Espay Alberto J, Norris Matthew M, Eliassen James C, Dwivedi Alok, Smith Matthew S, Banks Christi, Allendorfer Jane B, Lang Anthony E, Fleck David E, Linke Michael J, Szaflarski Jerzy P
From the UC Neuroscience Institute, Department of Neurology (A.J.E., C.B., J.P.S.), and Department of Internal Medicine (M.J.L.), University of Cincinnati; Gardner Family Center for Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders (A.J.E.), Cincinnati; University of Cincinnati Center for Imaging Research (M.M.N., J.C.E., M.S.S., D.E.F.), OH; Division of Biostatistics and Epidemiology (A.D.), Texas Tech University Health Sciences Center, El Paso; The Morton and Gloria Shulman Movement Disorders Clinic and the Edmond J. Safra Program in Parkinson's Disease (A.E.L.), University Health Network and the University of Toronto, Canada; University of Alabama at Birmingham (J.B.A., J.P.S.); and Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center (M.J.L.), Research Service, Cincinnati, OH.
Neurology. 2015 Feb 24;84(8):794-802. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000001282. Epub 2015 Jan 28.
To examine the effect of cost, a traditionally "inactive" trait of intervention, as contributor to the response to therapeutic interventions.
We conducted a prospective double-blind study in 12 patients with moderate to severe Parkinson disease and motor fluctuations (mean age 62.4 ± 7.9 years; mean disease duration 11 ± 6 years) who were randomized to a "cheap" or "expensive" subcutaneous "novel injectable dopamine agonist" placebo (normal saline). Patients were crossed over to the alternate arm approximately 4 hours later. Blinded motor assessments in the "practically defined off" state, before and after each intervention, included the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale motor subscale, the Purdue Pegboard Test, and a tapping task. Measurements of brain activity were performed using a feedback-based visual-motor associative learning functional MRI task. Order effect was examined using stratified analysis.
Although both placebos improved motor function, benefit was greater when patients were randomized first to expensive placebo, with a magnitude halfway between that of cheap placebo and levodopa. Brain activation was greater upon first-given cheap but not upon first-given expensive placebo or by levodopa. Regardless of order of administration, only cheap placebo increased activation in the left lateral sensorimotor cortex and other regions.
Expensive placebo significantly improved motor function and decreased brain activation in a direction and magnitude comparable to, albeit less than, levodopa. Perceptions of cost are capable of altering the placebo response in clinical studies.
This study provides Class III evidence that perception of cost is capable of influencing motor function and brain activation in Parkinson disease.
研究成本这一传统上被认为是干预措施“非活性”特征的因素对治疗性干预反应的影响。
我们对12例中度至重度帕金森病伴运动波动的患者(平均年龄62.4±7.9岁;平均病程11±6年)进行了一项前瞻性双盲研究,这些患者被随机分为接受“便宜”或“昂贵”的皮下注射“新型多巴胺激动剂”安慰剂(生理盐水)。约4小时后,患者交叉至另一组。在每次干预前后的“实际定义的关期”状态下进行盲法运动评估,包括统一帕金森病评定量表运动子量表、普渡钉板测试和一项敲击任务。使用基于反馈的视觉运动联想学习功能磁共振成像任务进行脑活动测量。采用分层分析检验顺序效应。
尽管两种安慰剂均改善了运动功能,但当患者首先被随机分配至昂贵安慰剂组时获益更大,获益程度介于便宜安慰剂组和左旋多巴组之间。首次给予便宜安慰剂后脑激活增加,但首次给予昂贵安慰剂或左旋多巴后未出现这种情况。无论给药顺序如何,只有便宜安慰剂增加了左侧外侧感觉运动皮层和其他区域的激活。
昂贵安慰剂显著改善了运动功能,并使脑激活降低,其方向和程度与左旋多巴相当,尽管程度小于左旋多巴。在临床研究中,对成本的认知能够改变安慰剂反应。
本研究提供了III类证据,表明对成本的认知能够影响帕金森病的运动功能和脑激活。