de Haan Anke, Hitchcock Caitlin, Meiser-Stedman Richard, Landolt Markus A, Kuhn Isla, Black Melissa J, Klaus Kristel, Patel Shivam D, Fisher David J, Dalgleish Tim
Medical Research Council Cognition and Brain Sciences Unit, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
Department of Psychology - Division of Child and Adolescent Health Psychology, University of Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland.
BMJ Open. 2021 Feb 24;11(2):e047212. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-047212.
Trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapies are the first-line treatment for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in children and adolescents. Nevertheless, open questions remain with respect to efficacy: why does this first-line treatment not work for everyone? For whom does it work best? Individual clinical trials often do not provide sufficient statistical power to examine and substantiate moderating factors. To overcome the issue of limited power, an individual participant data meta-analysis of randomised trials evaluating forms of trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy in children and adolescents aged 6-18 years will be conducted.
We will update the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence guideline literature search from 2018 with an electronic search in the databases PsycINFO, MEDLINE, Embase, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and CINAHL with the terms (trauma* OR stress*) AND (cognitive therap* OR psychotherap*) AND (trial* OR review*). Electronic searches will be supplemented by a comprehensive grey literature search in archives and trial registries. Only randomised trials that used any manualised psychological treatment-that is a trauma-focused cognitive behavioural therapy for children and adolescents-will be included. The primary outcome variable will be child-reported posttraumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) post-treatment. Proxy-reports (teacher, parent and caregiver) will be analysed separately. Secondary outcomes will include follow-up assessments of PTSS, PTSD diagnosis and symptoms of comorbid disorders such as depression, anxiety-related and externalising problems. Random-effects models applying restricted maximum likelihood estimation will be used for all analyses. We will use the Revised Cochrane Risk of Bias tool to measure risk of bias.
Contributing study authors need to have permission to share anonymised data. Contributing studies will be required to remove patient identifiers before providing their data. Results will be published in a peer-reviewed journal and presented at international conferences.
CRD42019151954.
创伤聚焦认知行为疗法是儿童和青少年创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)的一线治疗方法。然而,在疗效方面仍存在一些未解决的问题:为什么这种一线治疗方法并非对所有人都有效?它对谁效果最佳?个别临床试验往往没有足够的统计效力来检验和证实调节因素。为克服效力有限的问题,将对评估6至18岁儿童和青少年创伤聚焦认知行为疗法形式的随机试验进行个体参与者数据荟萃分析。
我们将使用(创伤或应激)以及(认知疗法或心理疗法)以及(试验或综述)等检索词,在PsycINFO、MEDLINE、Embase、Cochrane对照试验中央注册库和CINAHL数据库中进行电子检索,更新2018年英国国家卫生与临床优化研究所指南文献检索。电子检索将辅以在档案和试验注册库中进行的全面灰色文献检索。仅纳入使用任何手册化心理治疗方法的随机试验,即针对儿童和青少年的创伤聚焦认知行为疗法。主要结局变量将是儿童报告的治疗后创伤后应激症状(PTSS)。代理报告(教师、父母和照料者)将单独进行分析。次要结局将包括PTSS的随访评估、PTSD诊断以及共病障碍的症状,如抑郁、焦虑相关问题和外化问题。所有分析将使用应用限制最大似然估计的随机效应模型。我们将使用修订后的Cochrane偏倚风险工具来衡量偏倚风险。
参与研究的作者需获得分享匿名数据的许可。参与研究在提供数据前需去除患者标识符。研究结果将发表在同行评审期刊上,并在国际会议上展示。
PROSPERO注册号:CRD42019151954。