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Short-term psychodynamic psychotherapy for functional somatic disorders: A systematic review & meta-analysis of within-treatment effects, 2021, Abbass

Discussion in 'Other psychosomatic news and research' started by Andy, Apr 7, 2021.

  1. Andy

    Andy Committee Member

    Messages:
    21,914
    Location:
    Hampshire, UK
    Abstract

    Objective
    A recent meta-analysis of 17 randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) showed that Short-term Psychodynamic Psychotherapy (STPP) for functional somatic disorders (FSD) reduced somatic symptoms compared to wait list, minimal treatment, and treatment-as-usual controls. A clinically important yet unanswered question is how much improvement patients experience within STPP treatment.

    Methods
    Following a systematic search, we identified STPP trials presenting data at baseline and post-treatment/follow-up. Meta-analyses determined the magnitude of changes in somatic symptoms and other outcomes from before to after STPP, and analyses examined effect sizes as a function of study, therapy, and patient variables.

    Results
    We identified 37 trials (22 pre-post studies and 15 RCTs) totaling 2094 patients treated an average of 13.34 sessions for a range of FSD. Across all studies, somatic symptoms improved significantly from pre-treatment to short-term follow-up with a large effect size (SMD = −1.07), which was maintained at long-term follow-up (SMD = −0.90). After excluding two outlier studies, effects at short- and medium-term follow-up remained significant but were somewhat reduced in magnitude (e.g., short-term SMD = −0.73). Secondary outcomes including anxiety, depression, disability, and interpersonal problems had medium to large effects. Effects were larger for studies of STPP that were longer than 12 sessions or used an emotion-focused type of STPP, and for chronic pain or gastrointestinal conditions than for functional neurological disorders.

    Conclusions
    STPP results in moderate to large improvements in multiple outcome domains that are sustained in long-term follow-up. STPP is an effective treatment option for FSD and should be included in treatment guidelines.

    Paywall, https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0022399921001185
     
  2. Trish

    Trish Moderator Staff Member

    Messages:
    52,225
    Location:
    UK
    Aren't clinical trials supposed to base their claims of success on comparison with a control group, not within group improvement? If I have understood this correctly this is the same problem as the PACE LTFU paper that made much of within group improvement being sustained, and downplayed the fact that it was a null result for between group comparison, and the same with FITNET.
     
    Mithriel, Wyva and Andy like this.

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