Swanston Centre-Barwon Health, PO Box 281, Geelong, Victoria 3220, Australia
J Clin Psychiatry. 2015 Jun;76(6):702-11. doi: 10.4088/JCP.13r08858.
The nocebo effect, when a harmless substance creates harmful effects in a person who takes it, is a clinically salient yet seldom studied phenomenon that may be associated with poorer treatment outcomes, perceived adverse events, and treatment discontinuation. The covert presence of nocebo responders in clinical trials may contribute to outcome variance in both placebo and active treatment arms for important primary and secondary endpoints. Nocebo effects are thought to be driven by expectancy and conditioning.
This study analyzed pooled clinical trial data in the placebo arms of controlled trials of antidepressant medications to investigate variables associated with the emergence of adverse outcomes in placebo-treated participants (N = 2,457). Specifically, we examined treatment-emergent adverse events (TEAEs) and discontinuation in placebo-treated individuals. Trials were commenced between 1993 and 2010 as studies of duloxetine versus active comparator and/or placebo.
TEAEs were reported by 1,569 placebo-treated participants (63.9%), with 115 (4.7%) discontinuing from the studies due to TEAEs and 274 (11.2%) showing worsening of Hamilton Depression Rating Scale total score during placebo treatment. There was specifically no evidence to support the expectancy hypothesis, that reported TEAEs were influenced by adverse effects described in the clinical trials participant information and consent forms, or the conditioning hypothesis, that reported TEAEs would be influenced by adverse effect profiles of previous antidepressant medications used by these study participants. There was some evidence to suggest that people who had previously used complementary medications were more likely to report TEAEs. Variables specific to individual studies were the strongest predictors of TEAEs.
In this study, TEAEs were very common among placebo-treated clinical trial participants. Unexpectedly, there was no evidence to associate TEAEs with adverse clinical outcomes, nor were the conditioning or expectancy hypotheses supported by these data.
The nocebo effect is a common, covert, and poorly understood driver of clinical outcomes that requires further investigation.
当无害物质在服用它的人身上产生有害作用时,就会产生一种临床上显著但很少研究的现象,即“反安慰剂效应”,这可能与较差的治疗结果、感知到的不良事件和治疗中断有关。反安慰剂应答者在临床试验中的隐性存在可能会导致安慰剂和活性治疗组在重要的主要和次要终点上的结果差异。反安慰剂效应被认为是由期望和条件作用驱动的。
本研究分析了抗抑郁药物对照临床试验安慰剂组的汇总临床试验数据,以调查与安慰剂治疗参与者出现不良结局相关的变量(N=2457)。具体来说,我们检查了安慰剂治疗个体的治疗中出现的不良事件(TEAEs)和停药情况。这些试验于 1993 年至 2010 年期间开展,作为度洛西汀与活性对照药物和/或安慰剂的研究。
1569 名安慰剂治疗参与者(63.9%)报告出现 TEAEs,其中 115 名(4.7%)因 TEAEs 而退出研究,274 名(11.2%)在安慰剂治疗期间汉密尔顿抑郁量表总分恶化。没有证据支持报告的 TEAEs 受到临床试验参与者信息和知情同意书中描述的不良反应影响的期望假设,也没有证据支持报告的 TEAEs 将受到这些研究参与者以前使用的抗抑郁药物的不良反应特征影响的条件假设。有一些证据表明,以前使用过补充药物的人更有可能报告 TEAEs。特定于个别研究的变量是 TEAEs 的最强预测因子。
在这项研究中,安慰剂治疗的临床试验参与者中 TEAEs 非常常见。出乎意料的是,没有证据表明 TEAEs 与不良临床结局相关,也没有证据支持这些数据的条件作用或期望假设。
反安慰剂效应是一种常见的、隐性的、尚未被充分理解的临床结局驱动因素,需要进一步研究。