Literature DB >> 11406060

Antidepressants using active placebos.

J Moncrieff1, S Wessely, R Hardy.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although there is a consensus that antidepressants are effective in depression, placebo effects are also thought to be substantial. Side effects of antidepressants may reveal the identity of medication to participants or investigators and thus may bias the results of conventional trials using inert placebos. Using an 'active' placebo which mimics some of the side effects of antidepressants may help to counteract this potential bias.
OBJECTIVES: To investigate the efficacy of antidepressants when compared with 'active' placebos. SEARCH STRATEGY: The Cochrane Collaboration Depression, Anxiety and Neurosis review groups's search strategy was used to search MEDLINE (1966-2000), PsychLIT (1980-2000) and EMBASE (1974-2000) and this was last done in July 2000. Reference lists from relevant articles and textbooks were searched and 12 specialist journals were handsearched up to 1996. SELECTION CRITERIA: Randomised and quasi randomised controlled trials comparing antidepressants with active placebos in people with depression. DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS: Since many different outcome measures were used a standard measure of effect was calculated for each trial. A subgroup analysis of inpatient and outpatient trials was conducted. Two reviewers independently assessed whether each trial met inclusion criteria. MAIN
RESULTS: Nine studies involving 751 participants were included. Two of them produced effect sizes which showed a consistent and statistically significant difference in favour of the active drug. Combining all studies produced a pooled estimate of effect of 0.39 standard deviations (confidence interval, 0.24 to 0.54) in favour of the antidepressant measured by improvement in mood. There was high heterogeneity due to one strongly positive trial. Sensitivity analysis omitting this trial reduced the pooled effect to 0.17 (0.00 to 0.34). The pooled effect for inpatient and outpatient trials was highly sensitive to decisions about which combination of data was included but inpatient trials produced the lowest effects. REVIEWER'S
CONCLUSIONS: The more conservative estimates from the present analysis found that differences between antidepressants and active placebos were small. This suggests that unblinding effects may inflate the efficacy of antidepressants in trials using inert placebos. Further research into unblinding is warranted.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11406060     DOI: 10.1002/14651858.CD003012

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Cochrane Database Syst Rev        ISSN: 1361-6137


  3 in total

1.  A comparison of antidepressant trials using active and inert placebos.

Authors:  Joanna Moncrieff
Journal:  Int J Methods Psychiatr Res       Date:  2003       Impact factor: 4.035

2.  Using antidepressants during pregnancy.

Authors:  David Zitner; Angela Bischoff
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2005-11-08       Impact factor: 8.262

3.  Prescribing for personality disorder: qualitative study of interviews with general and forensic consultant psychiatrists.

Authors:  Lawrence Martean; Chris Evans
Journal:  Psychiatr Bull (2014)       Date:  2014-06
  3 in total

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