| Literature DB >> 26393486 |
A Masi1, A Lampit2, N Glozier1, I B Hickie1, A J Guastella1.
Abstract
Large placebo responses in many clinical trials limit our capacity to identify effective therapeutics. Although it is often assumed that core behaviors in children with autism spectrum disorders (ASDs) rarely remit spontaneously, there has been limited investigation of the size of the placebo response in relevant clinical trials. These trials also rely on caregiver and clinical observer reports as outcome measures. The objectives of this meta-analysis are to identify the pooled placebo response and the predictors of placebo response in pharmacological and dietary supplement treatment trials for participants with a diagnosis of ASD. Randomized controlled trials (RCTs) in pediatric ASD, conducted between 1980 and August 2014, were identified through a search of Medline, EMBASE, Web of Science, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews and clinicaltrials.gov. RCTs of at least 14 days duration, comparing the treatment response for an oral active agent and placebo using at least one of the common outcome measures, were included. Analysis of 25 data sets (1315 participants) revealed a moderate effect size for overall placebo response (Hedges' g=0.45, 95% confidence interval (0.34-0.56), P<0.001). Five factors were associated with an increase in response to placebo, namely: an increased response to the active intervention; outcome ratings by clinicians (as compared with caregivers); trials of pharmacological and adjunctive interventions; and trials located in Iran. There is a clear need for the identification of objective measures of change in clinical trials for ASD, such as evaluation of biological activity or markers, and for consideration of how best to deal with placebo response effects in trial design and analyses.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26393486 PMCID: PMC5068810 DOI: 10.1038/tp.2015.143
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Figure 1Flow of information through the stages of the meta-analysis, including reasons for excluding a full-text article.
Study characteristics
| N | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Akhondzadeh | 20 | 6.8 | 70 | Iran | Piracetam | Yes (risperidone) | Pharmacological | 70 | 1 | P: ABC (total score) | Clinician and caregiver interview | 13 |
| Akhondzadeh | 20 | 7.4 | 70 | Iran | Pentoxifylline | Yes (risperidone) | Pharmacological | 70 | 1 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB | Clinician and caregiver interview | 13 |
| Asadabadi | 20 | 7.5 | 65 | Iran | Celecoxib | Yes (risperidone) | Pharmacological | 70 | 1 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB | Clinician | 13 |
| Bent | 13 | 5.8 | 84.6 | USA | Omega-3 fatty acid | No | Dietary supplement | 84 | 1 | P: ABC-H S: ABC-I, IS, L, SB | Caregiver | 12 |
| Bent | 28 | 7.1 | 85.7 | USA | Omega-3 fatty acid | No | Dietary supplement | 42 | P: ABC-H S: ABC-I, IS, L, SB | Caregiver | 13 | |
| Fahmy | 14 | 5.7 | 78.6 | Egypt | L-carnitine | No | Dietary supplement | 168 | 1 | S: CARS | Clinician | 11 |
| Ghaleiha | 20 | 8 | 60 | Iran | Memantine | Yes (risperidone) | Pharmacological | 70 | 1 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB | Clinician and caregiver interview | 12 |
| Ghaleiha | 24 | 7.6 | 66.7 | Iran | Riluzole | Yes (risperidone) | Pharmacological | 70 | 1 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB | Caregiver | 13 |
| Ghaleiha | 23 | 5.9 | 78.3 | Iran | Galantamine | Yes (risperidone) | Pharmacological | 70 | 1 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB | Caregiver | 13 |
| Ghanizadeh and Moghimi-Sarani[ | 20 | 7.9 | 60 | Iran | Yes (risperidone) | Dietary supplement | 56 | 1 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB | Caregiver | 12 | |
| Hardan | 15 | 7.2 | 100 | USA | No | Dietary supplement | 84 | 1 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB; CGI-S | Clinician; caregiver | 11 | |
| Hasanzadeh | 24 | 6.8 | 83.3 | Iran | Yes (risperidone) | Dietary supplement | 70 | 1 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB | Clinician and caregiver interview | 13 | |
| Hellings | 14 | 10.3 | 100 | USA | Valproate | No | Pharmacological | 23 | 1 | ABC-I; CGI-S; CGI-I | Clinician; caregiver | 13 |
| Hollander | 20 | 7.4 | 85 | USA | Fluoxetine | No | Pharmacological | 42 | 1 | P: CY-BOCS; S: CGI-AD | Clinician | 8 |
| Hollander | 11 | 9 | 90.9 | USA | Divaloprex sodium | No | Pharmacological | 84 | 1 | S: ABC-I | Caregiver | 10 |
| Kent | 35 | 9 | 88.6 | USA | Risperidone | No | Pharmacological | 42 | 16 | P: ABC-I S: CGI-S | Clinician; caregiver | 12 |
| King | 76 | 9.6 | 84.2 | USA | Citalopram | No | Pharmacological | 84 | 6 | P: CY-BOCS-PDD S: ABC-I, H, IS, L, SB | Clinician; caregiver | 12 |
| Klaiman | 23 | 5 | 78.3 | USA | Tetrahydra-biopterin | No | Dietary supplement | 112 | 1 | S: ABC-I, H, IS, L, SB | Caregiver | 13 |
| Lemonnier | 30 | 7.1 | 73.3 | France | Bumetanide | No | Pharmacological | 84 | 1 | P: CARS | Clinician and caregiver interview | 9 |
| Marcus | 52 | 10.2 | 92.3 | USA | Aripiprazole | No | Pharmacological | 56 | 37 | S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB; CGI-S; CY-BOCS (compulsion subscale) | Clinician; caregiver | 9 |
| McCracken | 52 | 8.8 | 82.7 | USA | Risperidone | No | Pharmacological | 56 | 6 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB; VABS; CY-BOCS | Clinician; clinician and caregiver interview; caregiver | 8 |
| Mohammadi | 20 | 7.1 | 85 | Iran | Amantadine | Yes (risperidone) | Pharmacological | 70 | 1 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB | Clinician | 13 |
| Nagaraj | 21 | 5.3 | 85.7 | India | Risperidone | No | Pharmacological | 168 | 1 | P: CARS | Clinician and caregiver interview | 12 |
| Rezaei | 20 | 7.9 | 70 | Iran | Topiramate | Yes (risperidone) | Pharmacological | 56 | 1 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB | Clinician and caregiver interview | 13 |
| Shea | 39 | 7.3 | 82.1 | Canada | Risperidone | No | Pharmacological | 63 | 1 | P: ABC-I S: ABC-H, IS, L, SB | Caregiver | 8 |
Abbreviations: ABC, aberrant behavior checklist; ABC-H, ABC-hyperactivity/noncompliance subscale; ABC-I, ABC-irritability subscale; CARS, childhood autism rating scale; CGI, clinician global impression; CGI-I, CGI improvement; CGI-S, CGI severity; CY-BOCS, Children's Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale; CY-BOCS-PDD, CY-BOCS modified for pervasive developmental disorders; IS, ABC-inappropriate speech subscale; L, ABC-lethargy/social withdrawal subscale; P, primary outcome measure; S, secondary outcome measure; SB, ABC-stereotypic behavior subscale; VABS, Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scale.
Figure 2Forest plot of efficacy of treatment with placebo. The arrow representing the study of Asadabadi et al. 2013 (ref. 36) shows the confidence interval spread further than the limit for the effect size range (−2.00 to 2.00). CI, confidence interval.
Figure 3Subgroup analyses of moderators of placebo response in randomized controlled trials in pediatric ASD. aQ-test for between-group heterogeneity, mixed-effects model. ASD, autism spectrum disorder; CI, confidence interval.
Figure 4Placebo response versus response to treatment with active intervention. The equality line has a slope equal to 1, where the response to placebo is the same as the response to active intervention. The point above the line represents a trial where response to placebo was greater than response to treatment with the active intervention. A larger vertical divergence from the equality line represents a larger response to active intervention compared with response to placebo. The line labeled PR=0.1432+0.3134 × AR represents the regression line. AR, active response; PR, placebo response.