Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Sao Paulo, Sao Paulo, Brazil.
JAMA Netw Open. 2021 Sep 1;4(9):e2125531. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2021.25531.
The placebo effect in depression clinical trials is a substantial factor associated with failure to establish efficacy of novel and repurposed treatments. However, the magnitude of the placebo effect and whether it differs across treatment modalities in treatment-resistant depression (TRD) is unclear.
To examine the magnitude of the placebo effect in patients with TRD across different treatment modalities and its possible moderators.
Searches were conducted on MEDLINE, Web of Science, and PsychInfo from inception to June 21, 2021.
Randomized clinical trials (RCTs) were included if they recruited patients with TRD and randomized them to a placebo or sham arm and a pharmacotherapy, brain stimulation, or psychotherapy arm.
Independent reviewers used standard forms for data extraction and quality assessment. Random-effects analyses and standard pairwise meta-analyses were performed.
The primary outcome was the Hedges g value for the reported depression scales. Secondary outcomes included moderators assessed via meta-regression and response and remission rates. Heterogeneity was assessed with the I2 test, and publication bias was evaluated using the Egger test and a funnel plot. Cochrane Risk of Bias Tool was used to estimate risks.
Fifty RCTs were included involving various types of placebo or sham interventions with a total of 3228 participants (mean [SD] age, 45.8 [6.0] years; 1769 [54.8%] female). The pooled placebo effect size for all modalities was large (g = 1.05; 95% CI, 0.91-1.1); the placebo effect size in RCTs of specific treatment modalities did not significantly differ. Similarly, response and remission rates associated with placebo were comparable across modalities. Heterogeneity was large. Three variables were associated with a larger placebo effect size: open-label prospective treatment before double-blind placebo randomization (β = 0.35; 95% CI, 0.11 to 0.59; P = .004), later year of publication (β = 0.03; 95% CI, 0.003 to 0.05; P = .03), and industry-sponsored trials (β = 0.34; 95% CI, 0.09 to 0.58; P = .007). The number of failed interventions was associated with the probability a smaller placebo effect size (β = -0.12; 95% CI, -0.23 to -0.01, P = .03). The Egger test result was not significant for small studies' effects.
This analysis may provide a benchmark for past and future clinical RCTs that recruit patients with TRD standardizing an expected placebo effect size.
在抑郁症临床试验中,安慰剂效应是与新型和重新定位的治疗方法疗效失败相关的一个重要因素。然而,在治疗抵抗性抑郁症(TRD)中,安慰剂效应的大小及其是否因治疗方式而异尚不清楚。
在不同的治疗方式下,检查 TRD 患者的安慰剂效应的大小及其可能的调节因素。
从 2021 年 6 月 21 日开始,在 MEDLINE、Web of Science 和 PsychInfo 上进行了检索。
如果招募了 TRD 患者,并将其随机分配到安慰剂或假治疗组和药物治疗、脑刺激或心理治疗组,则纳入随机临床试验(RCT)。
独立审查员使用标准表格进行数据提取和质量评估。进行了随机效应分析和标准成对荟萃分析。
主要结果是报告的抑郁量表的 Hedges g 值。次要结果包括通过荟萃回归和反应及缓解率评估的调节因素。使用 I2 检验评估异质性,并使用 Egger 检验和漏斗图评估发表偏倚。使用 Cochrane 偏倚风险工具评估风险。
共纳入了 50 项 RCT,涉及各种类型的安慰剂或假干预,共有 3228 名参与者(平均[SD]年龄为 45.8[6.0]岁;1769[54.8%]为女性)。所有治疗方式的安慰剂效应大小均较大(g=1.05;95%CI,0.91-1.1);特定治疗方式 RCT 中的安慰剂效应大小无显著差异。同样,与安慰剂相关的反应和缓解率在不同治疗方式之间也相当。异质性较大。有三个变量与较大的安慰剂效应大小相关:双盲安慰剂随机分组前的开放标签前瞻性治疗(β=0.35;95%CI,0.11-0.59;P=0.004)、较晚的发表年份(β=0.03;95%CI,0.003-0.05;P=0.03)和行业赞助试验(β=0.34;95%CI,0.09-0.58;P=0.007)。失败干预的数量与较小的安慰剂效应大小相关(β=-0.12;95%CI,-0.23 至-0.01,P=0.03)。Egger 检验结果对小样本研究的影响不显著。
本分析可为招募 TRD 患者的过去和未来临床 RCT 提供一个基准,使预期的安慰剂效应大小标准化。