Nussbaumer Barbara, Kaminski-Hartenthaler Angela, Forneris Catherine A, Morgan Laura C, Sonis Jeffrey H, Gaynes Bradley N, Greenblatt Amy, Wipplinger Jörg, Lux Linda J, Winkler Dietmar, Van Noord Megan G, Hofmann Julia, Gartlehner Gerald
Department of Evidence-based Medicine and Clinical Epidemiology, Danube University Krems, Krems, Austria.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2015 Nov 8(11):CD011269. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011269.pub2.
Seasonal affective disorder (SAD) is a seasonal pattern of recurrent major depressive episodes that most commonly occurs during autumn or winter and remits in spring. The prevalence of SAD ranges from 1.5% to 9%, depending on latitude. The predictable seasonal aspect of SAD provides a promising opportunity for prevention. This review - one of four reviews on efficacy and safety of interventions to prevent SAD - focuses on light therapy as a preventive intervention. Light therapy is a non-pharmacological treatment that exposes people to artificial light. Mode of delivery (e.g. visors, light boxes) and form of light (e.g. bright white light) vary.
To assess the efficacy and safety of light therapy (in comparison with no treatment, other types of light therapy, second-generation antidepressants, melatonin, agomelatine, psychological therapies, lifestyle interventions and negative ion generators) in preventing SAD and improving patient-centred outcomes among adults with a history of SAD.
A search of the Specialised Register of the Cochrane Depression, Anxiety and Neuorosis Review Group (CCDANCTR) included all years to 11 August 2015. The CCDANCTR contains reports of relevant randomised controlled trials derived from EMBASE (1974 to date), MEDLINE (1950 to date), PsycINFO (1967 to date) and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trails (CENTRAL). Furthermore, we searched the Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL), Web of Knowledge, The Cochrane Library and the Allied and Complementary Medicine Database (AMED) (to 26 May 2014). We also conducted a grey literature search and handsearched the reference lists of all included studies and pertinent review articles.
For efficacy, we included randomised controlled trials on adults with a history of winter-type SAD who were free of symptoms at the beginning of the study. For adverse events, we also intended to include non-randomised studies. We intended to include studies that compared any type of light therapy (e.g. bright white light, administered by visors or light boxes, infrared light, dawn stimulation) versus no treatment/placebo, second-generation antidepressants (SGAs), psychological therapies, melatonin, agomelatine, lifestyle changes, negative ion generators or another of the aforementioned light therapies. We also planned to include studies that looked at light therapy in combination with any comparator intervention and compared this with the same comparator intervention as monotherapy.
Two review authors screened abstracts and full-text publications against the inclusion criteria. Two review authors independently abstracted data and assessed risk of bias of included studies.
We identified 2986 citations after de-duplication of search results. We excluded 2895 records during title and abstract review. We assessed 91 full-text papers for inclusion in the review, but only one study providing data from 46 people met our eligibility criteria. The included randomised controlled trial (RCT) had methodological limitations. We rated it as having high risk of performance and detection bias because of lack of blinding, and as having high risk of attrition bias because study authors did not report reasons for dropouts and did not integrate data from dropouts into the analysis.The included RCT compared preventive use of bright white light (2500 lux via visors), infrared light (0.18 lux via visors) and no light treatment. Overall, both forms of preventive light therapy reduced the incidence of SAD numerically compared with no light therapy. In all, 43% (6/14) of participants in the bright light group developed SAD, as well as 33% (5/15) in the infrared light group and 67% (6/9) in the non-treatment group. Bright light therapy reduced the risk of SAD incidence by 36%; however, the 95% confidence interval (CI) was very broad and included both possible effect sizes in favour of bright light therapy and those in favour of no light therapy (risk ratio (RR) 0.64, 95% CI 0.30 to 1.38). Infrared light reduced the risk of SAD by 50% compared with no light therapy, but in this case also the CI was too broad to allow precise estimations of effect size (RR 0.50, 95% CI 0.21 to 1.17). Comparison of both forms of preventive light therapy versus each other yielded similar rates of incidence of depressive episodes in both groups (RR 1.29, 95% CI 0.50 to 3.28). The quality of evidence for all outcomes was very low. Reasons for downgrading evidence quality included high risk of bias of the included study, imprecision and other limitations, such as self rating of outcomes, lack of checking of compliance throughout the study duration and insufficient reporting of participant characteristics.Investigators provided no information on adverse events. We could find no studies that compared light therapy versus other interventions of interest such as SGA, psychological therapies, melatonin or agomelatine.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Evidence on light therapy as preventive treatment for patients with a history of SAD is limited. Methodological limitations and the small sample size of the only available study have precluded review author conclusions on effects of light therapy for SAD. Given that comparative evidence for light therapy versus other preventive options is limited, the decision for or against initiating preventive treatment of SAD and the treatment selected should be strongly based on patient preferences.
季节性情感障碍(SAD)是一种复发性重度抑郁发作的季节性模式,最常见于秋季或冬季,并在春季缓解。SAD的患病率在1.5%至9%之间,具体取决于纬度。SAD可预测的季节性为预防提供了一个有前景的机会。本综述——关于预防SAD干预措施的疗效和安全性的四项综述之一——重点关注光疗法作为一种预防性干预措施。光疗法是一种让人们暴露在人造光下的非药物治疗方法。其给药方式(如眼罩、灯箱)和光的形式(如亮白光)各不相同。
评估光疗法(与不治疗、其他类型的光疗法、第二代抗抑郁药、褪黑素、阿戈美拉汀、心理疗法、生活方式干预和负离子发生器相比)在预防SAD以及改善有SAD病史的成年人以患者为中心的结局方面的疗效和安全性。
检索Cochrane抑郁、焦虑和神经症综述小组(CCDANCTR)的专业注册库涵盖至2015年8月11日的所有年份。CCDANCTR包含来自EMBASE(1974年至今)Medline(1950年至今)、PsycINFO(1967年至今)以及Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)的相关随机对照试验报告。此外,我们检索了护理及相关健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)、Web of Knowledge、Cochrane图书馆和补充与替代医学数据库(AMED)(至2014年5月26日)。我们还进行了灰色文献检索,并手工检索了所有纳入研究和相关综述文章的参考文献列表。
对于疗效评估方面,我们纳入了针对有冬季型SAD病史且在研究开始时无症状的成年人的随机对照试验。对于不良事件,我们也打算纳入非随机研究。我们打算纳入比较任何类型光疗法(如亮白光,通过眼罩或灯箱给药、红外光、黎明刺激)与不治疗/安慰剂、第二代抗抑郁药(SGAs)、心理疗法、褪黑素、阿戈美拉汀、生活方式改变、负离子发生器或上述其他光疗法之一的研究。我们还计划纳入研究光疗法与任何对照干预措施联合使用并将其与作为单一疗法的相同对照干预措施进行比较的研究。
两位综述作者根据纳入标准筛选摘要和全文出版物。两位综述作者独立提取数据并评估纳入研究的偏倚风险。
在对检索结果去重后,我们识别出2986条引用。在标题和摘要审查期间,我们排除了2895条记录。我们评估了91篇全文论文是否纳入综述,但只有一项来自46人的研究符合我们的纳入标准。纳入的随机对照试验(RCT)存在方法学局限性。由于缺乏盲法,我们将其评定为存在高实施和检测偏倚风险,并且由于研究作者未报告脱落原因且未将脱落者的数据纳入分析,评定为存在高失访偏倚风险。纳入的RCT比较了预防性使用亮白光(通过眼罩2500勒克斯)、红外光(通过眼罩0.18勒克斯)和不进行光治疗。总体而言,与不进行光治疗相比,两种预防性光疗法在数值上均降低了SAD的发病率。在亮光组中共有43%(6/14)的参与者患SAD,红外光组为33%(5/15),非治疗组为67%(6/9)。亮光疗法使SAD发病风险降低了36%;然而,95%置信区间(CI)非常宽,既包含了支持亮光疗法的可能效应量,也包含了支持不进行光疗法的效应量(风险比(RR)0.64,95%CI 0.30至1.38)。与不进行光治疗相比,红外光使SAD风险降低了50%,但在这种情况下,CI也过宽以至于无法精确估计效应量(RR 0.50,95%CI 0.21至1.17)。两种预防性光疗法相互比较时,两组抑郁发作的发生率相似(RR 1.29,95%CI 0.50至3.28)。所有结局的证据质量都非常低。证据质量降级的原因包括纳入研究的高偏倚风险、不精确性以及其他局限性,如结局的自我评定、在整个研究期间缺乏对依从性的检查以及参与者特征报告不足。研究者未提供关于不良事件的信息。我们未找到比较光疗法与其他感兴趣的干预措施(如SGA、心理疗法、褪黑素或阿戈美拉汀)的研究。
关于光疗法作为有SAD病史患者的预防性治疗的证据有限。唯一可用研究的方法学局限性和小样本量使得综述作者无法就光疗法对SAD的影响得出结论。鉴于光疗法与其他预防选择的比较证据有限,对于是否启动SAD预防性治疗以及所选择的治疗应强烈基于患者偏好来决定。