Department of Psychiatry, Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI, United States of America; Center for Clinical Management Research, VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System, Ann Arbor, MI, United States of America.
Department of Psychiatry, Michigan Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI, United States of America.
Contemp Clin Trials. 2023 Jun;129:107182. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2023.107182. Epub 2023 Apr 10.
Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) disproportionately affects low-income individuals and is untreated in 70% of those affected. One third of low-income Americans are treated in Federally Qualified Health Centers (FQHCs), which do not have the capacity to provide all patients with first-line treatments such as Prolonged Exposure (PE). To address this problem, FQHCs could use low-intensity interventions (e.g., Clinician-Supported PTSD Coach: CS PTSD Coach) and medium-intensity interventions (e.g., PE for Primary Care: PE-PC) to treat PTSD with fewer resources. However, some patients will still require high-intensity treatments (e.g., full-length PE) for sustained clinical benefit. Thus, there is a critical need to develop stepped-care models for PTSD in FQHCs.
We are conducting a Sequential, Multiple Assignment, Randomized Trial (SMART) with 430 adults with PTSD in FQHCs. Participants are initially randomized to CS PTSD Coach or PE-PC. After four sessions, early responders step down to lower frequency interaction within their assigned initial treatment strategy. Slow responders are re-randomized to either continue their initial treatment strategy or step up to Full PE for an additional eight weeks. The specific aims are to test the effectiveness of initiating treatment with PE-PC versus CS PTSD Coach in reducing PTSD symptoms and to test the effectiveness of second-stage strategies (continue versus step-up to Full PE) for slow responders.
This project will provide critical evidence to inform the development of an effective stepped-care model for PTSD. Testing scalable, sustainable sequences of PTSD treatments delivered in low-resource community health centers will improve clinical practice for PTSD.
创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)在低收入人群中发病率不成比例,且 70%的患者未得到治疗。三分之一的美国低收入人群在合格的联邦医疗中心(FQHCs)接受治疗,但这些中心没有能力为所有患者提供一线治疗,如延长暴露疗法(PE)。为了解决这个问题,FQHCs 可以使用低强度干预措施(例如,临床支持 PTSD 教练:CS PTSD Coach)和中强度干预措施(例如,初级保健中的 PE:PE-PC),以较少的资源治疗 PTSD。然而,一些患者仍需要高强度治疗(例如,完整长度的 PE)以获得持续的临床获益。因此,在 FQHCs 中为 PTSD 开发分级护理模型至关重要。
我们正在 FQHCs 中对 430 名 PTSD 成年人进行一项连续、多项任务、随机试验(SMART)。参与者最初随机分配到 CS PTSD Coach 或 PE-PC。经过四节课程后,早期反应者在其最初治疗策略中减少互动频率。反应较慢者重新随机分配,要么继续他们的初始治疗策略,要么再进行八周的全长度 PE。具体目标是测试以 PE-PC 还是 CS PTSD Coach 开始治疗以减少 PTSD 症状的有效性,并测试针对反应较慢者的第二阶段策略(继续或升级到全长度 PE)的有效性。
该项目将提供关键证据,为 PTSD 的有效分级护理模型的发展提供信息。在资源有限的社区卫生中心中测试可扩展、可持续的 PTSD 治疗序列,将改善 PTSD 的临床实践。