Wise Robert A, Bartlett Susan J, Brown Ellen D, Castro Mario, Cohen Rubin, Holbrook Janet T, Irvin Charles G, Rand Cynthia S, Sockrider Marianna M, Sugar Elizabeth A
Division of Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Department of Medicine, the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Md 21224, USA.
J Allergy Clin Immunol. 2009 Sep;124(3):436-44, 444e1-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jaci.2009.05.041. Epub 2009 Jul 25.
Information that enhances expectations about drug effectiveness improves the response to placebos for pain. Although asthma symptoms often improve with placebo, it is not known whether the response to placebo or active treatment can be augmented by increasing expectation of benefit.
The study objective was to determine whether response to placebo or a leukotriene antagonist (montelukast) can be augmented by messages that increase expectation of benefit.
A randomized 20-center controlled trial enrolled 601 asthmatic patients with poor symptom control who were assigned to one of 5 study groups. Participants were randomly assigned to one of 4 treatment groups in a factorial design (ie, placebo with enhanced messages, placebo with neutral messages, montelukast with enhanced messages, or montelukast with neutral messages) or to usual care. Assignment to study drug was double masked, assignment to message content was single masked, and usual care was not masked. The enhanced message aimed to increase expectation of benefit from the drug. The primary outcome was mean change in daily peak flow over 4 weeks. Secondary outcomes included lung function and asthma symptom control.
Peak flow and other lung function measures were not improved in participants assigned to the enhanced message groups versus the neutral messages groups for either montelukast or placebo; no differences were noted between the neutral placebo and usual care groups. Placebo-treated participants had improved asthma control with the enhanced message but not montelukast-treated participants; the neutral placebo group did have improved asthma control compared with the usual care group after adjusting for baseline difference. Headaches were more common in participants provided messages that mentioned headache as a montelukast side effect.
Optimistic drug presentation augments the placebo effect for patient-reported outcomes (asthma control) but not lung function. However, the effect of montelukast was not enhanced by optimistic messages regarding treatment effectiveness.
增强对药物疗效期望的信息可改善对安慰剂的疼痛反应。虽然哮喘症状常因安慰剂而改善,但尚不清楚通过增加对获益的期望是否能增强对安慰剂或活性治疗的反应。
本研究的目的是确定增加对获益期望的信息是否能增强对安慰剂或白三烯拮抗剂(孟鲁司特)的反应。
一项随机、20中心的对照试验纳入了601例症状控制不佳的哮喘患者,将其分配至5个研究组之一。参与者按析因设计随机分配至4个治疗组之一(即接受增强信息的安慰剂、接受中性信息的安慰剂、接受增强信息的孟鲁司特或接受中性信息的孟鲁司特)或常规治疗。研究药物的分配采用双盲法,信息内容的分配采用单盲法,常规治疗不设盲。增强信息旨在增加对药物获益的期望。主要结局是4周内每日呼气峰流速的平均变化。次要结局包括肺功能和哮喘症状控制。
对于孟鲁司特或安慰剂,接受增强信息组的参与者与接受中性信息组相比,呼气峰流速和其他肺功能指标并未改善;中性安慰剂组与常规治疗组之间未观察到差异。接受安慰剂治疗的参与者在接受增强信息后哮喘控制得到改善,但接受孟鲁司特治疗的参与者未改善;调整基线差异后,中性安慰剂组与常规治疗组相比哮喘控制确实得到改善。在被告知头痛是孟鲁司特副作用的信息的参与者中,头痛更为常见。
乐观的药物展示增强了患者报告结局(哮喘控制)的安慰剂效应,但未增强肺功能。然而,关于治疗效果的乐观信息并未增强孟鲁司特的效果。