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Journal Club. Alcohol and Health: Current Evidence September –October 2004. Featured Article. A Randomized Effectiveness Trial of Stepped Collaborative Care for Acutely Injured Trauma Survivors Zatzick D, et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2004;61(5):498 –506. Study Objective.
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Journal Club Alcohol and Health: Current Evidence September–October 2004 www.alcoholandhealth.org
Featured Article A Randomized Effectiveness Trial of Stepped Collaborative Care for Acutely Injured Trauma Survivors Zatzick D, et al. Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2004;61(5):498–506. www.alcoholandhealth.org
Study Objective To assess the effectiveness of a multifaceted collaborative care intervention for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and alcohol abuse www.alcoholandhealth.org
Study Design A randomized controlled trial comparing collaborative care with usual care in injured surgical inpatients www.alcoholandhealth.org
Assessing Validity of an Article about Therapy • Are the results valid? • What are the results? • How can I apply the results to patient care? www.alcoholandhealth.org
Are the Results Valid? • Were patients randomized? • Was randomization concealed? • Were patients analyzed in the groups to which they were randomized? • Were patients in the treatment and control groups similar with respect to known prognostic variables? www.alcoholandhealth.org
Are the Results Valid? (cont.) • Were patients aware of group allocation? • Were clinicians aware of group allocation? • Were outcome assessors aware of group allocation? • Was follow-up complete? www.alcoholandhealth.org
Were patients randomized? • Yes, patients were randomized. • Randomization was stratified by • PTSD symptom severity; • depressive symptom severity; and • alcohol and stimulant toxicology results (on admission). www.alcoholandhealth.org
Was randomization concealed? • It is not clear whether randomization was concealed. • Patients were randomized after they completed an initial detailed research interview. www.alcoholandhealth.org
Were patients analyzed in the groups to which they were randomized? • Yes, analyses were done on an intention-to-treat sample. www.alcoholandhealth.org
Age Sex Education Income Race Marital status Intentional injury Injury severity Number of prior traumas PTSD and depressive symptom severity Admission blood alcohol Presence of medical comorbidity Inpatient length of stay Days on the surgical ward before enrollment Were the patients in the treatment and control groups similar? Groups did not differ significantly on the following: There was a non-significant trend toward more alcohol abuse or dependence in the collaborative care group. www.alcoholandhealth.org
Were patients aware of group allocation? • Yes: • They provided informed consent for the research. • They knew if they had received case management, counseling, and/or pharmacotherapy. • Subjects were not blinded to the content of the interventions. www.alcoholandhealth.org
Were clinicians aware of group allocation? • Yes, clinicians were aware of group allocation in order to provide the intervention. www.alcoholandhealth.org
Were outcome assessors aware of group allocation? • Outcome assessors may have been aware of group allocation. • There was no blinding. www.alcoholandhealth.org
Was follow-up complete? • One subject in the intervention group dropped out after randomization, but before intervention (a post-randomization dropout). • 83%–88% of subjects completed the 1-, 3-, 6-, and/or 12-month follow-up. www.alcoholandhealth.org
What Are the Results? • How large was the treatment effect? • How precise was the estimate of the treatment effect? www.alcoholandhealth.org
How large was the treatment effect? Results Over a Year of Follow-up www.alcoholandhealth.org
How precise was the estimate of the treatment effect? • Precision is reflected in the confidence intervals. • The results were statistically significant. www.alcoholandhealth.org
How Can I Apply the Results to Patient Care? • Were the study patients similar to the patients in my practice? • Were all clinically important outcomes considered? • Are the likely treatment benefits worth the potential harm and costs? www.alcoholandhealth.org
Were the study patients similar to those in my practice? • Patients with impaired cognition, self-inflicted injuries or psychosis, incarceration, or recent history of violence were excluded. • They also had to have significant PTSD or depressive symptoms to be in the study. • Almost 70% were men, and most had previous trauma. www.alcoholandhealth.org
Were all clinically important outcomes considered? • The following were not assessed: • recurrent injury • alcohol problems/symptoms • alcohol consequences were assessed with a diagnostic interview • PTSD diagnosis • diagnosis was assessed with a symptom checklist, not a gold standard diagnostic interview • functional status outcomes • costs www.alcoholandhealth.org
Are the likely treatment benefits worth the potential harm and costs? • The treatment benefits may be worth the potential harm and costs. • However, determining so will require additional study. www.alcoholandhealth.org
Summary • A collaborative care intervention, compared with usual care including community referrals, • prevented a small increase in the prevalence of PTSD; and • decreased the prevalence of alcohol abuse or dependence at 12 months. www.alcoholandhealth.org
Summary (cont.) • The study had some threats to validity. • The collaborative care group had a higher proportion of patients with alcohol abuse or dependence (a non-significant trend). • However, this imbalance should not have been an issue as it would have biased the study against finding an effect of the intervention. • Unconcealed randomization, loss to follow-up, and lack of blinding could have introduced biases favoring the intervention of unknown magnitude. www.alcoholandhealth.org
Summary (cont.) • Additional study of the findings’ clinical importance and the costs involved will be needed before such interventions are implemented widely. www.alcoholandhealth.org