A Comparison of Prolonged Exposure Therapy, Pharmacotherapy, and Their Combination for PTSD

Last updated: December 4, 2024
Sponsor: University of Pennsylvania
Overall Status: Active - Recruiting

Phase

4

Condition

Post-traumatic Stress Disorders

Treatment

Prolonged Exposure Therapy

Pharmacotherapy with paroxetine or venlafaxine XR

Clinical Study ID

NCT04961190
1620949-1
CER-2020C1-19382
  • Ages 18-75
  • All Genders
  • Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Study Summary

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) remains a salient and debilitating problem, in the general population and for military veterans in particular. Several psychological and pharmacological treatments for PTSD have evidence to support their efficacy. However, the lack of comparative effectiveness data for PTSD treatments remains a major gap in the literature, which limits conclusions that can be drawn about which of these treatments work best. The current study will compare the effectiveness of PTSD treatments with the strongest evidentiary support - Prolonged Exposure (PE) therapy and pharmacotherapy with paroxetine or venlafaxine - as well as the combination of these two treatments. A randomized trial will be conducted with a large, diverse sample of veterans with PTSD (N = 300) recruited from 6 VA Medical Centers throughout the US. Participants will complete baseline assessments, followed by an active treatment phase (involving up to 14 sessions of PE and/or medication management) with mid (7 week) and posttreatment (14 week) assessments, and follow-up assessments at 27 and 40 weeks. Study outcomes will include PTSD severity, depression, quality of life and functioning, assessed via clinical ratings and self-report measures. Further, a range of demographic and clinically relevant variables (e.g., trauma type/number, resilience) will be collected at baseline and examined as potential predictors or moderators of treatment response, addressing another gap in the PTSD treatment literature. These data will be used to develop algorithms from predicting the optimal treatment for individual patients (i.e., "personalized advantage indices"; PAIs). Effectiveness of the treatments will be compared using multilevel modeling. PAIs will be developed by conducting bootstrapped analyses to select variables that predict or moderate outcomes (clinician rated PTSD severity at Week 14), followed by jacknife analyses to determine the magnitude of the predicted difference (representing an individual's "predicted advantage" of one treatment over the others).

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion

Inclusion Criteria:

  • DSM-5 diagnosis of Posttraumatic Stress Disorder

  • military veteran

  • fluent in English

  • willing to participate in PE, pharmacotherapy, or both

  • capable of providing informed consent

Exclusion

Exclusion Criteria:

  • suicidal ideation with intent and/or plan, or suicidal behavior in the past month

  • active psychosis

  • history of manic episode(s)

  • a failed trial of Prolonged Exposure therapy or paroxetine and venlafaxine XR

  • ongoing medical conditions or treatments that would contraindicate initiating thesetreatments (e.g., medications that have potential interactions with paroxetine andvenlafaxine such as MAO inhibitors)

Study Design

Total Participants: 300
Treatment Group(s): 2
Primary Treatment: Prolonged Exposure Therapy
Phase: 4
Study Start date:
May 25, 2022
Estimated Completion Date:
July 15, 2026

Study Description

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) remains a salient and debilitating problem, in the general population and for military veterans in particular. Several psychological and pharmacological treatments for PTSD have evidence to support their efficacy. However, the lack of comparative effectiveness trials for PTSD treatments remains a major gap in the literature, which limits conclusions that can be drawn about which of these treatments work best. In particular, trials directly comparing efficacious psychotherapies and pharmacotherapies are needed to inform clinical decision making for patients and providers. To address this gap, the proposed study will aim to compare the effectiveness of PTSD treatments with the strongest evidentiary support - Prolonged Exposure (PE) therapy and pharmacotherapy with paroxetine or venlafaxine - as well as the combination of these two treatments. A randomized trial in proposed with a large, diverse sample of veterans with PTSD (N = 300) recruited from 6 Veterans Affairs Medical Centers throughout the US (in Philadelphia, Coatesville, Milwaukee, Dallas, San Diego, and Palo Alto). Treatments conditions will reflect "real world" practice in these settings, and minimal exclusion criteria related to safety will be adopted, to maximize external validity. Participants will be permitted to complete treatment sessions in person or via telehealth (based on evidence for equivalent outcomes across these modalities), to maximize patient access, recruitment, and generalizability. Participants will complete baseline assessments, followed by 14 weeks of active treatment (involving up to 14 sessions of PE and/or medication management) with mid and posttreatment assessments after 7 and 14 weeks respectively, and then follow-up assessments at 27 and 40 weeks. Primary outcomes will include PTSD severity, depression symptoms, quality of life and functioning, assessed via clinical ratings and self-report measures. Further, a range of demographic and clinically relevant variables (e.g., trauma type/number, physiological arousal) will be collected at baseline and examined as potential predictors or moderators of treatment response, addressing another key gap in the PTSD treatment literature. Specifically, these data will be used to develop algorithms from predicting the optimal treatment for individual patients (i.e., "personalized advantage indices"; PAIs), a statistical approach which has advanced the depression treatment literature but has only been used in a limited capacity in PTSD research. The project will include an Advisory Board composed of clinician and patient representatives, in order to obtain stakeholder feedback at every stage of the study (from implementation to dissemination of findings). The effectiveness of the treatments will be compared using multilevel modeling. PAIs will be developed by conducting bootstrapped analyses to select variables that predict or moderate outcomes (Clinician Administered PTSD Scale severity ratings at Week 14), followed by leave-one-out cross-validation (i.e., jackknife) analyses to determine the magnitude of the predicted difference that results in each analysis representing that individuals "predicted advantage" (of one treatment over the others). We hypothesize that individuals who receive PE will have better outcomes than those who receive pharmacotherapy alone, based on existing data (e.g., cross study effect size comparisons), but have planned the study and sample to maximize statistical power in all analyses.

Connect with a study center

  • Birmingham VA Healthcare System

    Birmingham, Alabama 35233
    United States

    Active - Recruiting

  • VA Palo Alto Healthcare System

    Menlo Park, California 94025
    United States

    Site Not Available

  • VA San Diego Healthcare System

    San Diego, California 92161
    United States

    Active - Recruiting

  • Coatesville VA Medicial Center

    Coatesville, Pennsylvania 19320
    United States

    Active - Recruiting

  • Corporal Michael J. Crescenz VA Medical Center

    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104
    United States

    Active - Recruiting

  • VA North Texas Healthcare System

    Dallas, Texas 75216
    United States

    Active - Recruiting

  • Milwaukee VA Medical Center

    Milwaukee, Wisconsin 53295
    United States

    Active - Recruiting

Not the study for you?

Let us help you find the best match. Sign up as a volunteer and receive email notifications when clinical trials are posted in the medical category of interest to you.