Hien Denise A, Campbell Aimee N C, Ruglass Lesia M, Saavedra Lissette, Mathews Abigail G, Kiriakos Grace, Morgan-Lopez Antonio
Gordon F. Derner Institute of Advanced Psychological Studies, Adelphi University; Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, and New York State Psychiatric Institute.
Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons, and New York State Psychiatric Institute.
J Subst Abuse Treat. 2015 Sep;56:23-33. doi: 10.1016/j.jsat.2015.04.001. Epub 2015 Apr 7.
Recent federal legislation and a renewed focus on integrative care models underscore the need for economical, effective, and science-based behavioral health care treatment. As such, maximizing the impact and reach of treatment research is of great concern. Behavioral health issues, including the frequent co-occurrence of substance use disorders (SUD) and posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), are often complex, with a myriad of factors contributing to the success of interventions. Although treatment guides for comorbid SUD/PTSD exist, most patients continue to suffer symptoms following the prescribed treatment course. Further, the study of efficacious treatments has been hampered by methodological challenges (e.g., overreliance on "superiority" designs (i.e., designs structured to test whether or not one treatment statistically surpasses another in terms of effect sizes) and short term interventions). Secondary analyses of randomized controlled clinical trials offer potential benefits to enhance understanding of findings and increase the personalization of treatment. This paper offers a description of the limits of randomized controlled trials as related to SUD/PTSD populations, highlights the benefits and potential pitfalls of secondary analytic techniques, and uses a case example of one of the largest effectiveness trials of behavioral treatment for co-occurring SUD/PTSD conducted within the National Drug Abuse Treatment Clinical Trials Network (NIDA CTN) and producing 19 publications. The paper concludes with implications of this secondary analytic approach to improve addiction researchers' ability to identify best practices for community-based treatment of these disorders. Innovative methods are needed to maximize the benefits of clinical studies and better support SUD/PTSD treatment options for both specialty and non-specialty healthcare settings. Moving forward, planning for and description of secondary analyses in randomized trials should be given equal consideration and care to the primary outcome analysis.
近期的联邦立法以及对综合护理模式的重新关注凸显了对经济、有效且基于科学的行为健康护理治疗的需求。因此,最大化治疗研究的影响和覆盖面备受关注。行为健康问题,包括物质使用障碍(SUD)和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的频繁共病,往往很复杂,有众多因素影响干预的成功。尽管存在针对SUD/PTSD共病的治疗指南,但大多数患者在遵循规定的治疗疗程后仍有症状。此外,有效治疗的研究受到方法学挑战的阻碍(例如,过度依赖“优越性”设计(即旨在测试一种治疗在效应大小方面是否在统计学上超过另一种治疗的设计)和短期干预)。随机对照临床试验的二次分析为增强对研究结果的理解和提高治疗的个性化提供了潜在益处。本文描述了与SUD/PTSD人群相关的随机对照试验的局限性,强调了二次分析技术的益处和潜在陷阱,并以国家药物滥用治疗临床试验网络(NIDA CTN)内进行的最大规模的SUD/PTSD共病行为治疗有效性试验之一为例,该试验产生了19篇出版物。本文最后阐述了这种二次分析方法对提高成瘾研究人员识别这些疾病社区治疗最佳实践能力的意义。需要创新方法来最大化临床研究的益处,并更好地支持专科和非专科医疗环境中的SUD/PTSD治疗选择。展望未来,随机试验中二次分析的规划和描述应与主要结局分析得到同等的考虑和重视。