4.5 Article

Does Inclusion of a Placebo Arm Influence Response to Active Antidepressant Treatment in Randomized Controlled Trials? Results From Pooled and Meta-Analyses

Journal

JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 71, Issue 3, Pages 270-279

Publisher

PHYSICIANS POSTGRADUATE PRESS
DOI: 10.4088/JCP.08r04516blu

Keywords

-

Funding

  1. Department of Psychiatry at Sunnybrook Hospital
  2. Canadian institutes of Health Research
  3. Eli Lilly Canada
  4. AstraZeneca Canada
  5. Lundbeck
  6. Biovail
  7. BrainCells
  8. Sanofi-Aventis
  9. Servier Canada
  10. Abbott
  11. Lundbeck Canada
  12. Pfizer Canada
  13. Janssen-Ortho
  14. Neurochem
  15. Eli Lilly
  16. Wyeth

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Objective: To determine if the inclusion of a placebo arm and/or the number of active comparators in antidepressant trials influences the response rates of the active medication and/or placebo. Data Sources: Searches of MEDLINE, PsycINFO, and pharmaceutical Web sites for published trials or trials conducted but unpublished between January 1996 and October 2007. Study Selection: 2,275 citations were reviewed, 285 studies were retrieved, and 90 were included in the analysis. Trials reporting response and/or remission rates in adult subjects treated with an antidepressant monotherapy for unipolar major depression were included. Data Extraction: The primary investigator recorded the number of responders and/or remitters in the intent-to-treat population of each study arm or computed these numbers using the quoted rates. Data Synthesis: Poisson regression analyses demonstrated that mean response rate for the active medication was higher in studies comparing 2 or more active medications without a placebo arm than in studies comparing 2 or more active medications with a placebo arm (65.4% vs 57.7%, P<.0001) or in studies comparing only 1 active medication with placebo (65.4% vs 51.7%, P=.0005). Mean response rate for placebo was significantly lower in studies comparing 1 rather than 2 or more active medications (34.3% vs 44.6%, P=.003). Mean remission rates followed a similar pattern. Meta-analysis confirmed results from the pooled analysis. Conclusions: These data suggest that antidepressant response rates in randomized control trials may be influenced by the presence of a placebo arm and by the number of treatment arms and that placebo response rates may be influenced by the number of active treatment arms in a study. J Clin Psychiatry 2010;71(3):270-279 (C) 2010 Physicians Postgraduate Press, Inc.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available