Literature DB >> 18954907

The antidepressant debate and the balanced placebo trial design: an ethical analysis.

Duff R Waring1.   

Abstract

There is ongoing debate about whether randomized, placebo-controlled trials under a double-blind have reliably established the pharmacological efficacy of antidepressants. Numerous meta-analyses of antidepressant efficacy trials, e.g., Kirsch et al. [Kirsch, I., Moore, T. J., Scoboria, A., & Nicholls, S. (2002). The emperor's new drugs: An analysis of antidepressant medication data submitted to the U.S. food and drug administration. Prevention and Treatment, 5, Article 23. (Retrieved July 19, 2007 from http://journals.apa.org/prevention/volume5)], have shown a modest drug-placebo difference but methodological problems with standard trial design preclude a definitive conclusion that this difference results from specific biological effects of antidepressants or the nonspecific factors that have not been adequately excluded. Standard trial design assumes the additivity thesis of pharmacological efficacy, being the assumption that the specific or "true" magnitude of the pharmacological effect is limited to the difference between the drug and placebo responses in a standard trial. If the drug effects are as small as these meta-analyses suggest, then their clinical effectiveness is questionable. If the drug effects are actually larger but masked by placebo effects, then the additivity thesis is not valid and we risk false negative results with standard trial design. Kirsch et al. propose an alternative, four arm balanced placebo trial design (BPTD) that can accurately test the additivity thesis. The BPTD uses antidepressants, active placebos and the intentional deception of research subjects. My focal question is whether the BPTD is ethically defensible. I will explore two objections that can be raised against it: 1) lying to BPTD research subjects violates their autonomy and exploits their illness and 2) the BPTD may not enable us to test the additivity thesis with accuracy, i.e., it may contribute to the masking of drug effects that it aims to avoid. I argue that these objections support the conclusion that the BPTD is ethically indefensible.

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Year:  2008        PMID: 18954907     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijlp.2008.09.001

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Law Psychiatry        ISSN: 0160-2527


  9 in total

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Authors:  Brandon J George; Peng Li; Harris R Lieberman; Greg Pavela; Andrew W Brown; Kevin R Fontaine; Madeline M Jeansonne; Gareth R Dutton; Adeniyi J Idigo; Mariel A Parman; Donald B Rubin; David B Allison
Journal:  Psychol Methods       Date:  2017-04-13

2.  Improving study design for antidepressant effectiveness assessment.

Authors:  Florian Naudet; Bruno Millet; Jean Michel Reymann; Bruno Falissard
Journal:  Int J Methods Psychiatr Res       Date:  2013-08-30       Impact factor: 4.035

3.  Importance of placebo effect in cough clinical trials.

Authors:  Ron Eccles
Journal:  Lung       Date:  2009-09-16       Impact factor: 2.584

4.  General and comparative efficacy and effectiveness of antidepressants in the acute treatment of depressive disorders: a report by the WPA section of pharmacopsychiatry.

Authors:  Thomas C Baghai; Pierre Blier; David S Baldwin; Michael Bauer; Guy M Goodwin; Kostas N Fountoulakis; Siegfried Kasper; Brian E Leonard; Ulrik F Malt; Dan Stein; Marcio Versiani; Hans-Jürgen Möller
Journal:  Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci       Date:  2011-11       Impact factor: 5.270

5.  Placebo and Active Treatment Additivity in Placebo Analgesia: Research to Date and Future Directions.

Authors:  Matthew J Coleshill; Louise Sharpe; Luana Colloca; Robert Zachariae; Ben Colagiuri
Journal:  Int Rev Neurobiol       Date:  2018-08-06       Impact factor: 3.230

6.  Interaction between drug and placebo effects: a cross-over balanced placebo design trial.

Authors:  Muhammad M Hammami; Eman A Al-Gaai; Syed Alvi; Muhammad B Hammami
Journal:  Trials       Date:  2010-11-19       Impact factor: 2.279

7.  Randomised controlled trials may underestimate drug effects: balanced placebo trial design.

Authors:  Karen Lund; Lene Vase; Gitte L Petersen; Troels S Jensen; Nanna B Finnerup
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-08       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  From Randomized Controlled Trials of Antidepressant Drugs to the Meta-Analytic Synthesis of Evidence: Methodological Aspects Lead to Discrepant Findings.

Authors:  Konstantinos N Fountoulakis; Roger S McIntyre; André F Carvalho
Journal:  Curr Neuropharmacol       Date:  2015       Impact factor: 7.363

9.  Drug*placebo interaction effect may bias clinical trials interpretation: hybrid balanced placebo and randomized placebo-controlled design.

Authors:  Muhammad M Hammami; Safa Hammami; Reem Al-Swayeh; Eman Al-Gaai; Faduma Abdi Farah; Sophia J S De Padua
Journal:  BMC Med Res Methodol       Date:  2016-11-29       Impact factor: 4.615

  9 in total

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