2023
DOI: 10.1111/jcpp.13756
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Long‐term clinical and cost‐effectiveness of a therapist‐supported online remote behavioural intervention for tics in children and adolescents: extended 12‐ and 18‐month follow‐up of a single‐blind randomised controlled trial

Abstract: Background: Little is known about the long-term effectiveness of behavioural therapy for tics. We aimed to assess the long-term clinical and cost-effectiveness of online therapist-supported exposure and response prevention (ERP) therapy for tics 12 and 18 months after treatment initiation. Methods: ORBIT (online remote behavioural intervention for tics) was a two-arm (1:1 ratio), superiority, single-blind, multicentre randomised controlled trial comparing online ERP for tics with online psychoeducation. The tr… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
2

Citation Types

0
16
0

Year Published

2023
2023
2024
2024

Publication Types

Select...
5

Relationship

2
3

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 9 publications
(16 citation statements)
references
References 23 publications
0
16
0
Order By: Relevance
“…The sister ORBIT trial presented data up to 18 months after randomization (equivalent to 15 months after treatment) and showed a similar tic severity improvement for the ERP group to that in the present study (6.9 raw points on the YGTSS-TTSS) but a slightly smaller improvement for psychoeducation (4.5 points). 13,14 A similar pattern was shown for the treatment response rates, with both studies classifying 55% of participants as treatment responders in the ERP group, while there was a difference for JAMA Network Open | Psychiatry psychoeducation (50% in the current study, 41% in ORBIT). The somewhat unexpected larger effect of the comparator in our study may be due to a range of reasons, such as a sample population with milder symptom severity and the use of more experienced therapists.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…The sister ORBIT trial presented data up to 18 months after randomization (equivalent to 15 months after treatment) and showed a similar tic severity improvement for the ERP group to that in the present study (6.9 raw points on the YGTSS-TTSS) but a slightly smaller improvement for psychoeducation (4.5 points). 13,14 A similar pattern was shown for the treatment response rates, with both studies classifying 55% of participants as treatment responders in the ERP group, while there was a difference for JAMA Network Open | Psychiatry psychoeducation (50% in the current study, 41% in ORBIT). The somewhat unexpected larger effect of the comparator in our study may be due to a range of reasons, such as a sample population with milder symptom severity and the use of more experienced therapists.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…41 This ICER was comparable to the £16 708 (approximately US $20 800) cost per QALY gained reported at 18 months after randomization in the ORBIT trial. 14 In summary, the probability of ERP being cost-effective compared with psychoeducation at the 12-month follow-up varied for each increasingly wider costing perspective: 78% for the health care organization perspective, 100% (dominance) for the health care sector perspective, and 65% for the societal perspective. A 12-month time frame is typically considered short for a health economic evaluation, and an extended time horizon has, on average, been shown to lead to more favorable estimates.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…Such a mobile decision support system may support (a) the diagnostic process, for example, by complementing existing diagnostic tools (interviews and questionnaires) with information on real‐time and real‐world markers of functioning that allows clinicians to steer clear of existing stereotypical ADHD presentations and to better embrace the heterogeneity of ADHD, (b) monitoring and boosting of functioning by the user with ADHD, for example, by providing lifestyle advice when needed and taking value‐based, shared decisions about treatment needs, and such a DSS (c) can be used as a tool to deliver treatment online, that is, in a broadly accessible way not hampered by waiting lists. For the latter, the work by Hollis and colleagues presented elsewhere in this issue (Hollis et al., 2023) sets the stage: they show that a behavioral intervention – in their case for tics – can effectively and cost‐effectively be administered online, providing an efficient mental health approach that increases access to effective treatment. An important additional requirement for a successful transition into a new concept of ADHD is an increased focus on education and training about ADHD.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%