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ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT04961190
PHASE4

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

Sponsor: University of Pennsylvania

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

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).

Official title: A Comparison of Prolonged Exposure Therapy, Pharmacotherapy, and Their Combination for PTSD: What Works Best, and for Whom

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

18 Years - 75 Years

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

302

Start Date

2022-05-25

Completion Date

2026-07-15

Last Updated

2026-01-07

Healthy Volunteers

Yes

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Prolonged Exposure Therapy

A form of cognitive-behavioral psychotherapy focused on imaginal exposure to trauma memories and in vivo exposure to trauma reminders

DRUG

Pharmacotherapy with paroxetine or venlafaxine XR

Standard dosing with paroxetine, a selectiveserotonin reuptake inhibitor that is FDA approved to treat PTSD and depression, or venlafaxine extended-release, a serotonin-norepinephrine reuptake inhibitor that is FDA approved to treat anxiety and depression

Locations (7)

Birmingham VA Healthcare System

Birmingham, Alabama, United States

VA Palo Alto Healthcare System

Menlo Park, California, United States

VA San Diego Healthcare System

San Diego, California, United States

Coatesville VA Medicial Center

Coatesville, Pennsylvania, United States

Corporal Michael J. Crescenz VA Medical Center

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States

VA North Texas Healthcare System

Dallas, Texas, United States

Milwaukee VA Medical Center

Milwaukee, Wisconsin, United States