Systematic Review and Individual Participant Data Meta-analysis: Reducing Self-harm in Adolescents: Pooled Treatment Effects, Study, Treatment, and Participant Moderators
Wright-Hughes A., Farrin AJ., Fonagy P., Ougrin D., Stahl D., Wright J., Irving D., Mughal F., Truscott A., Diggins E., Chanen A., Cooney E., Carter G., Clover K., Dadds M., Diamond G., Esposito-Smythers C., Green J., Griffiths H., Hassanian-Moghaddam H., Hatcher S., Hazell P., Husain N., Kaess M., King C., Morthorst B., O'Connor RC., Santamarina-Perez P., Tyrer P., Walwyn R., Cottrell D.
Objective: Self-harm is common in adolescents and a major public health concern. Evidence for effective interventions that stop repetition is lacking. This individual participant data (IPD) meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) aimed to provide robust estimates of therapeutic intervention effects and explore which treatments are best suited to different subgroups. Method: Databases and trial registers to January 2022 were searched. RCTs compared therapeutic intervention to control, targeted adolescents ages 11 to 18 with a history of self-harm and receiving clinical care, and reported on outcomes related to self-harm or suicide attempt. Primary outcome was repetition of self-harm 12 months after randomization. Two-stage random-effects IPD meta-analyses were conducted overall and by intervention. Secondary analyses incorporated aggregate data from RCTs without IPD. Results: The search identified 39 eligible studies; 26 provided IPD (3,448 participants), and 7 provided aggregate data (698 participants). There was no evidence that interventions were more or less effective than controls at preventing repeat self-harm by 12 months in IPD (odds ratio 1.06 [95% CI 0.86, 1.31], 20 studies, 2,949 participants) or IPD and aggregate data (odds ratio 1.02 [95% CI 0.82, 1.27], 22 studies, 3,117 participants) meta-analyses and no evidence of heterogeneity of treatment effects on study and treatment factors. Across all interventions, participants with multiple prior self-harm episodes showed evidence of improved treatment effect on self-harm repetition 6 to 12 months after randomization (odds ratio 0.33 [95% CI 0.12, 0.94], 9 studies, 1,771 participants). Conclusion: This large-scale meta-analysis of RCTs provided no evidence that therapeutic intervention was more, or less, effective than control for reducing repeat self-harm. Evidence indicating more effective interventions in youth with 2 or more self-harm incidents was observed. Funders and researchers need to agree on a core set of outcome measures to include in subsequent studies. Study preregistration information: Reducing Self-harm in Adolescents: An Individual Participant Data Meta-analysis; https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?RecordID=152119.