Frontiers in Psychiatry (May 2020)

Efficacy and Moderators of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy for Psychosis Versus Other Psychological Interventions: An Individual-Participant Data Meta-Analysis

  • David T. Turner,
  • Mirjam Reijnders,
  • Mark van der Gaag,
  • Mark van der Gaag,
  • Eirini Karyotaki,
  • Lucia R. Valmaggia,
  • Lucia R. Valmaggia,
  • Steffen Moritz,
  • Tania Lecomte,
  • Douglas Turkington,
  • Rafael Penadés,
  • Helio Elkis,
  • Corinne Cather,
  • Frances Shawyer,
  • Kieron O’Connor,
  • Zhan-Jiang Li,
  • Eliza Martha de Paiva Barretto,
  • Pim Cuijpers

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00402
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11

Abstract

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BackgroundStudy-level meta-analyses have demonstrated the efficacy of cognitive–behavioural therapy for psychosis (CBTp). Limitations of conventional meta-analysis may be addressed using individual-participant-data (IPD). We aimed to determine a) whether results from IPD were consistent with study-level meta-analyses and b) whether demographic and clinical characteristics moderate treatment outcome.MethodsWe systematically searched PubMed, Embase, PsychInfo and CENTRAL. Authors of RCTs comparing CBTp with other psychological interventions were contacted to obtain original databases. Hierarchical mixed effects models were used to examine efficacy for psychotic symptoms. Patient characteristics were investigated as moderators of symptoms at post-treatment. Sensitivity analyses were conducted for risk of bias, treatment format and study characteristics.ResultsWe included 14 of 23 eligible RCTs in IPD meta-analyses including 898 patients. Ten RCTs minimised risk of bias. There was no significant difference in efficacy between RCTs providing IPD and those not (p >0.05). CBTp was superior vs. other interventions for total psychotic symptoms and PANSS general symptoms. No demographic or clinical characteristics were robustly demonstrated as moderators of positive, negative, general or total psychotic symptoms at post-treatment. Sensitivity analyses demonstrated that number of sessions moderated the impact of treatment assignment (CBTp or other therapies) on total psychotic symptoms (p = 0.02).ConclusionsIPD suggest that patient characteristics, including severity of psychotic symptoms, do not significantly influence treatment outcome in psychological interventions for psychosis while investing in sufficient dosage of CBTp is important. IPD provide roughly equivalent efficacy estimates to study-level data although significant benefit was not replicated for positive symptoms. We encourage authors to ensure IPD is accessible for future research.

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