IMPACT Strategic Research Centre, Deakin University, Geelong, VIC, Australia.
Centre for Adolescent Health, Murdoch Children's Research Institute, Parkville, VIC, Australia.
BMC Med. 2018 Dec 28;16(1):237. doi: 10.1186/s12916-018-1228-y.
The SMILES trial was the first intervention study to test dietary improvement as a treatment strategy for depression. Molendijk et al. propose that expectation bias and difficulties with blinding might account for the large effect size. While we acknowledge the issue of expectation bias in lifestyle intervention trials and indeed discuss this as a key limitation in our paper, we observed a strong correlation between dietary change and change in depression scores, which we argue is consistent with a causal effect and we believe unlikely to be an artefact of inadequate blinding. Since its publication, our results have been largely replicated and our recent economic evaluation of SMILES suggests that the benefits of our approach extend beyond depression. We argue that the SMILES trial should be considered an important, albeit preliminary, first step in the field of nutritional psychiatry research.
SMILES 试验是首个测试饮食改善作为抑郁症治疗策略的干预研究。Molendijk 等人提出,期望偏差和盲法困难可能是造成这种大效应的原因。虽然我们承认生活方式干预试验中的期望偏差问题,并在我们的论文中确实将其作为一个关键限制进行了讨论,但我们观察到饮食变化与抑郁评分变化之间存在很强的相关性,我们认为这与因果效应一致,而且我们认为不太可能是由于盲法不充分造成的假象。自发表以来,我们的研究结果已被广泛复制,我们最近对 SMILES 的经济评估表明,我们方法的益处不仅限于抑郁症。我们认为,SMILES 试验应该被视为营养精神病学研究领域的一个重要的、尽管是初步的第一步。