Campbell Letitia, Kenardy Justin, Andersen Tonny, McGregor Leanne, Maujean Annick, Sterling Michele
Menzies Health Institute Queensland, Centre for National Research on Disability and Rehabilitation Medicine (CONROD), NHMRC CRE in Recovery Following Road Traffic Injury, Griffith University, Gold Coast.
CONROD, University of Queensland; School of Psychology, University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
J Physiother. 2015 Oct;61(4):218. doi: 10.1016/j.jphys.2015.07.003. Epub 2015 Aug 28.
As a consequence of a road traffic crash, persistent pain and disability following whiplash injury are common and incur substantial personal and economic costs. Up to 50% of people who experience a whiplash injury will never fully recover and up to 30% will remain moderately to severely disabled by the condition. The reason as to why symptoms persist past the acute to sub-acute stage and become chronic is unclear, but likely results from complex interactions between structural injury, physical impairments, and psychological and psychosocial factors. Psychological responses related to the traumatic event itself are becoming an increasingly recognised factor in the whiplash condition. Despite this recognition, there is limited knowledge regarding the effectiveness of psychological interventions, either delivered alone or in combination with physiotherapy, in reducing the physical and pain-related psychological factors of chronic whiplash. Pilot study results have shown positive results for the use of trauma-focused cognitive behaviour therapy to treat psychological factors, pain and disability in individuals with chronic whiplash. The results have indicated that a combined approach could not only reduce psychological symptoms, but also pain and disability.
The primary aim of this randomised, controlled trial is to investigate the effectiveness of combined trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy, delivered by a psychologist, and physiotherapy exercise to decrease pain and disability of individuals with chronic whiplash and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). The trial also aims to investigate the effectiveness of the combined therapy in decreasing post-traumatic stress symptoms, anxiety and depression.
A total of 108 participants with chronic whiplash-associated disorder (WAD) grade II of > 3 months and < 5 years duration and PTSD (diagnosed with the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS) according to the DSM-5) will be recruited for the study. Participants will be assessed via phone screening and in person at a university research laboratory. Interventions will take place in southeast Queensland, Australia and southern Denmark.
Psychological therapy will be delivered once a week over 10 weeks, with participants randomly assigned to either trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy or supportive therapy, both delivered by a clinical psychologist. Participants will then receive ten sessions of evidence-based physiotherapy exercise delivered over a 6-week period.
The primary outcome measure is neck disability (Neck Disability Index). Secondary outcomes focus on: pain intensity; presence and severity of PTSD (CAPS V and PTSD Checklist 5); psychological distress (Depression, Anxiety Stress Scale 21); patient perceived functionality (SF-12, Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia, and Patient-Specific Functional Scale); and pain-specific self-efficacy and catastrophising (Pain Self-Efficacy Questionnaire and Pain Catastrophizing Scale). After psychotherapy (10 weeks after randomisation) and physiotherapy (16 weeks after randomisation), as well as at the 6-month and 12-month follow-ups, a blind assessor will measure the outcomes.
All analyses will be conducted on an intention-to-treat basis. The primary and secondary outcomes that are measured will be analysed using linear mixed and logistic regression models. Any effect of site (Australia or Denmark) will be evaluated by including a site-by-treatment group-by-time interaction term in the mixed models analyses. Effect modification will only be assessed for the primary outcome of the Neck Disability Index.
This study will provide a definitive evaluation of the effects of adding trauma-focused cognitive behaviour therapy to physiotherapy exercise for individuals with chronic WAD and PTSD. This study is likely to influence the clinical management of whiplash injury and will have immediate clinical applicability in Australia, Denmark and the wider international community. The study will also have implications for both health and insurance policy makers in their decision-making regarding treatment options and funding.
由于道路交通事故,挥鞭伤后持续疼痛和残疾很常见,会带来巨大的个人和经济成本。经历挥鞭伤的人中有高达50%永远无法完全康复,高达30%会因该病症而持续中度至重度残疾。症状为何在急性至亚急性期过后仍持续并发展为慢性尚不清楚,但可能是由于结构损伤、身体功能障碍以及心理和社会心理因素之间的复杂相互作用所致。与创伤事件本身相关的心理反应在挥鞭伤病症中越来越被视为一个因素。尽管有这种认识,但关于单独或与物理治疗相结合的心理干预在减少慢性挥鞭伤的身体和疼痛相关心理因素方面的有效性,了解仍然有限。初步研究结果表明,使用以创伤为重点的认知行为疗法治疗慢性挥鞭伤患者的心理因素、疼痛和残疾取得了积极成果。结果表明,综合方法不仅可以减轻心理症状,还可以减轻疼痛和残疾。
这项随机对照试验的主要目的是研究由心理学家提供的以创伤为重点的认知行为疗法与物理治疗运动相结合,对减轻慢性挥鞭伤和创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)患者的疼痛和残疾的有效性。该试验还旨在研究联合疗法在减轻创伤后应激症状、焦虑和抑郁方面的有效性。
总共将招募108名患有慢性挥鞭伤相关疾病(WAD)二级、病程超过3个月且小于5年并患有创伤后应激障碍(根据DSM-5用临床医生管理的PTSD量表(CAPS)诊断)的参与者进行这项研究。参与者将通过电话筛查和在大学研究实验室进行面对面评估。干预将在澳大利亚昆士兰州东南部和丹麦南部进行。
心理治疗将在10周内每周进行一次,参与者被随机分配到以创伤为重点的认知行为疗法或支持性疗法,均由临床心理学家提供。然后,参与者将在6周内接受十次循证物理治疗运动。
主要结果测量指标是颈部残疾(颈部残疾指数)。次要结果集中在:疼痛强度;创伤后应激障碍的存在和严重程度(CAPS V和创伤后应激障碍检查表5);心理困扰(抑郁、焦虑压力量表21);患者感知功能(SF-12、坦帕运动恐惧量表和患者特定功能量表);以及疼痛特异性自我效能感和灾难化思维(疼痛自我效能感问卷和疼痛灾难化量表)。在心理治疗后(随机分组后10周)和物理治疗后(随机分组后16周),以及在6个月和12个月随访时,一名盲法评估者将测量这些结果。
所有分析将基于意向性治疗原则进行。所测量的主要和次要结果将使用线性混合和逻辑回归模型进行分析。地点(澳大利亚或丹麦)的任何影响将通过在混合模型分析中纳入地点×治疗组×时间交互项来评估。仅对颈部残疾指数这一主要结果评估效应修正。
本研究将对为患有慢性WAD和PTSD的个体在物理治疗运动中添加以创伤为重点的认知行为疗法的效果进行明确评估。本研究可能会影响挥鞭伤的临床管理,并将在澳大利亚、丹麦和更广泛的国际社会具有直接的临床适用性。该研究还将对健康和保险政策制定者在治疗选择和资金方面的决策产生影响。