Ref (type) | Population | Outcome, Interventions | Results and statistical analysis | Effect size | Favours |
Adverse effects (any) | |||||
Systematic review |
1148 people 6 RCTs in this analysis |
Proportion of people withdrawing from RCT
151/571 (26%) with sertraline 138/577 (24%) with placebo |
RR 1.10 95% CI 0.90 to 1.33 |
Not significant | |
RCT |
208 people In review |
Proportion of people with insomnia
35% with sertraline 22% with placebo Absolute numbers not reported |
P = 0.04 |
Effect size not calculated | placebo |
RCT |
208 people In review |
Proportion of people with diarrhoea
28% with sertraline 11% with placebo Absolute numbers not reported |
P = 0.003 |
Effect size not calculated | placebo |
RCT |
208 people In review |
Proportion of people with nausea
23% with sertraline 11% with placebo Absolute numbers not reported |
P = 0.03 |
Effect size not calculated | placebo |
RCT |
208 people In review |
Proportion of people with decreased appetite
12% with sertraline 1% with placebo Absolute numbers not reported |
P = 0.001 |
Effect size not calculated | placebo |
RCT |
169 people with combat-related PTSD |
Proportion of people with fatigue
12 weeks
9/86 (11%) with sertraline (25–200 mg/day, flexible dose) 1/83 (1%) with placebo |
P = 0.018 |
Effect size not calculated | placebo |
RCT |
169 people with combat-related PTSD |
Proportion of people discontinuing treatment
12 weeks
26/86 (30%) with sertraline (25–200 mg/day, flexible dose) 14/83 (17%) with placebo |
P = 0.041 |
Effect size not calculated | placebo |
RCT |
169 people with combat-related PTSD |
Proportion of people with diarrhoea
12 weeks
27/86 (31%) with sertraline (25–200 mg/day, flexible dose) 15/83 (18%) with placebo |
Reported as not significant P value not reported |
Not significant | |
RCT |
169 people with combat-related PTSD |
Proportion of people with headache
12 weeks
23/86 (27%) with sertraline (25–200 mg/day, flexible dose) 20/83 (24%) with placebo |
Reported as not significant P value not reported |
Not significant | |
RCT |
169 people with combat-related PTSD |
Proportion of people with insomnia
12 weeks
12/86 (14%) with sertraline (25–200 mg/day, flexible dose) 8/83 (10%) with placebo |
Reported as not significant P value not reported |
Not significant |