| Literature DB >> 25423149 |
Astrid Hernández1, Josep-E Baños2, Cristina Llop3, Magí Farré1.
Abstract
AIM: Lack of knowledge concerning the nature of placebo and why it is necessary may influence the participation of patients in clinical trials. The objective of the present study is to review how placebo is described in written information for participants in clinical trials to be evaluated by a Human Research Ethics Committee.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2014 PMID: 25423149 PMCID: PMC4244087 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0113654
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Most frequent explanations of what placebo is on the patients' information sheets (n = 359).
| Placebo description | n (%) |
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| “Same/similar look” | 12 (3.3) |
| “Pill/tablet of sugar” | 9 (2.5) |
| “Saline solution” | 4 (1.1) |
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| “A substance/capsule without drug or active medicine” | 55 (15.4) |
| “A substance/capsule/drug without pharmacological activity” | 26 (7.2) |
| “A substance/capsule/drug without activity” | 29 (8.1) |
| “A substance/capsule/drug with no effect” | 11 (3.1) |
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| “Same look, without pharmacological or therapeutic activity” | 13 (3.6) |
| “Same or similar look, without any active ingredient or drug” | 152 (42.3) |
| “Same look, inactive drug without any effect” | 25 (7.0) |
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The commonest medical specialties contributing to the total number of studies including placebo (they represent 72.8% of the total number of studies including placebo).
| Medical specialty | n (%) |
| Oncology | 54 (15.0) |
| Cardiology | 51 (14.2) |
| Neurology | 47 (13.1) |
| Digestive | 27 (7.5) |
| Pulmonology | 22 (6.1) |
| Rheumatology | 22 (6.1) |
| Nephrology | 20 (5.6) |
| Dermatology | 12 (3.3) |
| Psychiatry | 12 (3.3) |
| Clinical Pharmacology | 10 (2.8) |
| Infectious Diseases | 10 (2.8) |
|
| 287 (79.8) |
|
| 72 (20.2) |
| 359 (100) |
Descriptions of placebo found on the selected webpages of some organizations.
| Organization | Webpages | Descriptions of placebo |
| ClinicalTrials.gov |
| A substance that does not contain active ingredients and is made to be physically indistinguishable (that is, it looks and tastes identical) from the actual drug being studied. |
| ICH guidelines: E10: Choice of Control Group and Related Issues in Clinical Trials (Section 2.1) |
| A "dummy" treatment that appears as identical as possible to the test treatment with respect to physical characteristics such as colour, weight, taste and smell, but that does not contain the test drug. |
| EU Clinical Trials Register |
| A placebo is a control substance (a dummy treatment) that is given to people taking part in a clinical trial. |
| Medline Plus Medical Library |
| 1: A usually pharmacologically inert preparation prescribed more for the mental relief of the patient than for its actual effect on a disorder. 2: An inert or innocuous substance used especially in controlled experiments testing the efficacy of another substance, such as a drug. |
| National Institutes of Health (NIH) |
| A placebo is a pill or liquid that looks like the new treatment but does not have any treatment value from active ingredients. |
| NIH-Clinical Center |
| Placebos are harmless, inactive substances made to look like the real medicine used in the clinical trial. |
| NIH-National Heart lung and Blood Institute (NHLBI-NIH) |
| Placebo is a pill, liquid or powder that has no active medicine in it. It's a fake. |
| National Library of Medicine – Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) |
| Any dummy medication or treatment. |
| World Health Organization (WHO) |
| In the context of research, a placebo is a substance or procedure which patients accept as a medicine or therapy, but which actually has no specific therapeutic activity for their conditions. |