognitive behaviour therapy, compared with usual care in patients with varying tinnitus severity.
In this randomised controlled trial, undertaken at the Adelante Department of Audiology and Communication (Hoensbroek, Netherlands), we enrolled previously untreated Dutch speakers (aged >18 years) who had a primary complaint of tinnitus but no health issues precluding participation. An independent research assistant randomly allocated patients by use of a computer-generated allocation sequence in a 1:1 ratio, stratified by tinnitus severity and hearing ability, in block sizes of four to receive specialised care of cognitive behaviour therapy with sound-focused tinnitus retraining therapy or usual care. Patients and assessors were masked to treatment assignment. Primary outcomes were health-related quality of life (assessed by the health utilities index score), tinnitus severity (tinnitus questionnaire score), and tinnitus impairment (tinnitus handicap inventory score), which were assessed before treatment and at 3 months, 8 months, and 12 months after randomisation. We used multilevel mixed regression analyses to assess outcomes in the intention-to-treat population. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00733044.
Between September, 2007 and January, 2011, we enrolled and treated 492 (66%) of 741 screened patients. Compared with 247 patients assigned to usual care, 245 patients assigned to specialised care improved in health-related quality of life during a period of 12 months (between-group difference 0·059, 95% CI 0·025 to 0·094; effect size of Cohen's d=0·24; p=0·0009), and had decreased tinnitus severity (-8·062, -10·829 to -5·295; d=0·43; p<0·0001) and tinnitus impairment (-7·506, -10·661 to -4·352; d=0·45; p<0·0001). Treatment seemed effective irrespective of initial tinnitus severity, and we noted no adverse events in this trial.
Specialised treatment of tinnitus based on cognitive behaviour therapy could be suitable for widespread implementation for patients with tinnitus of varying severity.
Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMW).
多达 21%的成年人会出现耳鸣,这是最令人痛苦和虚弱的听力学问题之一。缺乏医学治疗和标准化的实践可能导致昂贵且延长的治疗。我们旨在评估基于认知行为疗法的阶梯式护理方法对不同耳鸣严重程度患者的有效性。
在 Adelante 耳鼻喉科和沟通部(荷兰 Hoensbroek)进行的这项随机对照试验中,我们招募了未经治疗的荷兰语母语者(年龄>18 岁),他们主要抱怨耳鸣,但没有健康问题妨碍参与。一名独立的研究助理使用计算机生成的分配序列,以 1:1 的比例,按耳鸣严重程度和听力能力进行分层,以 4 人为一组随机分配患者,接受认知行为疗法的专门治疗,包括以声音为焦点的耳鸣再训练疗法或常规护理。患者和评估者对治疗分配不知情。主要结局是健康相关生活质量(通过健康效用指数评分评估)、耳鸣严重程度(耳鸣问卷评分)和耳鸣障碍(耳鸣残疾量表评分),在随机分组后 3 个月、8 个月和 12 个月进行评估。我们使用多级混合回归分析评估意向治疗人群的结果。该研究在 ClinicalTrials.gov 注册,编号为 NCT00733044。
2007 年 9 月至 2011 年 1 月期间,我们招募并治疗了 741 名筛查患者中的 492 名(66%)。与 247 名接受常规护理的患者相比,245 名接受专门护理的患者在 12 个月期间的健康相关生活质量得到改善(组间差异 0.059,95%CI 0.025 至 0.094;Cohen's d 效应大小为 0.24;p=0.0009),耳鸣严重程度降低(-8.062,-10.829 至-5.295;d=0.43;p<0.0001)和耳鸣障碍减轻(-7.506,-10.661 至-4.352;d=0.45;p<0.0001)。治疗似乎有效,与初始耳鸣严重程度无关,并且我们在该试验中没有观察到任何不良事件。
基于认知行为疗法的耳鸣专门治疗可能适合广泛应用于不同严重程度的耳鸣患者。
荷兰健康研究与发展组织(ZonMW)。