Suomi Aino, Evans Lynette, Rodgers Bryan, Taplin Stephanie, Cowlishaw Sean
Australian Catholic University, Institute of Child Protection Studies, Canberra, Australia.
The University of Melbourne, Melbourne Graduate School of Education, Melbourne, Australia.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 Dec 4;12(12):CD011257. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD011257.pub2.
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) refers to an anxiety or trauma- and stressor-related disorder that is linked to personal or vicarious exposure to traumatic events. PTSD is associated with a range of adverse individual outcomes (e.g. poor health, suicidality) and significant interpersonal problems which include difficulties in intimate and family relationships. A range of couple- and family-based treatments have been suggested as appropriate interventions for families impacted by PTSD.
The objectives of this review were to: (1) assess the effects of couple and family therapies for adult PTSD, relative to 'no treatment' conditions, 'standard care', and structured or non-specific individual or group psychological therapies; (2) examine the clinical characteristics of studies that influence the relative effects of these therapies; and (3) critically evaluate methodological characteristics of studies that may bias the research findings.
We searched MEDLINE (1950- ), Embase (1980- ) and PsycINFO (1967- ) via the Cochrane Common Mental Disorders Controlled Trials Register (CCMDCTR) to 2014, then directly via Ovid after this date. We also searched the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (CENTRAL) via the Cochrane Library. We conducted supplementary searches of PTSDPubs (all available years) (this database is formerly known as PILOTS (Published International Literature on Traumatic Stress)). We manually searched the early editions of key journals and screened the reference lists and bibliographies of included studies to identify other relevant research. We also contacted the authors of included trials for unpublished information. Studies have been incorporated from searches to 3 March 2018.
Eligible studies were randomised controlled trials (RCTs) of couple or family therapies for PTSD in adult samples. The review considered any type of therapy that was intended to treat intact couples or families where at least one adult family member met criteria for PTSD. It was required that participants were diagnosed with PTSD according to recognised classification systems.
We used the standard methodological procedures prescribed by Cochrane. Three review authors screened all titles and abstracts and two authors independently extracted data from each study deemed eligible and assessed the risk of bias for each study. We used odds ratios (OR) to summarise the effects of interventions for dichotomous outcomes, and standardised mean differences (SMD) to summarise post-treatment between-group differences on continuous measures.
We included four trials in the review. Two studies examined the effects of cognitive behavioural conjoint/couple's therapy (CBCT) relative to a wait list control condition, although one of these studies only reported outcomes in relation to relationship satisfaction. One study examined the effects of structural approach therapy (SAT) relative to a PTSD family education (PFE) programme; and one examined the effects of adjunct behavioural family therapy (BFT) but failed to report any outcome variables in sufficient detail - we did not include it in the meta-analysis. One trial with 40 couples (80 participants) showed that CBCT was more effective than wait list control in reducing PTSD severity (SMD -1.12, 95% CI -1.79 to -0.45; low-quality evidence), anxiety (SMD -0.93, 95% CI -1.58 to -0.27; very low-quality evidence) and depression (SMD -0.66, 95% CI -1.30 to -0.02; very low-quality evidence) at post-treatment for the primary patient with PTSD. Data from two studies indicated that treatment and control groups did not differ significantly according to relationship satisfaction (SMD 1.07, 95% CI -0.17 to 2.31; very low-quality evidence); and one study showed no significant differences regarding depression (SMD 0.28, 95% CI -0.35 to 0.90; very low-quality evidence) or anxiety symptoms (SMD 0.15, 95% CI -0.47 to 0.77; very low-quality evidence) for the partner of the patient with PTSD. One trial with 57 couples (114 participants) showed that SAT was more effective than PFE in reducing PTSD severity for the primary patient (SMD -1.32, 95% CI -1.90 to -0.74; low-quality evidence) at post-treatment. There was no evidence of differences on the other outcomes, including relationship satisfaction (SMD 0.01, 95% CI -0.51 to 0.53; very low-quality evidence), depression (SMD 0.21, 95% CI -0.31 to 0.73; very low-quality evidence) and anxiety (SMD -0.16, 95% CI -0.68 to 0.36; very low-quality evidence) for intimate partners; and depression (SMD -0.28, 95% CI -0.81 to 0.24; very low-quality evidence) or anxiety (SMD -0.34, 95% CI -0.87 to 0.18; very low-quality evidence) for the primary patient. Two studies reported on adverse events and dropout rates, and no significant differences between groups were observed. Two studies were classified as having a 'low' or 'unclear' risk of bias in most domains, except for performance bias that was rated 'high'. Two studies had significant amounts of missing information resulting in 'unclear' risk of bias. There were too few studies available to conduct subgroup analyses.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There are few trials of couple-based therapies for PTSD and evidence is insufficient to determine whether these offer substantive benefits when delivered alone or in addition to psychological interventions. Preliminary RCTs suggest, however, that couple-based therapies for PTSD may be potentially beneficial for reducing PTSD symptoms, and there is a need for additional trials of both adjunctive and stand-alone interventions with couples or families which target reduced PTSD symptoms, mental health problems of family members and dyadic measures of relationship quality.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)是一种与焦虑或创伤及应激源相关的障碍,与个人亲身经历或间接接触创伤性事件有关。PTSD与一系列不良个体后果(如健康状况不佳、自杀倾向)以及严重的人际关系问题相关,其中包括亲密关系和家庭关系方面的困难。一系列基于夫妻和家庭的治疗方法已被建议作为对受PTSD影响家庭的适当干预措施。
本综述的目的是:(1)评估夫妻和家庭治疗对成人PTSD的效果,相对于“无治疗”、“标准护理”以及结构化或非特定的个体或团体心理治疗;(2)研究影响这些治疗相对效果的研究的临床特征;(3)严格评估可能使研究结果产生偏差的研究方法学特征。
我们通过Cochrane常见精神障碍对照试验注册库(CCMDCTR)检索MEDLINE(1950年起)、Embase(1980年起)和PsycINFO(1967年起)至2014年,此后通过Ovid直接检索。我们还通过Cochrane图书馆检索Cochrane对照试验中心注册库(CENTRAL)。我们对PTSDPubs(所有可用年份)进行了补充检索(该数据库前身为PILOTS(创伤应激相关国际文献发表库))。我们手动检索了关键期刊的早期版本,并筛选了纳入研究的参考文献列表和书目以识别其他相关研究。我们还联系了纳入试验的作者以获取未发表的信息。纳入的研究截至2018年3月3日的检索结果。
符合条件的研究是针对成人样本中PTSD的夫妻或家庭治疗的随机对照试验(RCT)。本综述考虑了旨在治疗完整夫妻或家庭的任何类型的治疗,其中至少一名成年家庭成员符合PTSD标准。要求参与者根据公认的分类系统被诊断为PTSD。
我们使用Cochrane规定的标准方法程序。三位综述作者筛选所有标题和摘要,两位作者独立从每项被认为符合条件的研究中提取数据,并评估每项研究的偏倚风险。我们使用比值比(OR)总结二分结局的干预效果,使用标准化均值差(SMD)总结连续测量指标上治疗后组间差异。
我们在综述中纳入了四项试验。两项研究考察了认知行为联合/夫妻治疗(CBCT)相对于等待列表对照条件的效果,尽管其中一项研究仅报告了与关系满意度相关的结局。一项研究考察了结构方法治疗(SAT)相对于PTSD家庭教育(PFE)计划的效果;一项研究考察了辅助行为家庭治疗(BFT)的效果,但未足够详细地报告任何结局变量——我们未将其纳入荟萃分析。一项有40对夫妻(80名参与者)的试验表明,对于患有PTSD的主要患者,CBCT在治疗后在降低PTSD严重程度(SMD -1.12,95% CI -1.79至 -0.45;低质量证据)、焦虑(SMD -0.93,95% CI -1.58至 -0.27;极低质量证据)和抑郁(SMD -0.66,95% CI -1.30至 -0.02;极低质量证据)方面比等待列表对照更有效。两项研究的数据表明,治疗组和对照组在关系满意度方面无显著差异(SMD 1.07,95% CI -0.17至2.31;极低质量证据);一项研究表明,对于患有PTSD患者的伴侣,在抑郁(SMD 0.28,95% CI -0.35至0.90;极低质量证据)或焦虑症状(SMD 0.15,95% CI -0.47至0.77;极低质量证据)方面无显著差异。一项有57对夫妻(114名参与者)的试验表明,对于主要患者,SAT在治疗后在降低PTSD严重程度方面比PFE更有效(SMD -1.32,95% CI -1.90至 -0.74;低质量证据)。在其他结局方面,包括亲密伴侣的关系满意度(SMD 0.01,95% CI -0.51至0.53;极低质量证据)、抑郁(SMD 0.21,95% CI -0.31至0.73;极低质量证据)和焦虑(SMD -0.16,95% CI -0.68至0.36;极低质量证据);以及主要患者的抑郁(SMD -0.28,95% CI -0.81至0.24;极低质量证据)或焦虑(SMD -0.34,95% CI -0.87至0.18;极低质量证据),均未发现差异。两项研究报告了不良事件和脱落率,未观察到组间有显著差异。两项研究在大多数领域被归类为具有“低”或“不清楚”的偏倚风险,除了表现偏倚被评为“高”。两项研究有大量缺失信息,导致偏倚风险“不清楚”。由于可用研究数量太少,无法进行亚组分析。
针对PTSD的夫妻治疗试验很少,证据不足以确定单独提供这些治疗或作为心理干预的补充是否能带来实质性益处。然而,初步的随机对照试验表明,针对PTSD的夫妻治疗可能对减轻PTSD症状有潜在益处,并且需要对针对减轻PTSD症状、家庭成员心理健康问题以及关系质量二元测量的夫妻或家庭辅助和独立干预进行更多试验。