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Does pharmacotherapy really have as enduring effects as psychotherapy in anxiety disorders? Some doubts

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 December 2018

Falk Leichsenring
Affiliation:
Professor, Psychosomatics and Psychotherapy, University of Giessen, Germany Email: [email protected]
Jürgen Hoyer
Affiliation:
Professor, Institute of Clinical Psychology and Psychotherapy, University of Dresden, Germany.
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Abstract

Type
Correspondence
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal College of Psychiatrists 2018 

Bandelow et al recently presented a meta-analysis testing the assumption that the effects of psychotherapy in anxiety disorders are more endurable than those of pharmacotherapy.Reference Bandelow, Sagebiel, Belz, Görlich, Michaelis and Wedekind1 From non-significant differences between psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy in pre-follow-up effect sizes the authors concluded that ‘… patients who stopped taking a drug showed the same durable improvement as patients who stopped psychotherapy’.Reference Bandelow, Sagebiel, Belz, Görlich, Michaelis and Wedekind1

Besides the severe (and properly discussed) limitation that an unclear percentage of patients may have started new psychological treatment or taken medications in the follow-up period, this meta-analysis raises further serious concerns.

First, the authors did not clearly specify their inclusion criteria. Apparently, they did not require head-to head comparisons of psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy as an inclusion criterion. Second, as a consequence, Bandelow et al compared pre–post and pre-follow-up effect sizes of psychotherapy, medication and placebo obtained from different randomised controlled trials. Thus, the studies being compared may differ with regard to important treatment moderators such as characteristics of patient populations and setting conditions. For these and other reasons analyses of pre–post and pre-follow-up effect sizes should be avoided in meta-analyses.Reference Cuijpers, Weitz, Cristea and Twisk2

Third, Bandelow et al did not adhere to the logic of equivalence testing that includes the definition of a margin compatible with equivalence and performing two one-sided tests (TOST).Reference Walker and Nowacki3 They apparently applied the more usual two-sided superiority test. However, concluding from a non-significant two-sided superiority test that two treatments (i.e. pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy) are equally efficacious (in the long-term) is questionable.Reference Walker and Nowacki3 The traditional two-sided test and TOST often yield inconsistent results.Reference Barker, Luman, McCauley and Chu4 Fourth, furthermore, Bandelow et al seem to have not controlled for researcher allegiance.Reference Mellers, Hertwig and Kahneman5 Thus, a bias in favour of pharmacotherapy cannot be excluded given that the first and last authors disclose multifold collaboration with pharmaceutical companies.

Finally and of note, the authors avoid discussing potential long-term negative effects that any type of psychotropic drug treatment, particularly after long-term use, may have, for example by increasing the risk of experiencing additional psychopathological problems that do not necessarily subside with discontinuation of the drug or of modifying responsiveness to subsequent treatments.Reference Fava, Benas and Cosci6

The data presented by Bandelow et al suggest that pharmacotherapy may have endurable effects in anxiety disorders as well. However, the authors’ conclusion that in the long-term term psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy are equally efficacious in anxiety disorders is questionable for the reasons given above.

Footnotes

Declaration of interest F.L. and J.H. are trained psychotherapists.

References

1Bandelow, B, Sagebiel, A, Belz, M, Görlich, Y, Michaelis, S, Wedekind, D. Enduring effects of psychological treatments for anxiety disorders: meta-analysis of follow-up studies. Br J Psychiatry 2018; 212: 333–8.Google Scholar
2Cuijpers, P, Weitz, E, Cristea, IA, Twisk, J. Pre-post effect sizes should be avoided in meta-analyses. Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci 2017; 26: 364–8.Google Scholar
3Walker, E, Nowacki, AS. Understanding equivalence and noninferiority testing. J Gen Intern Med 2011; 26: 192–6.Google Scholar
4Barker, LE, Luman, ET, McCauley, MM, Chu, SY. Assessing equivalence: an alternative to the use of difference tests for measuring disparities in vaccination coverage. Am J Epidemiol 2002; 156: 1056–61.Google Scholar
5Mellers, B, Hertwig, R, Kahneman, D. Do frequency representations eliminate conjunction effects? An exercise in adversarial collaboration. Psychol Sci 2001; 12: 269–75.Google Scholar
6Fava, GA, Benas, iG, Cosci, F. The potential role of iatrogenic comorbidity in the interaction between pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy in anxiety disorders Verhaltenstherapie 2017; 27: 275–80.Google Scholar
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