Therapist-supported internet therapy for mental disorders – a health technology assessment

Elvsaas IKØ, Stoinska-Schneider A, Smedslund G.
Record ID 32018000783
English, Norwegian
Original Title: Terapeutveiledet internettbehandling ved psykiske lidelser – en fullstendig metodevurdering
Authors' objectives: There are several recent systematic reviews on the effect of therapist-supported internet therapy for various diagnoses and the aim of this health technology assessment was to provide an overview of high quality systematic reviews summarizing the clinical effect of therapist-supported internet therapy for various mental disorders in children, adolescents and adults, as well as assessing certainty of effect estimates. In addition, we performed a health economic evaluation and described budgetary consequences of a therapist-supported internet program for mental disorders compared with conventional cognitive behavioural therapy in the Western Norway Regional Health Authority. The health technology assessment is prepared on behalf of the Commission Forum in the National System for Managed Introduction of New Health Technologies within the Specialist Health Service in Norway, i.e. New Methods (“Nye metoder”).
Authors' results and conclusions: Effect: The systematic literature searches gave 3684 hits. We reviewed 107 publications in full text after excluding non-relevant publications by title and abstract review. We excluded another 90 publications after full text assessment and was left with 17 systematic reviews. These were quality assessed. For each of the relevant diagnoses, we included the systematic review with the latest search and highest methodological quality. Only one of the systematic reviews exclusively assessed therapist-supported internet therapy. The other systematic reviews included studies that assessed internet treatment with both with and without therapist support. In some of the systematic reviews, separate subgroup analyses were performed between therapist-supported and unguided treatment. In other systematic reviews, it was discussed and possibly qualitatively investigated if there were differences between therapist-supported internet therapy and unguided internet treatment. Therapist-supported internet therapy: Anxiety: Compared with minimal or no treatment, adults Therapist-supported internet therapy with cognitive behavioral therapy gave better symptom relief (standardised mean difference (SMD) -1.06 [95% CI -1.25 to -0.82], low confidence), higher functional level (RR 3.75 [95% CI 2, 51 to 5.60], low confidence) and better quality of life (SMD 0.47 [95% CI 0.38 to 0.57], moderate confidence) than no or minimal treatment. The review did not assess any of the other relevant outcomes for our health technology assessment. Compared with unguided internet therapy, adults: Therapist-supported internet therapy with cognitive behavioral therapy did not improve symptom relief (SMD -0.22 [95% CI -0.56 to 0.13], very low confidence) and quality of life (SMD 0.07 [95 % CI -0.37 to 0.50], very low confidence) compared to unguided internet therapy. Functional level estimates were not measurable. The review did not assess any of the other relevant outcomes for our health technology assessment. Compared with face-to-face treatment, adults: Therapist-supported internet therapy with cognitive behavioral therapy did not improve symptom relief (SMD 0.06 [95% CI -0.25 to 0.37], low confidence) or function level (RR 1.09 [95% CI 0.89 to 1.34], low confidence) compared to face-to-face treatment. There was a small difference in quality of life in favour of therapist-supported internet therapy (SMD 0.26 [95% CI 0.06 to 0.45], low confidence). The review did not assess any of the other relevant outcomes for our health technology assessment. Internet therapy with and without therapist support: Depression: Compared with no treatment, adults: Internet therapy (with and without therapist-support) with cognitive behavioral therapy gave better symptom relief (SMD 0.74 [95% CI 0.62 to 0.86], moderate confidence) than no treatment. The review did not assess any of the other relevant outcomes for our health technology assessment. Depression and anxiety (overall effect estimates): Compared with minimal or no treatment, adults: Internet therapy (with and without therapist-support) with cognitive behavioral therapy gave larger reduction of mental symptoms (g = 0.90 [95% CI 0.74 to 1.00], low confidence) than minimal and no treatment. Participants in the internet therapy group were mostly satisfied with the treatment (median 86% satisfied). The review did not assess any of the other relevant outcomes for our health technology assessment. Compared with face-to-face treatment: Internet therapy (with and without therapist-support) with cognitive behavioral therapy gave larger reduction of mental symptoms (g = 0.38 [95% CI 0.18 to 0.59], low confidence) than face-to-face treatment. Insomnia: Compared with no treatment, adults: Internet therapy (with and without therapist-support) with cognitive behavioral therapy gave better sleep efficiency (g = 0.58 [95% CI 0.36 to 0.81], very low confidence) and improvement in insomnia severity (g = 1.09 [95% CI 0.74 to 1.45], very low confidence) than no treatment. The review did not assess any of the other relevant outcomes for our health technology assessment. Alcohol abuse: Compared with no treatment, adults: Internet therapy (with and without therapist-support) with different forms of evidence-based treatment for alcohol abuse gave no difference in alcohol consumption (MD -25.0 grams / week [95% CI -51.9 to 1.9], low confidence) or proportion of participants meeting drinking limit guidelines (RR 1.22 [95% CI 0.79 to 1.89], very low confidence) in adults who misused alcohol as compared to no treatment. There was no difference between the groups in self-reported social problems (very low confidence). The review did not assess any of the other relevant outcomes for our health technology assessment. Compared with no treatment, students: Internet therapy (with and without therapist-support) with different forms of evidence-based treatment for alcohol abuse lowered alcohol consumption (MD -11.7 grams / week [95% CI -19.3 to -4.1], moderate confidence) and the proportion of participants meeting drinking limit guidelines (RR 1.53 [95% CI 1.09 to 2.17], moderate confidence) in students who misused alcohol compared to no treatment. There were no difference in self-reported social problems (SMD 0 [95% CI -0.10 to 0.10], moderate confidence) between the groups. Mental disorders in children and adolescents: Compared with no treatment, children and adolescents: Internet therapy (with and without therapist-support) with cognitive behavioral therapy gave improvement in depressive symptoms (MD 1.68 [95% CI -3.11 to -0.25], very low confidence), anxiety (MD -1.47 [95 % CI -2.36 to -0.59], low confidence) and quality of life (MD -5.55 [95% CI -10.88 to -0.22], very low confidence) in children and adolescents compared to no treatment or waiting list control. More in the control group than in the intervention group left the study early (OR 1.31 [95% CI 1.08 to 1.58], moderate confidence). The review did not assess any of the other relevant outcomes for our health technology assessment. Health economy: Direct treatment costs associated with therapist-supported internet-based treatment are NOK 17,600 for a treatment series. A treatment series delivered in conventional setting costs about NOK 17,100. When patients’ transportation costs are included in the calculation, internet-based therapy have a potential to generate cost savings compared with conventional face-to-face therapy. The budget implications of introduction of internet-based therapy as routine treatment are uncertain. Increased use of therapist-supported internet-based therapy could lead to some savings in terms of reduced travel costs. It can also lead to an increase in the number of patients receiving treatment and thus an increase in total cost.
Authors' methods: Effect: We conducted systematic searches for literature in nine databases. At least two researchers went independently through title, abstracts and full-text articles. The following criteria were used for search strategy and article selection: Population: Adults with primary diagnosis of mild to moderate depression and / or anxiety, alcohol dependence or insomnia, and psychical disorders in children and adolescents. Intervention: Therapist-supported internet-based therapy on all platforms (data machine, tablets, mobile phone). Comparator: Face-to-face treatment, unguided internet therapy, waiting list control. Outcomes: Symptoms, functional level, workforce, quality of life, patient satisfaction, adverse events, waiting time for treatment. Study design: High quality systematic reviews based on Scientific Quality Assessment of Review, Cochrane EPOC group. Language: English, Scandinavian. Exclusion criteria: Systematic reviews with low methodological quality. Relevant systematic reviews within each diagnosis were quality-assessed using relevant checklist. The certainty in the documentation was assessed using Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development and Evaluation (GRADE). Health economy: To put the results in a Norwegian context, we performed a cost-minimization analysis in the payer’s perspective, comparing "eMeistring", a therapist-supported internet-based program for mental disorders available in the Western Norway Regional Health Authority, with conventional face- to- face treatment. In addition, we described the budget implications of introduction of this program as a routine treatment in the Western Norway Regional Health Authority.
Details
Project Status: Completed
Year Published: 2018
English language abstract: An English language summary is available
Publication Type: Full HTA
Country: Norway
MeSH Terms
  • Therapy, Computer-Assisted
  • Computer-Assisted Instruction
  • Videoconferencing
  • Remote Consultation
  • Technology Assessment, Biomedical
  • Cognitive Behavioral Therapy
  • Mental Disorders
  • Internet
  • Norway
Keywords
  • internet‐based therapy
  • internet‐based cognitive behavioural therapy
  • internet‐based CBT
  • iCBT
  • eHealth
Contact
Organisation Name: Norwegian Institute of Public Health
Contact Address: P.O. Box 222 Skoyen, N-0123, Oslo
This is a bibliographic record of a published health technology assessment from a member of INAHTA or other HTA producer. No evaluation of the quality of this assessment has been made for the HTA database.