Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-q99xh Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T17:06:49.224Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Childhood trauma and differential response to long-term psychoanalytic versus cognitive–behavioural therapy for chronic depression in adults

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 August 2024

Lina Krakau*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Mainz, Germany
Mareike Ernst
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Psychology, Psychotherapy and Psychoanalysis, Institute of Psychology, University of Klagenfurt, Klagenfurt am Woerthersee, Austria
Martin Hautzinger
Affiliation:
Department of Psychology, Section Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, Eberhard Karls University, Tübingen, Germany
Manfred E. Beutel
Affiliation:
Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Mainz, Germany
Marianne Leuzinger-Bohleber
Affiliation:
Department of Psychosomatic Medicine and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center of the Johannes Gutenberg-University Mainz, Mainz, Germany
*
Correspondence: Lina Krakau. Email: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Background

Childhood trauma is a major risk factor for chronic depression. It has been suggested that adults with chronic depression who have experienced childhood trauma may require long-term treatment owing to a breakdown of basic trust and related difficulties in developing a productive therapeutic relationship.

Aims

As empirical studies have been preliminary and scarce, we studied the effects of psychoanalytic therapy (PAT) versus cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT) for chronic depression in adults with a history of childhood trauma. In this subgroup, we expected a greater symptom reduction in PAT compared with CBT.

Method

In a large trial of long-term psychotherapies for chronic depression (LAC-Study; Clinical Trial Register ISRCTN91956346), 210 adults received open-ended CBT or PAT in an out-patient setting and were examined yearly over 5 years on the Beck Depression Inventory – II (BDI-II). Based on a linear mixed model approach, we tested participant-reported childhood trauma based on the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ) as a predictor and moderator of treatment outcome. CTQ subscales were examined exploratively.

Results

Depressive symptoms decreased over time (b = −4.55, s.e. = 0.90, 95% CI −6.32 to −2.81, T = −5.08; P < 0.001). A significant three-way interaction between childhood trauma, time and therapy group (b = −0.05, s.e. = 0.02, 95% CI −0.09 to −0.01, T = −2.42; P = 0.016) indicated that participants with childhood trauma profited especially well from PATs.

Conclusions

Our results indicate differential benefits from PAT compared with CBT among adults with chronic depression and a history of childhood trauma. The results have important implications for differential indication and policy.

Type
Original Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Royal College of Psychiatrists

People with a history of childhood trauma are at higher risk for recurring and persistent episodes of depression (chronic depression). Meta-analyses disagree on whether depressed individuals with a history of childhood trauma show a less favourable response following first-line depression treatmentReference Nanni, Uher and Danese1,Reference Nelson, Klumparendt, Doebler and Ehring2 or not.Reference Kuzminskaite, Gathier, Cuijpers, Penninx, Ammerman and Brakemeier3 It is suggested that although this patient group does profit from active treatment, they suffer from more residual symptoms and relapse risks.Reference Kuzminskaite, Gathier, Cuijpers, Penninx and Vinkers4,Reference Maj, Stein, Parker, Zimmerman, Fava and de Hert5 In representative community surveys approximately 8–12% of respondents report having experienced multiple forms of adversity,Reference Butler, Quigg and Bellis6,Reference Krakau, Tibubos, Beutel, Ehrenthal, Gieler and Brähler7 with each occurrence elevating the likelihood of subsequent incidents.Reference Kim and Drake8 In most cases, they suffered these acts of harm in the immediate caregiving setting, for example at the hands of their parents. Specifically, Hurren et alReference Hurren, Thompson, Jenkins, Chrzanowski, Allard and Stewart9 found that 78.5% of perpetrators of child abuse victimise their biological children. Step-parents and in-home caregivers constitute other important perpetrator groups.Reference Hurren, Thompson, Jenkins, Chrzanowski, Allard and Stewart9,Reference Mathews, Finkelhor, Pacella, Scott, Higgins and Meinck10

Traumatic experiences are associated with extreme feelings of helplessness and hopelessness.Reference Krystal11 In the context of caregiving, these profoundly affect early relationship experiences and secure attachment, which form the base of future perceptions, emotions and behaviour in relationships and beyond.Reference Rokita, Dauvermann and Donohoe12 Basic trust in significant others, and the development of self-agency, may be severely compromised.Reference Bohleber and Leuzinger-Bohleber13,Reference Fonagy and Allison14 Other people, for example therapists, are often perceived as critical, rejecting and potentially dangerous.Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Manfred, Fischmann and Beutel15 The inadequate early relationship dynamic may be repeated inside and outside the therapy room,Reference Van Nieuwenhove, Truijens, Meganck, Cornelis and Desmet16 making it more difficult to form a helpful therapeutic alliance.Reference Talia, Daniel, Miller-Bottome, Brambilla, Miccoli and Safran17 The empirical literature has been inconclusive about differential benefits from different psychotherapy modalities in this patient group.Reference Barbe, Bridge, Birmaher, Kolko and Brent18Reference Williams, Crane, Barnhofer, Brennan, Duggan and Fennell23 Although previous research mostly focused on short-term psychotherapies, the effectiveness of long-term treatments for people with chronic depression and childhood trauma has been understudied.Reference Fonagy, Rost, Carlyle, McPherson, Thomas and Pasco Fearon24,Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Hautzinger, Fiedler, Keller, Bahrke and Kallenbach25 One of the few studies including psychodynamic therapies found that patient reports of greater family unhappiness and parental problems predicted a relatively stronger response to psychodynamic short- and long-term treatments compared with solution-focused therapy, which is more problem- and future-oriented and less focused on past experiences and their connections to present interpersonal relationships.Reference Heinonen, Knekt, Härkänen, Virtala and Lindfors21

The current study

Data are drawn from the Outcomes of Long-term Psychotherapies of Chronically Depressed Patients (LAC) studyReference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Hautzinger, Fiedler, Keller, Bahrke and Kallenbach25Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Kaufhold, Kallenbach, Negele, Ernst and Keller27 comparing PAT and long-term CBT for chronic depression over a period of 5 years following treatment start. Patients could choose to be randomised or allocated to their preferred treatment option. The main outcomes at the 5-year follow-up were reported in Beutel et al.Reference Beutel, Krakau, Kaufhold, Bahrke, Grabhorn and Hautzinger28 No differences in symptom reduction were found between CBT and PAT or allocation type, albeit with larger therapy doses in PAT. Greater structural change was achieved in PAT from the third year onward. The current analysis aimed to expand on the differential indication for people with chronic depression and determine the differential benefits of CBT and PAT for those with or without a history of childhood trauma. As a prominent risk factor complicating the course of depression, childhood trauma represents important diagnostic information that may help to improve treatment personalisation and clinical management. The study manuals clearly differ in their focus in the treatment of depression. PAT has a stronger treatment focus on the exploration of life-story narratives of past and interpersonal experiences and on working on their repercussions in the therapeutic relationship. It attempts to understand the symptom presentation within the context of disrupted developmental processes, specifically attempting to deal with unconscious fantasies and conflicts resulting from this disruption, which are then worked through in the ‘here and now’ of the therapeutic relationship.Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Manfred, Fischmann and Beutel15,Reference Taylor29 CBT focuses on cognitive dysfunctions, irrational thoughts and belief systems resulting from adverse childhood experiences and teaches skills to cope with symptoms.Reference Hautzinger30 The manualised treatments were reliably discriminated by the Comparative Psychotherapy Process Scale (CPPS).Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Hautzinger, Fiedler, Keller, Bahrke and Kallenbach25,Reference Hilsenroth, Blagys, Ackerman, Bonge and Blais31 Given PAT's specific treatment focus and higher amount of sessions, we hypothesised that people with chronic depression reporting a history of childhood trauma benefit more from psychoanalytic compared with cognitive–behavioural treatment.

Method

Study design and participants

For an extensive overview of the study design, we refer to previous publications.Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Hautzinger, Fiedler, Keller, Bahrke and Kallenbach25Reference Beutel, Krakau, Kaufhold, Bahrke, Grabhorn and Hautzinger28 The study included N = 252 participants with chronic depression. Participants had to be between 21 and 60 years old, score ≥17 on the Beck Depression Inventory – II (BDI-II),Reference Hautzinger, Keller and Kühner32 receive a score ≥9 points on the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology Clinician Rating (QIDS-C)Reference Rush, Trivedi, Ibrahim, Carmody, Arnow and Klein33 and meet the diagnostic criteria for major depression or dysthymia. If participants used antidepressant medication, they had to have been on a stable dosage for ≥4 weeks. Exclusion criteria comprised psychotic illness, substance misuse, dementia, borderline, schizoid, paranoid and antisocial personality disorder, acute and/or chronic physical illness and acute suicidality. Written informed consent was obtained from all participants. They were informed about the trial treatments (long-term CBT or PAT) and could choose to be randomised to CBT or PAT or to select their preferred treatment. The study's four-arm design included randomised or preferred CBT or PAT respectively. Participants were randomised by an independent statistics centre, generating separate random allocation sequences for the four study sites. The study sites were university-affiliated research institutions with out-patient clinics (university hospitals in Frankfurt, Mainz, Berlin and Hamburg, Germany) that coordinated diagnostics, training workshops and patient referral. Session frequency and treatment duration were not predetermined. For sample size calculation, see Beutel et alReference Beutel, Leuzinger-Bohleber, Rüger, Bahrke, Negele and Haselbacher26 and Leuzinger-Bohleber et al.Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Hautzinger, Fiedler, Keller, Bahrke and Kallenbach25 The study was registered (Clinical Trial Register ISRCTN91956346). The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008. All procedures involving human patients were approved by the Ethics Committee of the Physician Board of Rhineland-Palatinate, Mainz, Germany (Ref: 837.124.075659).

Interventions

Psychoanalytic therapy (PAT) for depression has been well described.Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Manfred, Fischmann and Beutel15 Study therapists were trained in the empirically validated manual for the treatment of chronic depression.Reference Taylor29 The study manual integrates the treatment of people with chronic depression with research on embodied memories and early trauma.Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Manfred, Fischmann and Beutel15 It is recognised that childhood trauma overwhelms the individual's capacity to maintain a minimal sense of safety and destroys trust in the availability of reliable and empathic others as well as one's own self-agency. Procedural, embodied memories developed before full maturation of memory structures are understood to unconsciously determine the individual's emotions, thoughts and actions in relationships in the present. Unprocessed, unconscious conflicts of the past can be repeated and understood in the transference and successively transferred into a healing process.

Cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT) for depression is based on the work of Beck, Lewinsohn and others, and is integrated into a widely used and well-accepted treatment protocol in Germany.Reference Hautzinger30 CBT therapists used five modules (problem analysis, goals, psychoeducation and rationale for treatment; behavioural activation and increasing pleasant activities; cognitive interventions to restructure basic assumptions and schemata; social skill training, problem-solving and stress management; maintenance and relapse prevention). From a cognitive–behavioural view, threat-related information processing, heightened emotional reactivity and disrupted reward processing have been formulated as treatment targets in the context of chronic depression and childhood trauma.Reference McLaughlin, Colich, Rodman and Weissman34

Compared with CBT, PAT scored higher on items characteristic of psychodynamic interpersonal therapy (e.g. feelings and perceptions linked to past experiences; focus on the patient–therapist relationship) with moderate effect sizes (0.35–0.74), whereas CBT was rated higher (0.30–0.84) on cognitive–behavioural items (e.g. focus on irrational belief systems; teaching specific techniques). The interrater reliability was high (intraclass correlation coefficient >0.85).Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Hautzinger, Fiedler, Keller, Bahrke and Kallenbach25 A difference in total session numbers between CBT and PAT may be considered as an intrinsic feature of the treatment approachesReference Benecke, Huber, Staats, Zimmermann, Henkel and Deserno35 regulated by German guidelines, with CBT comprising up to 80 and PAT up to 300 sessions covered by insurance.Reference Dieckmann, Dahm, Streeck-Fischer, Neher and Schmidt36

Instruments

Depressive symptoms were measured yearly over the course of 5 years using the Beck Depression Inventory – II (BDI-II).Reference Hautzinger, Keller and Kühner32 The instrument incorporates 21 statements rating the severity of depressive symptoms during the past 2 weeks on a 4-point Likert scale (0–3). Higher values denote higher symptom load. The German language version of the BDI-II has shown good reliability, sensitivity to change and validity.Reference Kühner, Keller, Schricker, Beddig, Huffziger and Timm37 Good internal consistency was replicated in our sample (ωbaseline = 0.82).

Childhood trauma was measured with the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ).Reference Bernstein, Ahluvalia, Pogge and Handelsman38,Reference Klinitzke, Romppel, Häuser, Brähler and Glaesmer39 A global scale and six subscales assess self-rated emotional abuse and neglect, physical abuse and neglect, sexual abuse, and family inconsistency, specific to the German versionReference Maercker and Bromberger40. Family inconsistency refers to a subjective appraisal of instability, unsafety and unpredictability in the home and the relationship with the main family members more generally (e.g. ‘I was scared that my family could break apart at any time’ or ‘[My caregivers] or other family members were unpredictable’). Three additional items assess minimising responses on a seventh scale (e.g. ‘I had the best family in the world’). Participants are asked about the time of their upbringing and to rate each of the 31 items (e.g. ‘I had enough to eat’) on a 5-point Likert scale (ranging from 1 = never to 5 = very often). The German version of the abuse and neglect scales have been validated.Reference Klinitzke, Romppel, Häuser, Brähler and Glaesmer39 We found good internal consistency for the total score (ω = 0.95), emotional abuse (ω = 0.89), emotional neglect (ω = 0.92), physical abuse (ω = 0.88), sexual abuse (ω = 0.92), inconsistency experiences (ω = 0.85) and minimisation (ω = 0.80) but low internal consistency for physical neglect (ω = 0.65), which is in line with previous findings.Reference Klinitzke, Romppel, Häuser, Brähler and Glaesmer39,Reference Ernst, Beutel, Zwerenz and Krakau41 Since the family inconsistency subscale is not frequently used, we examined the proposed seven-factor structure using confirmatory factor analysis, resulting in acceptable fit (comparative fit index CFI = 0.98, Tucker–Lewis index TLI = 0.98, root mean square error of approximation RMSEA = 0.05, standardised root mean squared residual SRMR = 0.08) with all factor loadings ≥0.40 on the intended factors except for the physical neglect item ‘Someone brought me to a physician when I needed it’. We provide prevalence rates for individuals reporting at least moderate levels of childhood abuse and neglect, using the cut-offs initially proposed by Bernstein et al,Reference Bernstein, Ahluvalia, Pogge and Handelsman38 which have been widely adopted.Reference Häuser, Schmutzer, Brähler and Glaesmer42

Statistical analyses

All analyses were conducted in R (R Core Team, 2023, version 4.3.3 for Windows). Average levels of the reported CTQ values were compared between therapy types using Student's t-tests or Welch's t-tests, as appropriate. Proportions of at least moderate abuse and neglect experiences were compared using χ2-tests or Fisher's exact tests, as appropriate. Our hypotheses on the effect of the interaction between therapy type and childhood trauma on changes in depressive symptoms were tested using a linear mixed-effects model approach to account for repeated measurements of each participant. The model included a participant-specific Gaussian random intercept. We accounted for initial depression severity and varying treatment doses by including the sample mean-centred baseline depression (BDI-II) score and total therapy dose (session number) as fixed covariates. Therapy type, childhood trauma, time and their respective interactions were incorporated as fixed effects. A three-way interaction between therapy type, childhood trauma and time was included to evaluate our central hypothesis. Time was assessed as years after treatment start. Therapy type was coded as a factor variable (0 = CBT; 1 = PAT). The modelling approach uses all available data (i.e. not only completers) and is valid under the missing at random (MAR) assumption. Following recommendations,Reference Pek and Flora43 we report the unstandardised regression coefficients and report 95% confidence intervals alongside P-values. We conducted graphical post hoc analyses of significant interactions to interpret the slopes.

Missing data and sensitivity analyses

For the intention to treat (ITT) sample based on 252 participants, n = 6 CTQ assessments (2.38%) were missing at baseline and were handled using listwise deletion. BDI-II data were complete at baseline, but a substantial proportion of data were lost to follow-up: BDI-II data were missing for n = 67 participants (26.58%) in year 1, n = 103 (40.87%) in year 2, n = 103 (40.87%) in year 3, n = 132 (52.38%) in year 3 and n = 119 (47.22%) in year 5. The percentages reported here are given with reference to the ITT sample. The exact amount of available data for each therapy group at each assessment point is presented in Supplementary Table 1, available at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.2024.112. Given the large proportion of missing data, we based our analysis sample on all participants with valid CTQ baseline data and at least two valid BDI-II assessments. This procedure resulted in an analysis sample of n = 210 participants. In our main analysis, we assumed the data to be missing at random. In addition, we performed a first sensitivity analysis by repeating all analysis steps based on last observation carried forward (LOCF) imputation. The described procedure mimics the management of missing data for our primary outcome analysis. To increase statistical power, we merged the randomised and preference cells, as no difference in outcomes between the randomised and preference cells was found in our main outcome publications.Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Hautzinger, Fiedler, Keller, Bahrke and Kallenbach25,Reference Beutel, Krakau, Kaufhold, Bahrke, Grabhorn and Hautzinger28 As reported in Beutel et al,Reference Beutel, Krakau, Kaufhold, Bahrke, Grabhorn and Hautzinger28 1 CBT participant and 17 PAT participants were in ongoing treatment at the 5-year assessment. In a second sensitivity analysis, we excluded all participants still receiving treatment after year 4, so that the last assessment point is an actual follow-up.

Results

Trial flow and sample description

In total, 554 people participated in diagnostic interviews, of whom 252 constitute the intention to treat (ITT) sample. We refer to the main outcome publications for a detailed trial flowchart and information about the 302 participants who did not enter the trial.Reference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Hautzinger, Fiedler, Keller, Bahrke and Kallenbach25,Reference Beutel, Krakau, Kaufhold, Bahrke, Grabhorn and Hautzinger28 Table 1 shows the baseline information of the ITT sample, stratified by the two treatment conditions. Participants in the CBT and PAT groups did not differ significantly regarding sociodemographic information or childhood trauma reports. At least moderate levels of emotional neglect were most frequently reported (n = 135, 53.6%), followed by emotional abuse (n = 107, 42.5%). About one-third of participants reported having experienced physical neglect (n = 80, 31.7%), and physical abuse experiences were reported by 15.5% of participants (n = 39). Sexual abuse was experienced by 24.6% of participants (n = 62). Pearson correlation coefficients between the CTQ total and CTQ subscales are reported in Supplementary Table 2. The median session number was 242 for PAT and 59 for CBT. Seventeen participants in PAT and one in CBT were in ongoing treatment at the 5-year outcome assessment.

Table 1 Baseline characteristics of the intention to treat (ITT) sample (N = 252) separately for cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT) and psychoanalytic psychotherapy (PAT)a

PTSD, post-traumatic stress disorder; CTQ, Childhood Trauma Questionnaire; BDI-II, Beck Depression Inventory – II.

a. Missing baseline information for job status (n = 10 participants), educational level (n = 7), marital status (n = 7), inability to work (n = 15), previous out-patient treatment (n = 9), CTQ scales (n = 6), all P > 0.05 between treatment groups.

b. Comorbid dysthymia and major depressive disorder.

Change in depressive symptoms

The results of the multilevel models for the CTQ total scale and its subscales are presented in Table 2. Across all models, there was a main effect of baseline symptom severity, indicating that higher symptom severity at baseline predicted higher symptom severity throughout treatment. We found a statistically significant main effect for a decrease in depressive symptoms over time. In two models a significant two-way interaction between time and treatment type was observed. However, the post hoc exploration of the linear decrease in symptoms over time revealed no statistically significant difference between treatment groups (Supplementary Fig. 1), paralleling the results of our main outcome analysis. We therefore conclude that CBT and PAT lead to similar symptom reductions over time, controlling for CTQ (i.e. childhood trauma) levels. There was no statistically significant main effect of the CTQ (total scale and subscales) or its two-way interaction with time. Hence, we did not find evidence indicating that CTQ levels would generally affect symptom courses in long-term therapies. The hypothesis regarding a differential benefit of PAT for participants who experienced childhood trauma was evaluated by examining the effect of the three-way interaction between time, treatment type and CTQ levels on changes in depressive symptoms. Here, a statistically significant interaction was found on the total scale as well as for the two subscales sexual abuse and family inconsistency. For the models testing physical abuse (P = 0.080) and physical neglect (P = 0.053) a trend for this interaction was observed but did not reach statistical significance. Statistically significant effects were examined graphically. Figure 1 shows that a steeper decline in symptoms was found in PAT compared with CBT at higher childhood trauma levels. At lower childhood trauma levels, both treatment groups achieved similar symptom reductions. We therefore conclude that participants reporting higher levels of childhood trauma profit more from PAT than from CBT. Within the PAT treatment condition, the slope of the decrease in symptoms over time was steeper at higher compared with lower childhood trauma levels, indicating that these participants profit especially well from PAT.

Table 2 Results of the linear mixed-effects models on the change in depressive symptoms over time

CTQ, Childhood Trauma Questionnaire; BDI-II, Beck Depression Inventory – II.

a. Model fit information: CTQ total: Akaike information criterion (AIC) = 6946.89, Bayesian information criterion (BIC) = 7004.94; CTQ emotional abuse: AIC = 6942.55, BIC = 7000.59; CTQ emotional neglect AIC = 6941.74; BIC = 6999.79; CTQ physical abuse: AIC = 6933.78; BIC = 6991.83; CTQ physical neglect: AIC = 6932.95; BIC = 6990.99; CTQ sexual abuse: AIC = 6932.62; BIC = 6990.67; CTQ family inconsistency: AIC = 6934.56; BIC = 6992.6, N = 210.

Fig. 1 Estimated average (mean; s.e.) decline in depressive symptoms on the Beck Depression Inventory – II (BDI-II) over time, depending on the type of therapy and different levels of childhood trauma measured on the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ).

Results for the model including (a) the CTQ total, (b) the CTQ subscale sexual abuse (SA) and (c) the CTQ subscale family inconsistency (IN). CBT, cognitive–behavioural therapy; PAT, psychoanalytic psychotherapy.

Sensitivity analyses

Sensitivity analyses are displayed in Supplementary Tables 3 and 4. Overall, the results of the LOCF sensitivity analysis in the analysis sample (n = 210) parallel the main analysis, with some exceptions regarding models based on the CTQ subscales: the three-way interaction between time, treatment type and the CTQ subscale sexual abuse was no longer statistically significant (P = 0.068), while the three-way interaction in the model incorporating physical neglect was now statistically significant (P = 0.021) (Supplementary Table 3). The second sensitivity analysis included only participants who ended treatment prior to or at the 4-year assessment (n = 177). Again, the results for the model based on the overall CTQ score are completely in line with our main analysis. The three-way interaction between time, treatment type and the CTQ subscale sexual abuse was no longer statistically significant (P = 0.064), the three-way interaction in the model incorporating physical abuse (P = 0.016) as well as emotional abuse (P = 0.049) now emerged as statistically significant (Supplementary Table 4).

Discussion

As we expected, childhood trauma had a differential effect on symptom change: participants who reported more childhood trauma improved more in PAT than in CBT over a 5-year period. Clearly, PAT and CBT differed regarding therapeutic techniqueReference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Hautzinger, Fiedler, Keller, Bahrke and Kallenbach25 and the number of sessions. Previous research found that both the number of sessions and the application of psychoanalytic techniques mediated differences in outcomes following psychoanalytic versus cognitive–behavioural treatments, particularly noting that psychoanalytic techniques led to lasting symptom improvement partially driven by the discussion of early memories.Reference Zimmermann, Löffler-Stastka, Huber, Klug, Alhabbo and Bock44 Although we cannot determine the precise mechanisms of the differential response in our study, we surmise that working in line with the PAT study manual, that is, with biographical narratives with close scrutiny of transference manifestations of procedural or embodied patterns, may help patients not only to gain a consistent narrative of their adverse experiences, but also to make corrective experiences counteracting their interpersonal distrust stemming from the traumatic experiences. The reliable and lasting psychoanalytic setting with high session frequency creates a special opportunity to activate old, often not fully conscious memories and observe their influence on present-day construal and emotional experiences with high emotional intensity and vividness that can have pervasive effects on a person's functioning, as Lane et alReference Lane, Ryan, Nadel and Greenberg45 posited. This is a prerequisite for understanding that the inadequate behaviour arose in the traumatic situation and has influenced thinking, feeling and acting without being recognised.

Comparison with previous research

In line with this theoretical argument, our results expand the evidence and strengthen the findings of the differential benefits of psychodynamic therapies for childhood adversity from a previous study.Reference Heinonen, Knekt, Härkänen, Virtala and Lindfors21 In that study, participants reporting more adversity (family unhappiness, parental problems) were more flexible in the therapeutic interaction and willing to engage in self-reflection, according to clinician ratings.Reference Heinonen, Knekt, Härkänen, Virtala and Lindfors46 These patients’ ratings of the therapeutic alliance were comparatively favourable in psychodynamic therapies.Reference Heinonen, Knekt and Lindfors47 Previous qualitative research has shown that patients who attributed their symptoms to their life stories were more likely to benefit from psychodynamic compared with solution-focused therapy.Reference Hardt and Rutter54 Thus, there might be a match between the focus of psychodynamic therapy linking and reflecting past and current relationship experiences and a patient's ability and willingness to recall and work through childhood trauma and adversity. Future research efforts will need to disentangle whether the experience of childhood trauma, the ability to recall it or the patient's subjective appraisal of their significance contribute to a greater benefit from psychodynamic therapies.

Indeed, memories are unstable and at times details about traumatic experiences may not be consciously available. Previous research has shown that subtle increases in the reporting of childhood trauma, which can be interpreted as a changed recollection in the severity of childhood trauma or a reappraisal of the events, were associated with improvement during psychodynamic in-patient treatment.Reference Ernst, Beutel, Zwerenz and Krakau41 To the best of our knowledge, no similar investigations are available for CBT treatments. However, in psychodynamic therapies the strong focus on understanding a patient's current problems in the context of their upbringingReference Leuzinger-Bohleber, Manfred, Fischmann and Beutel15 may increase the likelihood of reflecting on the relationship with caregivers. We surmise that within the context of treating depression, the psychodynamic setting is associated with a greater likelihood that childhood trauma comes up and is worked through intensively. Moreover, patients satisfied with psychodynamic treatment describe ‘getting to the root of things’ and ‘working through trauma’ as important to their recovery’.Reference Nilsson, Svensson, Sandell and Clinton48

Childhood trauma and differential indication

Although findings regarding treatment effectiveness following childhood trauma are not entirely consistent,Reference Nanni, Uher and Danese1Reference Kuzminskaite, Gathier, Cuijpers, Penninx, Ammerman and Brakemeier3 childhood trauma has been identified as a negative prognostic indicator in treating depression. Identifying patients with a specific need for a psychoanalytic treatment modality is therefore a major step towards treatment personalisation. Future research needs to replicate our findings using fully randomised designs where childhood trauma is stratified prospectively between CBT and PAT. However, as comparative long-term trials have beenReference Juul, Jakobsen, Jørgensen, Poulsen, Sørensen and Simonsen49 and likely will remain rare, our results are an important entry point for generating future hypotheses and to enrich discussions. As different types of childhood trauma often co-occur, we formulated our hypothesis based on the overall presentation of childhood trauma rather than a specific subtype. This is supported by the CTQ total score proving to be a consistent moderator of treatment effects among our main and sensitivity analyses. Experiences of family inconsistencies emerged as one of the drivers of differential treatment responses. This might indicate that for individuals with these kinds of unsettling recollections of their childhood, there is something specifically beneficial in the way in which psychoanalytic treatment orientations aim to rebuild a life narrative as well as a sense of self in relation to others. Indeed, ongoing experiences of inconsistency while growing up can be understood as a chronic threat that the affected child is unable to truly grasp and understand. This subjective experience constitutes the antithesis of basic trust.Reference Bohleber and Leuzinger-Bohleber13,Reference Fonagy and Allison14

Strengths and limitations

A unique strength of the present study pertains to the analysis of the research question within the different theoretical orientations in one psychotherapy trial with the same measurement points, instruments and other potential sources of variance relating to study design and procedure. The ecological validity of the results can be assumed to be high, as not only were participants able to choose their preferred treatment, but study psychotherapies were comparable to routine care in the sense that the number or frequency of sessions and medication were handled flexibly. Still, the results must be interpreted in light of the study's limitations. The most important limitation pertains to the post hoc investigation of our hypothesis: the trial focused on chronic depression, not chronic depression related to childhood trauma. Although baseline levels of childhood trauma were comparable between treatment groups, it was not stratified between the conditions during a randomisation process, limiting the quality of evidence. As the choice of session frequency and treatment duration was made in each therapeutic dyad, we cannot specify on optimal dosage. We entered total dose as a control variable, showing no statistically significant effect. This finding may be read in line with the good-enough level literature, suggesting that treatment length is determined by individual change rates.Reference Bone, Delgadillo and Barkham50,Reference Barkham, Connell, Stiles, Miles, Margison and Evans51 Yet, such an effect may be obscured by the different standard therapy doses between treatments in our study. The fact that a small number of treatments were ongoing after 5 years was handled by additional sensitivity analyses, which confirmed our findings. Although we were able to reliably distinguish between the two therapeutic interventions,Reference Hilsenroth52 we could not relate a process assessment of the intervention technique with the outcome. These measures were only available for a subsample (n = 137), which did not allow us to distinguish the effects of dose and technique. More research is necessary to delineate the exact techniques through which PAT achieved its effectiveness in participants who had experienced childhood trauma. Operative effect size computation in mixed-effects models and their interpretation is still highly debatedReference Correll, Mellinger and Pedersen53 and was therefore not included. Lastly, childhood trauma was assessed via self-report, which can differ from third-party sources of information. In the context of this investigation, one could argue that the subjective experience and its recall rather than historical truths matter. In any case, recollections of adverse childhood experiences can be deemed reliable.Reference Hardt and Rutter54

Supplementary material

Supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjp.2024.112.

Data availability

The data supporting the findings of this study are available on reasonable request from the corresponding author. Data are not publicly available as open access data has not been approved in the informed consent and the data contain information that could compromise the privacy of research participants. Analytic code is available from the corresponding author on reasonable request. Research materials are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.

Acknowledgements

We thank all patients who participated, the study therapists and research assistants, interns, students and members of the administrative teams of the participating institutions. Specifically, we want to thank Bernhard Rüger, the chair of the independent statistical centre at the Ludwig-Maximillians-University Munich, Wolfram Keller, and Gottfried Fiedler, who conceptualised and led the LAC study together with the authors M.L.-B., M.E.B. and M.H.

Author contributions

The LAC study was conceptualised and led by M.L.-B. and M.E.B. and M.H. L.K. developed the concept and research question of the paper, wrote the first draft and conducted the statistical analyses. M.E., M.L.-B., M.E.B. and M.H. revised it and provided important intellectual content. All authors have reviewed the final version of the manuscript, agree with its submission and are responsible for all aspects of the work. This work is part of the cumulative PhD of the first author L.K.

Funding

The LAC study was supported by the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Psychoanalyse, Psychotherapie, Psychosomatik und Tiefenpsychologie (DGPT), the German Psychoanalytic Association (DPV), the Heidehof Foundation, the German Research Foundation (several conference supports), and specific support of the Operationalized Psychodynamic Diagnosis (OPD) by Dr M. von der Tann, as well as some private funders. The supporting institutions did not have any influence on the study realisation or the data analyses.

Declaration of interest

M.E. and L.K. are training as psychodynamic/psychoanalytic therapists. M.L.-B. and M.E.B. are state-licensed psychoanalysts involved in the training of psychodynamic/psychoanalytic therapists. M.H. is a state-licensed cognitive–behavioural therapist and involved in the training of cognitive–behavioural therapists.

Footnotes

*

Joint senior authors.

References

Nanni, V, Uher, R, Danese, A. Childhood maltreatment predicts unfavorable course of illness and treatment outcome in depression: a meta-analysis. Am J Psychiatry 2012; 169: 141–51.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nelson, J, Klumparendt, A, Doebler, P, Ehring, T. Childhood maltreatment and characteristics of adult depression: meta-analysis. Br J Psychiatry 2017; 210: 96104.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kuzminskaite, E, Gathier, AW, Cuijpers, P, Penninx, BWJH, Ammerman, RT, Brakemeier, EL, et al. Treatment efficacy and effectiveness in adults with major depressive disorder and childhood trauma history: a comprehensive meta-analysis. Neurosci Appl 2022; 1: 100224.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kuzminskaite, E, Gathier, AW, Cuijpers, P, Penninx, BWJH, Vinkers, CH. Treatment response in individuals with depression and a history of childhood maltreatment – authors’ reply. Lancet Psychiatry 2023; 10: e34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maj, M, Stein, DJ, Parker, G, Zimmerman, M, Fava, GA, de Hert, M, et al. The clinical characterization of the adult patient with depression aimed at personalization of management. World Psychiatry 2020; 19: 269–93.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Butler, N, Quigg, Z, Bellis, MA. Cycles of violence in England and Wales: the contribution of childhood abuse to risk of violence revictimisation in adulthood. BMC Med 2020; 18(1): 325.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Krakau, L, Tibubos, AN, Beutel, ME, Ehrenthal, JC, Gieler, U, Brähler, E. Personality functioning as a mediator of adult mental health following child maltreatment. J Affect Disord 2021; 291: 126–34.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kim, H, Drake, B. Cumulative prevalence of onset and recurrence of child maltreatment reports. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 2019; 58: 1175–83.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hurren, E, Thompson, C, Jenkins, B, Chrzanowski, A, Allard, T, Stewart, A. Who Are the Perpetrators of Child Maltreatment? Criminology Research Advisory Council, 2018.Google Scholar
Mathews, B, Finkelhor, D, Pacella, R, Scott, JG, Higgins, DJ, Meinck, F, et al. Child sexual abuse by different classes and types of perpetrator: prevalence and trends from an Australian national survey. Child Abuse Negl 2024; 147: 106562.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Krystal, H. Integration and Self-Healing: Affect, Trauma, Alexithymia. The Analytic Press, 1988.Google Scholar
Rokita, KI, Dauvermann, MR, Donohoe, G. Early life experiences and social cognition in major psychiatric disorders: a systematic review. Eur Psychiatry 2018; 53: 123–33.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bohleber, W, Leuzinger-Bohleber, M. The special problem of interpretation in the treatment of traumatized patients. Psychoanal Inq 2016; 36(1): 6076.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fonagy, P, Allison, E. The role of mentalizing and epistemic trust in the therapeutic relationship. Psychotherapy 2014; 51: 372–80.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leuzinger-Bohleber, MB, Manfred, E, Fischmann, T, Beutel, ME. Chronische Depression: Analytische Langzeitpsychotherapie [Chronic Depression: Analytic Long-term Psychotherapy]. Hogrefe Verlag, 2022.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Van Nieuwenhove, K, Truijens, F, Meganck, R, Cornelis, S, Desmet, M. Working through childhood trauma-related interpersonal patterns in psychodynamic treatment: an evidence-based case study. Psychol Trauma Theory Res Pract Policy 2020; 12: 6474.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Talia, A, Daniel, SIF, Miller-Bottome, M, Brambilla, D, Miccoli, D, Safran, JD, et al. AAI predicts patients’ in-session interpersonal behavior and discourse: a “move to the level of the relation” for attachment-informed psychotherapy research. Attach Hum Dev 2014; 16: 192209.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Barbe, RP, Bridge, JA, Birmaher, B, Kolko, DJ, Brent, DA. Lifetime history of sexual abuse, clinical presentation, and outcome in a clinical trial for adolescent depression. J Clin Psychiatry 2004; 65: 7783.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bausch, P, Fangmeier, T, Meister, R, Elsaeßer, M, Kriston, L, Klein, JP, et al. The impact of childhood maltreatment on long-term outcomes in disorder-specific vs. Nonspecific psychotherapy for chronic depression. J Affect Disord 2020; 272: 152–7.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harkness, KL, Bagby, RM, Kennedy, SH. Childhood maltreatment and differential treatment response and recurrence in adult major depressive disorder. J Consult Clin Psychol 2012; 80: 342–53.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Heinonen, E, Knekt, P, Härkänen, T, Virtala, E, Lindfors, O. Childhood adversities as predictors of improvement in psychiatric symptoms and global functioning in solution-focused and short- and long-term psychodynamic psychotherapy during a 5-year follow-up. J Affect Disord 2018; 235: 525–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schramm, E, Kriston, L, Zobel, I, Bailer, J, Wambach, K, Backenstrass, M, et al. Effect of disorder-specific vs nonspecific psychotherapy for chronic depression: a randomized clinical trial. JAMA Psychiatry 2017; 74: 233–42.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Williams, JMG, Crane, C, Barnhofer, T, Brennan, K, Duggan, DS, Fennell, MJV, et al. Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy for preventing relapse in recurrent depression: a randomized dismantling trial. J Consult Clin Psychol 2014; 82: 275–86.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fonagy, P, Rost, F, Carlyle, JA, McPherson, S, Thomas, R, Pasco Fearon, RM, et al. Pragmatic randomized controlled trial of long-term psychoanalytic psychotherapy for treatment-resistant depression: the Tavistock Adult Depression Study (TADS). World Psychiatry 2015; 14: 312–21.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leuzinger-Bohleber, M, Hautzinger, M, Fiedler, G, Keller, W, Bahrke, U, Kallenbach, L, et al. Outcome of psychoanalytic and cognitive-behavioural long-term therapy with chronically depressed patients: a controlled trial with preferential and randomized allocation. Can J Psychiatry 2019; 64: 4758.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beutel, ME, Leuzinger-Bohleber, M, Rüger, B, Bahrke, U, Negele, A, Haselbacher, A, et al. Psychoanalytic and cognitive-behavior therapy of chronic depression: study protocol for a randomized controlled trial. Trials 2012; 13(1): 117.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Leuzinger-Bohleber, M, Kaufhold, J, Kallenbach, L, Negele, A, Ernst, M, Keller, W, et al. How to measure sustained psychic transformations in long-term treatments of chronically depressed patients: symptomatic and structural changes in the LAC Depression Study of the outcome of cognitive-behavioural and psychoanalytic long-term treatments. Int J Psychoanal 2019; 100: 99127.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beutel, ME, Krakau, L, Kaufhold, J, Bahrke, U, Grabhorn, A, Hautzinger, M, et al. Recovery from chronic depression and structural change: 5-year outcomes after psychoanalytic and cognitive-behavioural long-term treatments (LAC depression study). Clin Psychol Psychother 2023; 30: 188201.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Taylor, D. Treatment manuals and the advancement of psychoanalytic knowledge: the treatment manual of the Tavistock Adult Depression Study. Int J Psychoanal 2015; 96: 845–75.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hautzinger, M. Cognitive Behavior Therapy of Depression (7th edn). Beltz, 2013.Google Scholar
Hilsenroth, MJ, Blagys, MD, Ackerman, SJ, Bonge, DR, Blais, MA. Measuring psychodynamic-interpersonal and cognitive-behavioral techniques: development of the comparative psychotherapy process scale. Psychother Theory Res Pract Train 2005; 42: 340–56.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hautzinger, M, Keller, F, Kühner, C. BDI-II Beck-Depressions-Inventar [Beck-Depression-Inventory]. Harcourt Test Services, 2006.Google Scholar
Rush, AJ, Trivedi, MH, Ibrahim, HM, Carmody, TJ, Arnow, B, Klein, DN, et al. The 16-item Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS), clinician rating (QIDS-C), and self-report (QIDS-SR): a psychometric evaluation in patients with chronic major depression. Biol Psychiatry 2003; 54: 573–83.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
McLaughlin, KA, Colich, NL, Rodman, AM, Weissman, DG. Mechanisms linking childhood trauma exposure and psychopathology: a transdiagnostic model of risk and resilience. BMC Med 2020; 18(1): 96.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Benecke, C, Huber, D, Staats, H, Zimmermann, J, Henkel, M, Deserno, H, et al. A comparison of psychoanalytic therapy and cognitive behavioral therapy for anxiety (panic/agoraphobia) and personality disorders (APD study): presentation of the RCT study design. Z Psychosom Med Psychother 2016; 62: 252–69.Google ScholarPubMed
Dieckmann, M, Dahm, A, Streeck-Fischer, A, Neher, M, Schmidt, MH. Aktualisierte und ergänzte Auflage auf der Basis der aktuell gültigen Psychotherapie-Richtlinie [11th Updated and Amended Edition Based on the Current Psychotherapy Guideline]. In Kommentar Psychotherapie-Richtlinien [Psychotherapy Guidelines Commentary]. Elsevier, 2018.Google Scholar
Kühner, C, Keller, F, Schricker, IF, Beddig, T, Huffziger, S, Timm, C, et al. Diagnostische Performanz und Validität des deutschsprachigen BDI-II – eine Sekundäranalyse mit Daten aus klinischen und nichtklinischen Stichproben [Diagnostic performance and validity of the German version of the BDI-II – a secondary analysis with data from clinical and nonclinical samples]. Psychiatr Prax 2023; 50: 3642.Google Scholar
Bernstein, DP, Ahluvalia, T, Pogge, D, Handelsman, L. Validity of the childhood trauma questionnaire in an adolescent psychiatric population. J Am Acad Child Adolesc Psychiatry 1997; 36: 340–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klinitzke, G, Romppel, M, Häuser, W, Brähler, E, Glaesmer, H. Die deutsche Version des Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ) – psychometrische Eigenschaften in einer bevölkerungsrepräsentativen Stichprobe [The German version of the childhood trauma questionnaire (CTQ) – psychometric characteristics in a representative sample of the general population]. Psychother Psychosom Med Psychol 2012; 62: 4751.Google Scholar
Maercker, A, Bromberger, F. Checklisten und Fragebogen zur Erfassung traumatischer Ereignisse in deutscher Sprache [Checklists and questionnaires to assess traumatic experiences in German]. Trier Psychol Berichte 2005; 32(2): 1–80.Google Scholar
Ernst, M, Beutel, ME, Zwerenz, R, Krakau, L. Seeing the past in a new light: change in reports of childhood abuse and neglect before and after inpatient psychotherapy and its relevance for change in depression symptoms. Psychother Res 2023: 33: 222–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Häuser, W, Schmutzer, G, Brähler, E, Glaesmer, H. Maltreatment in childhood and adolescence: results from a survey of a representative sample of the German population. Dtsch Ärztebl Int 2011; 108: 287–94.Google ScholarPubMed
Pek, J, Flora, DB. Reporting effect sizes in original psychological research: a discussion and tutorial. Psychol Methods 2018; 23: 208–25.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Zimmermann, J, Löffler-Stastka, H, Huber, D, Klug, G, Alhabbo, S, Bock, A, et al. Is it all about the higher dose? Why psychoanalytic therapy is an effective treatment for major depression: is it all about the higher dose? Clin Psychol Psychother 2015; 22: 469–87.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lane, RD, Ryan, L, Nadel, L, Greenberg, L. Memory reconsolidation, emotional arousal, and the process of change in psychotherapy: new insights from brain science. Behav Brain Sci 2015; 38: e1.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Heinonen, E, Knekt, P, Härkänen, T, Virtala, E, Lindfors, O. Associations of early childhood adversities with mental disorders, psychological functioning, and suitability for psychotherapy in adulthood. Psychiatry Res 2018; 264: 366–73.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Heinonen, E, Knekt, P, Lindfors, O. What works for whom: patients’ psychological resources and vulnerabilities as common and specific predictors of working alliance in different psychotherapies. Front Psychiatry 2022; 13: 848408.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Nilsson, T, Svensson, M, Sandell, R, Clinton, D. Patients’ experiences of change in cognitive–behavioral therapy and psychodynamic therapy: a qualitative comparative study. Psychother Res 2007; 17: 553–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Juul, S, Jakobsen, JC, Jørgensen, CK, Poulsen, S, Sørensen, P, Simonsen, S. The difference between shorter- versus longer-term psychotherapy for adult mental health disorders: a systematic review with meta-analysis. BMC Psychiatry 2023; 23(1): 438.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bone, C, Delgadillo, J, Barkham, M. A systematic review and meta-analysis of the good-enough level (GEL) literature. J Couns Psychol 2021; 68: 219–31.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Barkham, M, Connell, J, Stiles, WB, Miles, JNV, Margison, F, Evans, C, et al. Dose-effect relations and responsive regulation of treatment duration: the good enough level. J Consult Clin Psychol 2006; 74: 160–7.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hilsenroth, MJ. A programmatic study of short-term psychodynamic psychotherapy: assessment, process, outcome, and training. Psychother Res 2007; 17: 3145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Correll, J, Mellinger, C, Pedersen, EJ. Flexible approaches for estimating partial eta squared in mixed-effects models with crossed random factors. Behav Res Methods 2021; 54: 1626–42.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hardt, J, Rutter, M. Validity of adult retrospective reports of adverse childhood experiences: review of the evidence. J Child Psychol Psychiatry 2004; 45: 260–73.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1 Baseline characteristics of the intention to treat (ITT) sample (N = 252) separately for cognitive–behavioural therapy (CBT) and psychoanalytic psychotherapy (PAT)a

Figure 1

Table 2 Results of the linear mixed-effects models on the change in depressive symptoms over time

Figure 2

Fig. 1 Estimated average (mean; s.e.) decline in depressive symptoms on the Beck Depression Inventory – II (BDI-II) over time, depending on the type of therapy and different levels of childhood trauma measured on the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ).Results for the model including (a) the CTQ total, (b) the CTQ subscale sexual abuse (SA) and (c) the CTQ subscale family inconsistency (IN). CBT, cognitive–behavioural therapy; PAT, psychoanalytic psychotherapy.

Supplementary material: File

Krakau et al. supplementary material

Krakau et al. supplementary material
Download Krakau et al. supplementary material(File)
File 198.7 KB
Submit a response

eLetters

No eLetters have been published for this article.