| Literature DB >> 32324902 |
Oliver Pfaar1, Ioana Agache2, Karl-Christian Bergmann3,4, Carsten Bindslev-Jensen5, Jean Bousquet6,7, Peter S Creticos8,9, Philippe Devillier10, Stephen R Durham11, Peter Hellings12,13,14, Susanne Kaul15, Jörg Kleine-Tebbe16, Ludger Klimek17, Lars Jacobsen18, Marek Jutel19,20, Antonella Muraro21, Nikolaos G Papadopoulos22,23, Winfried Rief24, Glenis K Scadding25, Manfred Schedlowski26, Mohamed H Shamji27,28, Gunter Sturm29,30, Ronald van Ree31, Carmen Vidal32, Stefan Vieths15, Bettina Wedi33, Roy Gerth van Wijk34, Anthony J Frew35.
Abstract
The placebo (Latin "I will please") effect commonly occurs in clinical trials. The psychological and physiological factors associated with patients' expectations about a treatment's positive and negative effects have yet to be well characterized, although a functional prefrontal cortex and intense bidirectional communication between the central nervous system and the immune system appear to be prerequisites for a placebo effect. The use of placebo raises certain ethical issues, especially if patients in a placebo group are denied an effective treatment for a long period of time. The placebo effect appears to be relatively large (up to 77%, relative to pretreatment scores) in controlled clinical trials of allergen immunotherapy (AIT), such as the pivotal, double-blind, placebo-controlled (DBPC) randomized clinical trials currently required by regulatory authorities worldwide. The European Academy of Allergy and Clinical Immunology (EAACI) therefore initiated a Task Force, in order to better understand the placebo effect in AIT and its specific role in comorbidities, blinding issues, adherence, measurement time points, variability and the natural course of the disease. In this Position Paper, the EAACI Task Force highlights several important topics regarding the placebo effect in AIT such as a) regulatory aspects, b) neuroimmunological and psychological mechanisms, c) placebo effect sizes in AIT trials, d) methodological limitations in AIT trial design and e) potential solutions in future AIT trial design. In conclusion, this Position Paper aims to examine the methodological problem of placebo in AIT from different aspects and also to highlight unmet needs and possible solutions for future trials.Entities:
Keywords: Position Paper; allergen immunotherapy; allergy; clinical trials; methods; placebo effects
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 32324902 DOI: 10.1111/all.14331
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergy ISSN: 0105-4538 Impact factor: 13.146