Gates Peter J, Sabioni Pamela, Copeland Jan, Le Foll Bernard, Gowing Linda
National Cannabis Prevention and Information Centre, 22-32 King St, UNSW Medicine, Sydney, Australia, 2031.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2016 May 5;2016(5):CD005336. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD005336.pub4.
Cannabis use disorder is the most commonly reported illegal substance use disorder in the general population; although demand for assistance from health services is increasing internationally, only a minority of those with the disorder seek professional assistance. Treatment studies have been published, but pressure to establish public policy requires an updated systematic review of cannabis-specific treatments for adults.
To evaluate the efficacy of psychosocial interventions for cannabis use disorder (compared with inactive control and/or alternative treatment) delivered to adults in an out-patient or community setting.
We searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL; 2015, Issue 6), MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, the Cumulaive Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) and reference lists of articles. Searched literature included all articles published before July 2015.
All randomised controlled studies examining a psychosocial intervention for cannabis use disorder (without pharmacological intervention) in comparison with a minimal or inactive treatment control or alternative combinations of psychosocial interventions.
We used standard methodological procedures as expected by The Cochrane Collaboration.
We included 23 randomised controlled trials involving 4045 participants. A total of 15 studies took place in the United States, two in Australia, two in Germany and one each in Switzerland, Canada, Brazil and Ireland. Investigators delivered treatments over approximately seven sessions (range, one to 14) for approximately 12 weeks (range, one to 56).Overall, risk of bias across studies was moderate, that is, no trial was at high risk of selection bias, attrition bias or reporting bias. Further, trials included a large total number of participants, and each trial ensured the fidelity of treatments provided. In contrast, because of the nature of the interventions provided, participant blinding was not possible, and reports of researcher blinding often were unclear or were not provided. Half of the reviewed studies included collateral verification or urinalysis to confirm self report data, leading to concern about performance and detection bias. Finally, concerns of other bias were based on relatively consistent lack of assessment of non-cannabis substance use or use of additional treatments before or during the trial period.A subset of studies provided sufficient detail for comparison of effects of any intervention versus inactive control on primary outcomes of interest at early follow-up (median, four months). Results showed moderate-quality evidence that approximately seven out of 10 intervention participants completed treatment as intended (effect size (ES) 0.71, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.63 to 0.78, 11 studies, 1424 participants), and that those receiving psychosocial intervention used cannabis on fewer days compared with those given inactive control (mean difference (MD) 5.67, 95% CI 3.08 to 8.26, six studies, 1144 participants). In addition, low-quality evidence revealed that those receiving intervention were more likely to report point-prevalence abstinence (risk ratio (RR) 2.55, 95% CI 1.34 to 4.83, six studies, 1166 participants) and reported fewer symptoms of dependence (standardised mean difference (SMD) 4.15, 95% CI 1.67 to 6.63, four studies, 889 participants) and cannabis-related problems compared with those given inactive control (SMD 3.34, 95% CI 1.26 to 5.42, six studies, 2202 participants). Finally, very low-quality evidence indicated that those receiving intervention reported using fewer joints per day compared with those given inactive control (SMD 3.55, 95% CI 2.51 to 4.59, eight studies, 1600 participants). Notably, subgroup analyses found that interventions of more than four sessions delivered over longer than one month (high intensity) produced consistently improved outcomes (particularly in terms of cannabis use frequency and severity of dependence) in the short term as compared with low-intensity interventions.The most consistent evidence supports the use of cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT), motivational enhancement therapy (MET) and particularly their combination for assisting with reduction of cannabis use frequency at early follow-up (MET: MD 4.45, 95% CI 1.90 to 7.00, four studies, 612 participants; CBT: MD 10.94, 95% CI 7.44 to 14.44, one study, 134 participants; MET + CBT: MD 7.38, 95% CI 3.18 to 11.57, three studies, 398 participants) and severity of dependence (MET: SMD 4.07, 95% CI 1.97 to 6.17, two studies, 316 participants; MET + CBT: SMD 7.89, 95% CI 0.93 to 14.85, three studies, 573 participants), although no particular intervention was consistently effective at nine-month follow-up or later. In addition, data from five out of six studies supported the utility of adding voucher-based incentives for cannabis-negative urines to enhance treatment effect on cannabis use frequency. A single study found contrasting results throughout a 12-month follow-up period, as post-treatment outcomes related to overall reduction in cannabis use frequency favoured CBT alone without the addition of abstinence-based or treatment adherence-based contingency management. In contrast, evidence of drug counselling, social support, relapse prevention and mindfulness meditation was weak because identified studies were few, information on treatment outcomes insufficient and rates of treatment adherence low. In line with treatments for other substance use, abstinence rates were relatively low overall, with approximately one-quarter of participants abstinent at final follow-up. Finally, three studies found that intervention was comparable with treatment as usual among participants in psychiatric clinics and reported no between-group differences in any of the included outcomes.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: Included studies were heterogeneous in many aspects, and important questions regarding the most effective duration, intensity and type of intervention were raised and partially resolved. Generalisability of findings was unclear, most notably because of the limited number of localities and homogeneous samples of treatment seekers. The rate of abstinence was low and unstable although comparable with treatments for other substance use. Psychosocial intervention was shown, in comparison with minimal treatment controls, to reduce frequency of use and severity of dependence in a fairly durable manner, at least in the short term. Among the included intervention types, an intensive intervention provided over more than four sessions based on the combination of MET and CBT with abstinence-based incentives was most consistently supported for treatment of cannabis use disorder.
大麻使用障碍是普通人群中最常报告的非法物质使用障碍;尽管国际上对卫生服务援助的需求在增加,但只有少数患有该障碍的人寻求专业帮助。已有治疗研究发表,但制定公共政策的压力要求对针对成年人的大麻特定治疗进行更新的系统评价。
评估在门诊或社区环境中为成年人提供的针对大麻使用障碍的心理社会干预措施的疗效(与无活性对照和/或替代治疗相比)。
我们检索了Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL;2015年第6期)、MEDLINE、EMBASE、PsycINFO、护理及相关健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)以及文章的参考文献列表。检索的文献包括2015年7月之前发表的所有文章。
所有随机对照研究,比较针对大麻使用障碍的心理社会干预措施(无药物干预)与最小或无活性治疗对照或心理社会干预措施的替代组合。
我们采用了Cochrane协作网预期的标准方法程序。
我们纳入了23项随机对照试验,涉及4045名参与者。共有15项研究在美国进行,2项在澳大利亚进行,2项在德国进行,1项分别在瑞士、加拿大、巴西和爱尔兰进行。研究人员进行了约七次治疗(范围为1至14次),持续约12周(范围为1至56周)。总体而言,各研究的偏倚风险为中等,即没有试验存在高选择偏倚、失访偏倚或报告偏倚风险。此外,试验纳入的参与者总数众多,且每项试验都确保了所提供治疗的保真度。相比之下,由于所提供干预措施的性质,不可能对参与者进行盲法,且关于研究人员盲法的报告往往不明确或未提供。一半的综述研究包括旁证核实或尿液分析以确认自我报告数据,这引发了对表现和检测偏倚的担忧。最后,对其他偏倚的担忧基于在试验期之前或期间对非大麻物质使用或额外治疗使用的评估相对一致的缺乏。一部分研究提供了足够详细的信息,以便比较任何干预措施与无活性对照在早期随访(中位数为四个月)时对感兴趣的主要结局的影响。结果显示,有中等质量的证据表明,约十分之七的干预参与者按预期完成了治疗(效应量(ES)为0.71,95%置信区间(CI)为0.63至0.78,11项研究,1424名参与者),且接受心理社会干预的参与者与接受无活性对照的参与者相比,使用大麻的天数更少(平均差(MD)为5.67,95%CI为3.08至8.26,6项研究,1144名参与者)。此外,低质量证据显示,接受干预的参与者更有可能报告点患病率戒断(风险比(RR)为2.55,95%CI为1.34至4.83,6项研究,1166名参与者),且与接受无活性对照的参与者相比,报告的依赖症状更少(标准化平均差(SMD)为4.15,95%CI为1.67至6.63,4项研究,889名参与者)以及与大麻相关的问题更少(SMD为3.34,95%CI为1.26至5.42,6项研究,2202名参与者)。最后,极低质量证据表明,接受干预的参与者与接受无活性对照的参与者相比,报告每天使用的大麻烟卷更少(SMD为3.55,95%CI为2.51至4.59,8项研究,1600名参与者)。值得注意的是,亚组分析发现,与低强度干预相比,超过四个疗程且持续时间超过一个月(高强度)的干预措施在短期内能持续改善结局(特别是在大麻使用频率和依赖严重程度方面)。最一致的证据支持使用认知行为疗法(CBT)、动机增强疗法(MET),尤其是它们的组合来帮助在早期随访时降低大麻使用频率(MET:MD为4.45,95%CI为1.90至7.00,4项研究,612名参与者;CBT:MD为10.94,95%CI为7.44至14.44,1项研究,134名参与者;MET + CBT:MD为7.38,95%CI为3.18至11.57,3项研究,398名参与者)以及依赖严重程度(MET:SMD为4.07,95%CI为1.97至6.17,2项研究,316名参与者;MET + CBT:SMD为7.89,95%CI为0.93至14.85,3项研究,573名参与者),尽管在九个月随访或更晚时没有任何特定干预措施始终有效。此外,六分之五的研究数据支持添加基于代金券的大麻阴性尿液奖励措施以增强对大麻使用频率的治疗效果。一项研究在整个12个月的随访期内发现了相反的结果,因为与大麻使用频率总体降低相关的治疗后结局在仅采用CBT且不添加基于戒断或治疗依从性的应急管理时更有利。相比之下,药物咨询、社会支持、预防复发和正念冥想的证据较弱,因为已识别的研究较少,治疗结局信息不足且治疗依从率较低。与其他物质使用的治疗情况一致,总体戒断率相对较低,约四分之一的参与者在最终随访时戒断。最后,三项研究发现,在精神科诊所的参与者中,干预措施与常规治疗相当,且在所纳入的任何结局方面均未报告组间差异。
纳入的研究在许多方面存在异质性,关于最有效治疗持续时间、强度和类型的重要问题被提出并部分得到解决。研究结果的可推广性尚不清楚,最明显的原因是研究地点数量有限且寻求治疗者的样本同质化。戒断率较低且不稳定,尽管与其他物质使用的治疗情况相当。与最小治疗对照相比,心理社会干预至少在短期内以相当持久的方式降低了使用频率和依赖严重程度。在所纳入的干预类型中,基于MET和CBT的组合并采用基于戒断的激励措施进行超过四个疗程的强化干预在治疗大麻使用障碍方面得到了最一致的支持。