From the Movement Disorders Centre and Edmond J. Safra Program in Parkinson's Disease, Toronto Western Hospital, University Health Network, Division of Neurology (T.A.M., C.M., A.E.L.), the Department of Paediatrics and Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation (P.S.), the Department of Public Health Sciences (G.T.), and the Department of Medicine (T.A.M., C.M., G.T., A.E.L.), University of Toronto; and the Department of Pediatrics (P.S.), Mount Sinai Hospital, Toronto. T.A.M. is currently with the Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders Clinic, Division of Neurology, Ottawa Hospital, University of Ottawa.
Neurology. 2014 Apr 22;82(16):1402-9. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000000340. Epub 2014 Mar 21.
To study the impact of negative expectation related to receiving a placebo (the "lessebo effect") on efficacy outcome measures of symptomatic treatments in Parkinson disease (PD).
We conducted meta-analyses of double-blind randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of dopamine agonists in PD and compared the pooled mean score change of the motor section of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (mUPDRS) across active treatment arms according to the presence of a placebo arm or the probability of placebo assignment (0%, <50%, and 50%) of the original RCT. A mixed-effects model was used. Heterogeneity was assessed by subgroup analyses and meta-regression modeling.
A total of 28 study arms were extracted from active-controlled trials (3,277 patients) and 42 from placebo-controlled trials (4,554 patients). The overall difference between groups in the pooled mean score change in the mUPDRS was 1.6 units (95% confidence interval [CI] 0.2, 3.0; p = 0.023), in favor of the active-controlled group. In subgroup analyses, this difference was of higher magnitude in the early PD group without motor fluctuations (3.3 mUPDRS units, 95% CI 1.1, 5.4; p = 0.003) and for study duration ≤ 12 weeks (4.1 mUPDRS units, 95% CI 1.0, 7.2; p = 0.009). There was no between-group difference using probability of placebo assignment as criterion.
This study shows that the use of a placebo can be associated with a clinically significant reduction in the magnitude of change of the mUPDRS after an active treatment in RCTs for PD. These new findings have potential implications in the development of new treatments and appraisal of current treatment options for PD and possibly for other neurologic disorders.
研究与接受安慰剂相关的负面预期(“lessebo 效应”)对帕金森病(PD)症状治疗疗效结局指标的影响。
我们对 PD 中多巴胺激动剂的双盲随机对照试验(RCT)进行了荟萃分析,并根据原始 RCT 中安慰剂臂的存在或安慰剂分配的可能性(0%、<50%和 50%),比较了运动统一帕金森病评定量表(mUPDRS)运动部分的汇总平均评分变化的活性治疗臂。采用混合效应模型。通过亚组分析和荟萃回归建模评估异质性。
从活性对照试验(3277 例患者)中提取了 28 个治疗臂,从安慰剂对照试验(4554 例患者)中提取了 42 个治疗臂。mUPDRS 汇总平均评分变化的组间总体差异为 1.6 个单位(95%置信区间 [CI] 0.2,3.0;p = 0.023),有利于活性对照组。在亚组分析中,在无运动波动的早期 PD 组中,这种差异更大(3.3 mUPDRS 单位,95%CI 1.1,5.4;p = 0.003),且研究持续时间≤12 周时差异更大(4.1 mUPDRS 单位,95%CI 1.0,7.2;p = 0.009)。使用安慰剂分配的可能性作为标准,两组之间没有差异。
本研究表明,在 PD 的 RCT 中,与接受活性治疗后 mUPDRS 的变化幅度相比,使用安慰剂可能与临床显著降低相关。这些新发现可能对开发新的治疗方法以及评估 PD 和可能的其他神经障碍的现有治疗选择产生影响。