Autor/es reacciones

Celso Arango

Head of the Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Director of the Institute of Psychiatry and Mental Health of the Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón

This phase 2/3 clinical trial compares treatment as usual versus treatment as usual but with the addition of two forms of avatar therapy in people with psychotic disorders who have auditory hallucinations that produce distress. One of the two added treatments was a simpler, six-session, non-personalised treatment based on exposure, assertiveness and self-stigma. The second, with twelve sessions, was personalised for each participant, integrating each patient's personal history into the intervention through the avatar.

Both avatar interventions were more effective than treatment as usual in reducing distress caused by auditory hallucinations (primary endpoint) at 16 weeks of treatment. Neither avatar intervention was superior to treatment as usual at 28 weeks, the severity of auditory hallucinations was also reduced at 16 weeks with both interventions, and the frequency of auditory hallucinations was reduced at 28 weeks only with the more personalised avatar intervention.

The study is very well conducted, with a sufficient sample size to assess the primary endpoint, and adds evidence for the use of digital innovation in the treatment portfolio for people with mental disorders.
However, several questions remain unresolved, such as identifying which patients can benefit from this treatment, especially since only 58% of those who were assigned the most personalised treatment completed the study. It is also necessary to know by what mechanism the reduction in discomfort is produced. It is hypothesised, but unanswered, that it may be by reducing anxiety and feelings of threat, greater empowerment or acceptance of voices. The two interventions have not been compared with psychotherapies that have been shown to be effective in these cases, such as cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) and cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT). Given the lack of people who can carry out these psychotherapies in the public system, cost-effectiveness studies are needed. If these digital interventions are shown to be cost-effective, they could become an alternative for a group of people with psychotic disorders.

EN