History of Sexual Trauma Moderates Psychotherapy Outcome for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder

John C Markowitz, Yuval Neria, Karina Lovell, Page E Van Meter, Eva Petkova

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Abstract

Background: Moderators of differential psychotherapy outcome for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD¬) are rare, yet have crucial clinical importance. We tested the moderating effects of trauma type for three psychotherapies in 110 unmedicated patients with chronic DSM-IV PTSD. Methods: Patients were randomized to 14 weeks of Prolonged Exposure (PE, N=38), Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT, N=40), or Relaxation Therapy (RT, N=32). The Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS) was the primary outcome measure. Moderator candidates were trauma type: interpersonal, sexual, physical. We fit a regression model for week 14 CAPS as a function of treatment (a three-level factor), an indicator of trauma type presence/absence, and their interactions, controlling for baseline CAPS, and evaluated potential confounds. Results: Thirty-nine (35%) patients reported sexual, 68 (62%) physical, and 102 (93%) interpersonal trauma. Baseline CAPS scores did not differ by presence/absence of trauma types. Sexual trauma as PTSD criterion A significantly moderated treatment effect: whereas all therapies had similar efficacy among non-sexually-traumatized patients, IPT had greater efficacy among sexually-traumatized patients (efficacy difference with and without sexual trauma: IPT vs. PE and IPT vs. RT p’s<.05), specifically in PTSD symptom clusters B and D (p’s<0.05). Conclusions: Few studies have assessed effects of varying trauma types on effects of differing psychotherapies. In this exploratory study, sexual trauma moderated PTSD outcomes of three therapies: IPT showed greater benefit for sexually traumatized patients than PE or RT. The IPT focus on affect to help patients determine trust in their current environments may particularly benefit patients who have suffered sexual assault. Clinicaltrials.g¬ov Identifier: NCT00739765
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)692-700
Number of pages8
JournalDepression and Anxiety
Volume34
Issue number8
Early online date4 Apr 2017
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2017

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