McMurran Mary, Crawford Mike J, Reilly Joe, Delport Juan, McCrone Paul, Whitham Diane, Tan Wei, Duggan Conor, Montgomery Alan A, Williams Hywel C, Adams Clive E, Jin Huajie, Lewis Matthew, Day Florence
Institute of Mental Health, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, UK.
Centre for Mental Health, Imperial College London, London, UK.
Health Technol Assess. 2016 Jul;20(52):1-250. doi: 10.3310/hta20520.
If effective, less intensive treatments for people with personality disorder have the potential to serve more people.
To compare the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of psychoeducation with problem-solving (PEPS) therapy plus usual treatment against usual treatment alone in improving social problem-solving with adults with personality disorder.
Multisite two-arm, parallel-group, pragmatic randomised controlled superiority trial.
Community mental health services in three NHS trusts in England and Wales.
Community-dwelling adults with any personality disorder recruited from community mental health services.
Up to four individual sessions of psychoeducation, a collaborative dialogue about personality disorder, followed by 12 group sessions of problem-solving therapy to help participants learn a process for solving interpersonal problems.
The primary outcome was measured by the Social Functioning Questionnaire (SFQ). Secondary outcomes were service use (general practitioner records), mood (measured via the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale) and client-specified three main problems rated by severity. We studied the mechanism of change using the Social Problem-Solving Inventory. Costs were identified using the Client Service Receipt Inventory and quality of life was identified by the European Quality of Life-5 Dimensions questionnaire. Research assistants blinded to treatment allocation collected follow-up information.
There were 739 people referred for the trial and 444 were eligible. More adverse events in the PEPS arm led to a halt to recruitment after 306 people were randomised (90% of planned sample size); 154 participants received PEPS and 152 received usual treatment. The mean age was 38 years and 67% were women. Follow-up at 72 weeks after randomisation was completed for 62% of participants in the usual-treatment arm and 73% in the PEPS arm. Intention-to-treat analyses compared individuals as randomised, regardless of treatment received or availability of 72-week follow-up SFQ data. Median attendance at psychoeducation sessions was approximately 90% and for problem-solving sessions was approximately 50%. PEPS therapy plus usual treatment was no more effective than usual treatment alone for the primary outcome [adjusted difference in means for SFQ -0.73 points, 95% confidence interval (CI) -1.83 to 0.38 points; p = 0.19], any of the secondary outcomes or social problem-solving. Over the follow-up, PEPS costs were, on average, £182 less than for usual treatment. It also resulted in 0.0148 more quality-adjusted life-years. Neither difference was statistically significant. At the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence thresholds, the intervention had a 64% likelihood of being the more cost-effective option. More adverse events, mainly incidents of self-harm, occurred in the PEPS arm, but the difference was not significant (adjusted incidence rate ratio 1.24, 95% CI 0.93 to 1.64).
There was possible bias in adverse event recording because of dependence on self-disclosure or reporting by the clinical team. Non-completion of problem-solving sessions and non-standardisation of usual treatment were limitations.
We found no evidence to support the use of PEPS therapy alongside standard care for improving social functioning of adults with personality disorder living in the community.
We aim to investigate adverse events by accessing centrally held NHS data on deaths and hospitalisation for all PEPS trial participants.
Current Controlled Trials ISRCTN70660936.
This project was funded by the National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Health Technology Assessment programme and will be published in full in Health Technology Assessment; Vol. 20, No. 52. See the NIHR Journals Library website for further project information.
如果有效,针对人格障碍患者的强度较低的治疗方法有可能惠及更多人。
比较心理教育与问题解决(PEPS)疗法加常规治疗与单纯常规治疗在改善人格障碍成年患者社会问题解决能力方面的临床疗效和成本效益。
多中心双臂、平行组、实用随机对照优势试验。
英格兰和威尔士三个国民保健服务信托基金的社区心理健康服务机构。
从社区心理健康服务机构招募的患有任何人格障碍的社区居住成年人。
最多进行四次个体心理教育课程,即关于人格障碍的协作对话,随后进行12次问题解决疗法小组课程,以帮助参与者学习解决人际问题的过程。
主要结局通过社会功能问卷(SFQ)测量。次要结局包括服务使用情况(全科医生记录)、情绪(通过医院焦虑抑郁量表测量)以及患者指定的按严重程度评级的三个主要问题。我们使用社会问题解决量表研究变化机制。使用客户服务收据清单确定成本,通过欧洲生活质量五维度问卷确定生活质量。对治疗分配不知情的研究助理收集随访信息。
共有739人被转诊参加试验,444人符合条件。PEPS组更多的不良事件导致在随机分配306人(计划样本量的90%)后停止招募;154名参与者接受了PEPS治疗,152名接受了常规治疗。平均年龄为38岁,67%为女性。常规治疗组62%的参与者和PEPS组73%的参与者在随机分组后72周完成了随访。意向性分析比较随机分组的个体,无论接受何种治疗或是否有72周随访的SFQ数据。心理教育课程的平均出勤率约为90%,问题解决课程的平均出勤率约为50%。对于主要结局,PEPS疗法加常规治疗并不比单纯常规治疗更有效[SFQ均值的调整差异为-0.73分,95%置信区间(CI)为-1.83至0.38分;p = 0.19],对于任何次要结局或社会问题解决能力也是如此。在随访期间,PEPS的成本平均比常规治疗少182英镑。它还带来了多0.0148个质量调整生命年。两者差异均无统计学意义。按照国家卫生与保健优化研究所的阈值,该干预措施有64%的可能性是更具成本效益的选择。PEPS组发生了更多的不良事件,主要是自残事件,但差异不显著(调整后的发病率比为1.24,95%CI为0.93至1.64)。
由于依赖自我披露或临床团队报告,不良事件记录可能存在偏差。问题解决课程未完成以及常规治疗的非标准化是局限性所在。
我们没有发现证据支持在标准护理基础上使用PEPS疗法来改善社区中人格障碍成年患者的社会功能。
我们旨在通过获取国民保健服务集中保存的所有PEPS试验参与者的死亡和住院数据来调查不良事件。
当前受控试验ISRCTN70660936。
该项目由国家卫生研究所(NIHR)卫生技术评估计划资助,将在《卫生技术评估》上全文发表;第20卷,第52期。有关更多项目信息,请访问NIHR期刊图书馆网站。