Comparability of Patients in Trials of eHealth and Face-to-Face Psychotherapeutic Interventions for Depression: Meta-synthesis.
Abstract: Background: Depressive disorders (DDs) are a public health problem. Face-to-face psychotherapeutic interventions are a
first-line option for their treatment in adults. There is a growing interest in eHealth interventions to maximize accessibility for
effective treatments. Thus, the number of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of eHealth psychotherapeutic interventions has
increased, and these interventions are being offered to patients. However, it is unknown whether patients with DDs differ in
internet-based and face-to-face intervention trials. This information is essential to gain knowledge about eHealth trials’ external
validity.
Objective: We aimed to compare the baseline characteristics of patients with DDs included in the RCTs of eHealth and
face-to-face psychotherapeutic interventions with a cognitive component.
Methods: In this meta-epidemiological study, we searched 5 databases between 1990 and November 2017 (MEDLINE, Embase,
PsycINFO, Google Scholar, and the database of Cuijpers et al). We included RCTs of psychotherapeutic interventions with a
cognitive component (eg, cognitive therapy, cognitive behavioral therapy [CBT], or interpersonal therapy) delivered face-to-face
or via the internet to adults with DDs. Each included study had a matching study for predefined criteria to allow a valid comparison
of characteristics and was classified as a face-to-face (CBT) or eHealth (internet CBT) intervention trial. Two authors selected
the studies, extracted data, and resolved disagreements by discussion. We tested whether predefined baseline characteristics
differed in face-to-face and internet-based trials using a mixed-effects model and testing for differences with z tests (statistical
significance set at .05). For continuous outcomes, we also estimated the difference in means between subgroups with 95% CI.
Results: We included 58 RCTs (29 matching pairs) with 3846 participants (female: n=2803, 72.9%) and mean ages ranging
from 20-74 years. White participants were the most frequent (from 63.6% to 100%). Other socioeconomic characteristics were
poorly described. The participants presented DDs of different severity measured with heterogeneous instruments. Internet CBT
trials had a longer depression duration at baseline (7.19 years higher, CI 95% 2.53-11.84; 10.0 vs 2.8 years; P=.002), but the
proportion of patients with previous depression treatment was lower (24.8% vs 42%; P=.04). Subgroup analyses found no evidence
of differences for the remaining baseline characteristics: age, gender, education, living area, depression severity, history of
depression, actual antidepressant medication, actual physical comorbidity, actual mental comorbidity, study dropout, quality of
life, having children, family status, and employment. We could not compare proficiency with computers due to the insufficient
number of studies.
Conclusions:
The baseline characteristics of patients with DDs included in the RCTs of eHealth and face-to-face psychotherapeutic interventions are generally similar. However, patients in eHealth trials had a longer duration of depression, and a lower proportion had received previous depression treatment, which might indicate that eHealth trials attract patients who postpone earlier treatment attempts.
Files in this item
Files | Size | Format | View |
---|---|---|---|
2.- Comparability of Patients ... | 288.3Kb | View/ |
Collections
- MEDICINA [566]