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Recent Advances in Psychological Treatments for PTSD

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Terence M. Keane, Ph.D. - Professor & Vice Chairman of Psychiatry; Assistant Dean for Research, | VA Boston Healthcare System; Boston University School of Medicine Hogan Conference Center College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, MA September 15, 2016 Recent Advances in Psychological Treatments for PTSD
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Page 1: Recent Advances in Psychological Treatments for PTSD

Terence M. Keane, Ph.D. - Professor & Vice Chairman of Psychiatry; Assistant Dean for Research, | VA Boston Healthcare System; Boston University School of Medicine

Hogan Conference CenterCollege of the Holy Cross, Worcester, MA

September 15, 2016

Recent Advances in Psychological Treatments for PTSD

Page 2: Recent Advances in Psychological Treatments for PTSD

COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTSPublic Employee Retirement Administration CommissionFive Middlesex Avenue, Suite 304 | Somerville, MA 02145Phone: 617-666-4446 | Fax: 617-628-4002TTY: 617-591-8917 | Web: www.mass.gov/perac

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PERAC EMERGING ISSUES FORUM 2016 | 1

 RECENT  ADVANCES  IN  PSYCHOLOGICAL  

TREATMENTS  FOR  PTSD

1  

TERENCE  M.  KEANE,  PH.D.    VA  Boston  Healthcare  System    

Professor  &  Vice  Chairman  of  Psychiatry  Assistant  Dean  for  Research    

Boston  University  School  of  Medicine    

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Developing and Validating Treatments

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A  NEW  GENERATION  OF  VETERANS  

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Page 5: Recent Advances in Psychological Treatments for PTSD

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PERAC EMERGING ISSUES FORUM 2016 | 3

Psychosocial Exposure therapy

Cognitive Processing Tx Present Centered Tx

EMDR Anxiety Mgmt. Skills

PTSD  Treatment  OpEons    (Foa,  Keane,  Friedman,  &  Cohen  2008)  

Pharmacological

SSRIs

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Common  elements  of  PTSD  Treatment?  

•  Disclosure  of  the  elements  of  the  experience.  •  Direct  therapeuEc  exposure  to  events.  

–  Countering  avoidance  strategies.    •  EducaEon  about  trauma  &  PTSD.  •  CogniEve  restructuring  on  key  distorEons.  •  Skills  for  Anxiety  Management.                  Keane  (2008;2010)  

 

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CBT  Treatment  of  PTSD  

§  Vietnam  Veterans  With  PTSD  §  Prolonged  Exposure  v.  Anxiety  Management  v.  Wait  List  Control  

§  6-­‐Month  Follow-­‐up  

     Keane,  Fairbank,  Caddell,  &  Zimering    (1989)  

 

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First  RCT  for  War  Veterans  with  Chronic  PTSD  

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More  than  fi?y  internaBonal  clinical  trials  before  2001.  There’s  more  than  another  fi?y  since  that  Bme.    

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PTSD  Symptom  Checklist  Scores  in  Vietnam  Combat  Veterans  

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

Exposure Therapy Wait List Control

Scor

e

Conditions

Pre Post Follow-up

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PERAC EMERGING ISSUES FORUM 2016 | 7

Research  Showing  PTSD  Treatment  Works  in  Civilians  (Resick  et  al.,  2002)  

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Prolonged  Exposure  and  Present-­‐Centered  Therapy  in  Veteran  and  AcEve  Duty  Women  (Schnurr  et  al.,  2007)  

40

50

60

70

80

PTSD Severity (CAPS)

Prolonged Exposure

Present-Centered Therapy

Overall d = .27*

One  of  the  largest  psychotherapy  trials,  with  277  women    Efficacy  

–   Prolonged  Exposure  was  more  effecEve  than  Present-­‐Centered  Therapy  for  reducing  PTSD  symptoms,  as  well  as  depression  and  anxiety,  and  improving  quality  of  life  

Feasibility  –   Implemented  at  9  VA  Medical  Centers,  2  Vet  Centers,  1  military  hospital  

–   High  therapy  quality  –   High  paEent  saEsfacEon  

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Helping  Veterans  and  Their  Significant  Others    

•  Couples  therapy  helps  with  PTSD  (Monson  et  al.,  2012)  – Benefits  from  a  15-­‐session  therapy  program  for  couples  with  one  partner  who  has  PTSD  

– Couples  receiving  Tx  showed  significantly  greater  improvements  in  PTSD  &  relaEonship  saEsfacEon.  

– Couples  therapy  boosted  PTSD  outcomes,  and  helped  a  partner  experiencing  the  burdens  of  caregiving  and  emoEonal  distress  

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First  study  of  CogniEve  Processing  Therapy  with  Veterans  (Monson  et  al.,  2006)    

•  CPT  led  to  significantly  greater  improvements  in  PTSD,  depression,  and  social  adjustment  compared  to  a  wait-­‐list  control  group.  

•  Veterans  with  PTSD-­‐related  disability  improved  just  as  much  as  Veterans  without  PTSD-­‐related  disability.  

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Overview of the Consortium to Alleviate PTSD (CAP)

Alan Peterson, PhD, PI; Terence M. Keane, Ph.D. CO-PI 17  

Future  IniEaEves:  The  ConsorEum  to  Alleviate  PTSD  (CAP)  

•  IntegraEon  of  VA  and  DoD  Resources    

•  Aims:  IdenEfy  factors  that  influence  PTSD  onset  and  progression,  examine  biomarkers  to  help  diagnose  PTSD  and  track  the  effects  of  therapy,  and  develop  novel  treatments  

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BLASTS produce SIMULTANEOUS physical and psychological trauma

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•  Signature  Wounds  of  OEF-­‐OIF…..  

 

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PTSD N=232 68.2%   2.9%  16.5%  

42.1%   6.8%  

5.3%  

10.3%  

12.6%  

TBI N=227 66.8%  

Chronic Pain

N=277 81.5%  

Prevalence  of  Chronic  Pain,  PTSD  and  TBI  in  a  Sample  of  340  OEF/OIF  Veterans  

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OEF/OIF: Pain, TBI, PTSD

Photo  by  Lynsey  Addario,  Corbis  ©  2005  NY  Times    

Photo  by  Airman  1st  Class  Nathan  Doza,  USAF  

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Making Treatments More Efficient and Effective

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Collaborations

•  Chronic Effects of Neurotrauma Consortium (CENC) – Consortium Director: Dr David Cifu, Virginia

Commonwealth University •  Military Suicide Research Consortium

– Co-Consortium Directors: Thomas Joiner, Florida State University and Peter Gutierrez, Denver VA MIRECC

•  Army Study to Assess Risk and Resilience in Servicemembers (STARRS) – Robert Ursano (USUHS) & Murray Stein (UCSD)

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Testing the Use of Technology for Greater Treatment Access

and Engagement

25  

Ongoing Work to Improve Care

– Group  CBT  for  Chronic  PTSD:  A  Randomized  Clinical  Trial  (Sloan)  

– Variable  Length  CPT  for  Combat-­‐Related  PTSD  (Resick  &  Wachen)  

–  PromoEng  access  to  and  engagement  in  evidence-­‐based  treatment  (Sayer)  

–  CSP  #591:  ComparaEve  EffecEveness  Research  in  Veterans  with  PTSD  (Schnurr)  

–  Treatment  of  post-­‐traumaEc  headaches  (Penzien)  –  EvaluaEon  of  couple’s  therapy:  Strength  at  Home  (Tah)  

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Web-­‐Based  IntervenEon  for  Returning  Veterans  With  Risky  Alcohol  Use  &  PTSD  Symptoms:  

 Support:  NIAAA  &  VA  NaLonal  Center  for  PTSD  

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Telemental  Health    

•  A  pilot  study  of  PE  for  PTSD  delivered  via  telehealth  technology  (Tuerk  et  al.,  2010)  – Veterans  who  received  PE  via  telehealth  at  their  local  VA  CBOC  experienced  large  reducEons  in  PTSD  and  depression;  improvements  were  similar  to  those  experienced  by  Veterans  who  received  the  treatment  in-­‐person  at  VA  Medical  Center  

•  Group  CPT  delivered  to  veterans  via  telehealth  (Morland  et  al.,  2011)  –  Results  support  the  feasibility  and  safety  of  using  video-­‐teleconferencing;  Both  groups  showed  clinically  meaningful  reducEons  in  PTSD  symptoms.  

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Web-­‐based  IntervenEons:  VetChange  (Brief,  Keane,  et  al.,  2013)  

•  A  self-­‐management  Web  IntervenEon  using  evidence-­‐based  strategies  for  OEF-­‐OIF  Veterans  engaging  in  high  risk  drinking    

•  Study  Design:    – Two  Groups:  IniEal  IntervenEon  Group  (IIG)  &  Delayed  IntervenEon  Group  (DIG)  

•  Assessments  at  baseline,  post-­‐intervenEon,  3  months  (DIG  completed  second  baseline  assessment)  

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Sample  Facebook    Ads  •  Seen  by  at  least  317,000  users  likely  to  be  returning  veterans,  over  43  recruiEng  days.      

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PTSD  Symptom  Changes  

33

35

37

39

41

43

45

Time 1 Time 2

PCL5 Total Scores *

IIG

DIG

* p < .001

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Drinking  and  Alcohol-­‐Related  Outcomes  

* p < .001

* *

*

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p<.001

p<.001 p<.001

p<.001

Outcomes  Aher  2-­‐weeks  for  ParEcipants  with  Subclinical  or  Probable  PTSD  

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Mobile  Phone  ApplicaEons:  PTSD  Coach  A  mobile  phone  applicaEon  for  people  with  

PTSD  and  those  interested  in  learning  more  about  PTSD    

 This  applicaEon  provides:  •  EducaEon  about  PTSD  •  A  self-­‐assessment  /  monitoring  tool  •  Portable  skills  to  address  acute  symptoms  •  Direct  connecEons  to  crisis  support  •  InformaEon  about  treatment  aimed  at  

guiding  those  who  could  benefit  into  care    

Stand-­‐alone  educaEon  and  symptom  management  tool,  or  augmentaEon  of  face-­‐to-­‐face  care  

Easily  accessible  tools,  when  they  are  needed  

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Summary  Points:    

•  Stress  Exposure  &  Rates  of  PTSD  in  is  High  in  USA  •  PTSD  is  a  Treatable  CondiEon.    •  Psychological  &  Pharmacological  Treatments  are  available.  •  CreaEve  Delivery  of  Treatments  is  Needed  •  Develop  IntegraEve  Treatments  for  MulEply  Injured  PaEents.    •  Barriers  to  Care  Need  to  be  Addressed  •  Response  Needed  at  Individual,  Family,  and  Community  Levels.    

 

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COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTSPublic Employee Retirement Administration CommissionFive Middlesex Avenue, Suite 304 | Somerville, MA 02145

Phone: 617-666-4446 | Fax: 617-628-4002TTY: 617-591-8917 | Web: www.mass.gov/perac


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