Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA.
Department of Comparative Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, 94305, USA.
Mol Psychiatry. 2022 Jun;27(6):2640-2649. doi: 10.1038/s41380-022-01515-9. Epub 2022 Mar 25.
Significant clinical improvement is often observed in patients who receive placebo treatment in randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trials. While a proportion of this "improvement" reflects experimental design limitations (e.g., reliance on subjective outcomes, unbalanced groups, reporting biases), some of it reflects genuine improvement corroborated by physiological change. Converging evidence across diverse medical conditions suggests that clinically-relevant benefits from placebo treatment are associated with the activation of brain reward circuits. In parallel, evidence has accumulated showing that such benefits are facilitated by clinicians that demonstrate warmth and proficiency during interactions with patients. Here, we integrate research on these neural and social aspects of placebo effects with evidence linking oxytocin and social reward to advance a neurobiological account for the social facilitation of placebo effects. This account frames oxytocin as a key mediator of treatment success across a wide-spectrum of interventions that increase social connectedness, thereby providing a biological basis for assessing this fundamental non-specific element of medical care.
在随机双盲安慰剂对照试验中,接受安慰剂治疗的患者通常会观察到显著的临床改善。虽然这种“改善”的一部分反映了实验设计的局限性(例如,依赖主观结果、组间不平衡、报告偏倚),但其中一些反映了真正的改善,这是由生理变化证实的。来自不同医疗条件的综合证据表明,安慰剂治疗带来的临床相关益处与大脑奖励回路的激活有关。与此同时,有证据表明,临床医生在与患者互动时表现出温暖和熟练,有助于实现这种益处。在这里,我们将安慰剂效应的这些神经和社会方面的研究与将催产素和社会奖励联系起来的证据相结合,提出了一个神经生物学解释,即社会促进安慰剂效应。该解释将催产素作为增加社会联系的广泛干预措施治疗成功的关键介质,从而为评估医疗保健这一基本非特异性元素提供了生物学基础。