Psychoeducation with problem-solving (PEPS) therapy for adults with personality disorder: a pragmatic randomised controlled trial to determine the clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of a manualised intervention to improve social functioning

被引:8
|
作者
McMurran, Mary [1 ]
Crawford, Mike J. [2 ]
Reilly, Joe [3 ,4 ]
Delport, Juan [5 ]
McCrone, Paul [6 ]
Whitham, Diane [7 ]
Tan, Wei [7 ]
Duggan, Conor [1 ,8 ]
Montgomery, Alan A. [7 ]
Williams, Hywel C. [7 ]
Adams, Clive E. [1 ]
Jin, Huajie [6 ]
Lewis, Matthew [5 ]
Day, Florence [7 ]
机构
[1] Univ Nottingham, Inst Mental Hlth, Nottingham, England
[2] Imperial Coll London, Ctr Mental Hlth, London, England
[3] Univ Durham, Ctr Integrated Hlth Care Res, Sch Med Pharm & Hlth, Durham, England
[4] Tees Esk & Wear Valleys NHS Fdn Trust, Middlesbrough, Cleveland, England
[5] Cwm Taf Univ, Hlth Board, Ctr Psychol Therapies, Mt Ash, Wales
[6] Kings Coll London, Inst Psychiat, London, England
[7] Univ Nottingham, Nottingham Clin Trials Unit, Nottingham, England
[8] Partnerships Care, Nottingham, England
关键词
DIALECTICAL BEHAVIOR-THERAPY; PSYCHOLOGICAL TREATMENTS; EMOTIONAL PREDICTABILITY; PHYSICAL HEALTH; ADVERSE EVENTS; BORDERLINE; PEOPLE; PSYCHOTHERAPY; OUTPATIENTS; CONSORT;
D O I
10.3310/hta20520
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: If effective, less intensive treatments for people with personality disorder have the potential to serve more people. Objectives: 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. Design: Multisite two-arm, parallel-group, pragmatic randomised controlled superiority trial. Setting: Community mental health services in three NHS trusts in England and Wales. Participants: Community-dwelling adults with any personality disorder recruited from community mental health services. Interventions: 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. Main outcome measures: 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. Results: 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 pound 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). Limitations: 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. Conclusions: 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.
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页码:1 / +
页数:251
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