Ali Afia, Hall Ian, Blickwedel Jessica, Hassiotis Angela
UCL Division of Psychiatry, University College London, Charles Bell House, 67-73 Riding House Street, London, UK, W1W 7EY.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Apr 7;2015(4):CD003406. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD003406.pub4.
Outwardly-directed aggressive behaviour is a significant part of problem behaviours presented by people with intellectual disabilities. Prevalence rates of up to 50% have been reported in the literature, depending on the population sampled. Such behaviours often run a long-term course and are a major cause of social exclusion. This is an update of a previously published systematic review (see Hassiotis 2004; Hassiotis 2008).
To evaluate the efficacy of behavioural and cognitive-behavioural interventions on outwardly-directed aggressive behaviour in people with intellectual disabilities when compared to standard intervention or wait-list controls.
In April 2014 we searched CENTRAL, Ovid MEDLINE, Embase, and eight other databases. We also searched two trials registers, checked reference lists, and handsearched relevant journals to identify any additional trials.
We included studies if more than four participants (children or adults) were allocated by random or quasi-random methods to either intervention, standard treatment, or wait-list control groups.
Two review authors independently identified studies and extracted and assessed the quality of the data.
We deemed six studies (309 participants), based on adult populations with intellectual disabilities, suitable for inclusion in the current version of this review. These studies examined a range of cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) approaches: anger management (three studies (n = 235); one individual therapy and two group-based); relaxation (one study; n = 12), mindfulness based on meditation (one study; n = 34), problem solving and assertiveness training (one study; n = 28). We were unable to include any studies using behavioural interventions. There were no studies of children.Only one study reported moderate quality of evidence for outcomes of interest as assessed by the Grades of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE) approach. We judged the evidence for the remaining studies to be of very low to low quality. Most studies were at risk of bias in two or more domains: one study did not randomly allocate participants and in two studies the process of randomisation was unclear; in one study there was no allocation concealment and in three studies this was unclear; blinding of assessors did not occur in three studies; incomplete outcome data were presented in one study and unclear in two studies; there was selective reporting in one study; and other biases were present in one study and unclear in four studies.Three of the six studies showed some benefit of the intervention on improving anger ratings. We did not conduct a meta-analysis, as we considered the studies too heterogeneous to combine (e.g. due to differences in the types of participants, sample size interventions, and outcome measures).Follow-up data for anger ratings for both the treatment and control groups were available for two studies. Only one of these studies (n = 161) had adequate long-term data (10 months), which found some benefit of treatment at follow-up (continued improvement in anger coping skills as rated by key workers; moderate-quality evidence).Two studies (n = 192) reported some evidence that the intervention reduces the number of incidents of aggression and one study (n = 28) reported evidence that the intervention improved mental health symptoms.One study investigated the effects of the intervention on quality of life and cost of health and social care utilisation. This study provided moderate-quality evidence, which suggests that compared to no treatment, behavioural or cognitive-behavioural interventions do not improve quality of life at 16 weeks (n = 129) or at 10 months follow-up (n = 140), or reduce the cost of health service utilisation (n = 133).Only one study (n = 28) assessed adaptive functioning. It reported evidence that assertiveness and problem-solving training improved adaptive behaviour.No studies reported data on adverse events.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: The existing evidence on the effectiveness of behavioural and cognitive-behavioural interventions on outwardly-directed aggression in children and adults with intellectual disabilities is limited. There is a paucity of methodologically sound clinical trials and a lack of long-term follow-up data. Given the impact of such behaviours on the individual and his or her support workers, effective interventions are essential. We recommend that randomised controlled trials of sufficient power are carried out using primary outcomes that include reduction in outward-directed aggressive behaviour, improvement in quality of life, and cost effectiveness.
外向攻击性行为是智力障碍者问题行为的重要组成部分。根据抽样人群的不同,文献报道的患病率高达50%。此类行为往往病程较长,是导致社会排斥的主要原因。这是对先前发表的系统评价的更新(见哈西奥蒂斯2004年;哈西奥蒂斯2008年)。
与标准干预或等待名单对照组相比,评估行为和认知行为干预对智力障碍者外向攻击性行为的疗效。
2014年4月,我们检索了Cochrane系统评价数据库、Ovid MEDLINE、Embase以及其他八个数据库。我们还检索了两个试验注册库,检查了参考文献列表,并手工检索了相关期刊以识别任何其他试验。
如果超过四名参与者(儿童或成人)通过随机或准随机方法被分配到干预组、标准治疗组或等待名单对照组,我们纳入这些研究。
两位综述作者独立识别研究并提取和评估数据质量。
我们认为六项基于成年智力障碍人群的研究(309名参与者)适合纳入本综述的当前版本。这些研究考察了一系列认知行为疗法(CBT)方法:愤怒管理(三项研究(n = 235);一项个体治疗和两项团体治疗);放松训练(一项研究;n = 12),基于冥想的正念训练(一项研究;n = 34),问题解决和自信训练(一项研究;n = 28)。我们未能纳入任何使用行为干预的研究。没有关于儿童的研究。
只有一项研究报告了根据推荐分级、评估、制定与评价(GRADE)方法评估的感兴趣结局的中等质量证据。我们判断其余研究的证据质量为极低到低质量。大多数研究在两个或更多领域存在偏倚风险:一项研究未随机分配参与者,两项研究的随机化过程不明确;一项研究没有分配隐藏,三项研究情况不明;三项研究中评估者未设盲;一项研究呈现了不完整的结局数据,两项研究情况不明;一项研究存在选择性报告;一项研究存在其他偏倚,四项研究情况不明。
六项研究中的三项显示干预对改善愤怒评分有一定益处。我们未进行荟萃分析,因为我们认为这些研究过于异质,无法合并(例如,由于参与者类型、样本量干预和结局测量的差异)。
两项研究提供了治疗组和对照组愤怒评分的随访数据。其中只有一项研究(n = 161)有足够的长期数据(10个月),该研究发现随访时治疗有一定益处(关键工作人员评定的愤怒应对技能持续改善;中等质量证据)。
两项研究(n = 192)报告了一些证据表明干预减少了攻击事件的数量,一项研究(n = 28)报告了证据表明干预改善了心理健康症状。
一项研究调查了干预对生活质量以及健康和社会护理利用成本的影响。这项研究提供了中等质量证据,表明与不治疗相比,行为或认知行为干预在16周(n = 129)或10个月随访时(n = 140)并未改善生活质量,也未降低健康服务利用成本(n = 133)。
只有一项研究(n = 28)评估了适应性功能。它报告了证据表明自信和问题解决训练改善了适应性行为。
没有研究报告不良事件的数据。
关于行为和认知行为干预对智力障碍儿童和成人外向攻击性行为有效性的现有证据有限。缺乏方法学上合理的临床试验,且缺乏长期随访数据。鉴于此类行为对个体及其支持人员的影响,有效的干预至关重要。我们建议进行有足够效力的随机对照试验,使用包括减少外向攻击性行为、改善生活质量和成本效益在内的主要结局指标。