The following is a good dictionary definition of the term
“placebo.”
“a substance that is not medicine
but is given to a patient who supposes it to be a medicine, either to appease a
patient or as a control in an experiment”
The experiments referred to are generally clinical trials
being run to determine the efficacy of a drug in treating a particular medical
condition. These trials are required to
test medicines against a placebo because of the “placebo effect.” If you give a sick person a pill and tell
them it might make them feel better, there is a tendency for the person to feel
as though they have improved even if the pill contained no medication at
all. This means that if you do give a
person a specific medication she might feel better from this placebo effect
rather from any actual medical change.
Consequently, medications are generally tested against placebos by giving
a fraction of the patients a placebo and a fraction the actual medication. The participants in these studies are aware
that they may receive a placebo.
For this type of testing to work, the subjects cannot
know whether they are given the actual medication or some inert
substitute. Generally, those performing
the study will not know either in order to prevent inadvertent clues being
provided to the subjects. This process
seems straightforward in principle, but it can be complicated in practice.
Aaron E. Carroll provided an interesting article in the
New York Times that tells us that
placebo effects are applicable to more than drug delivery: The Placebo Effect Doesn’t Apply Just to Pills. Carroll provides examples where mock surgical
procedures were performed in order to determine the existence of a placebo
effect.
“At the turn of this century,
arthroscopic surgery for osteoarthritis of the knee was common. Basically,
surgeons would clean out the knee using arthroscopic devices. Another common
procedure was lavage, in which a needle would inject saline into the knee to
irrigate it. The thought was that these procedures would remove fragments of
cartilage and calcium phosphate crystals that were causing inflammation. A
number of studies had shown that people who had these procedures improved more
than people who did not.”
A number of people were suspicious that these procedures
might not actually be effective. In 2002
a study was performed with the equivalent of a placebo control.
“A total of 180 patients who had osteoarthritis of the knee were randomly
assigned (with their consent) to one of three groups. The first had a standard
arthroscopic procedure, and the second had lavage. The third, however, had sham
surgery. They had an incision, and a procedure was faked so that they didn’t
know that they actually had nothing done. Then the incision was closed.”
The result was
that those receiving the placebo treatment—the sham surgery—thought that they
had improved as much as those who had actually received the procedures.
“The results were stunning. Those who had the actual procedures did no
better than those who had the sham surgery. They all improved the same amount.
The results were all in people’s heads.”
Carroll
provides some additional examples where the efficacy of medical procedures
turned out to be determined by a placebo effect.
“In 2005, a study was published
in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology proving that percutaneous
laser myocardial revascularization, in which a laser is threaded through blood
vessels to cut tiny channels in the heart muscle, didn’t improve angina better
than a placebo either.”
“A study published in 2003,
without a sham placebo control, showed that vertebroplasty — treating back pain
by injecting bone cement into fractured vertebrae — worked better than no
procedure at all. From 2001 through 2005, the number of Medicare beneficiaries
who underwent vertebroplasty each year almost doubled, from 45 to 87 per
100,000. Some of them had the procedure performed more than once because they
failed to achieve relief. In 2009, not one but two placebo-controlled studies
were published proving that vertebroplasty for osteoporotic vertebral fractures
worked no better than faking the procedure.”
Carroll’s complaint is that introducing sham surgeries in
order provide an assessment of the strength of a placebo effect is an approach
that has been around for a long time, but it is too rarely used. We subject a lot of patients to procedures of
unproven validity and only think to verify them later, after the fact.
“Earlier this year, researchers
published a systematic review of placebo controls in surgery. They searched the
medical literature from its inception all the way through 2013. In all that
time, they could find only 53 randomized controlled trials that included placebo
surgery as one option. In more than half of them, though, the effect of sham
surgery was equivalent to that of the actual procedure.”
One of the problems that arise with placebo controls in
such studies is that subjects might be able to guess that they were recipients
of the placebo and negate the effect. Anesthesia
and an actual incision would make that type of guess more difficult. The use of sham surgeries might be referred
to more accurately as utilizing an active placebo, or a super placebo.
Placebo effects are particularly important in evaluating
medications targeting mental health issues.
They are very strong in these cases and can be subject to
manipulation. Marcia Angell provided an
article in The New York Review that
discusses the issues: The Epidemic ofMental Illness: Why?
Angell reports on the work of Irving
Kirsch who published his findings in the book
The Emperor’s New Drugs: Exploding the Antidepressant Myth. Kirsch spent fifteen years trying to
discover whether antidepressant drugs actually work. His interest arose from a study of the effect
of placebos. In reviewing a large number
of published clinical trials he discovered:
“Most such trials last for six
to eight weeks, and during that time, patients tend to improve somewhat even
without any treatment. But Kirsch found that placebos were three times as
effective as no treatment. That didn’t particularly surprise him. What did
surprise him was the fact that antidepressants were only marginally better than
placebos. As judged by scales used to measure depression, placebos were 75
percent as effective as antidepressants.”
When drug companies perform clinical trials they don’t do
just one. Normally, they will do a
number and they tend to promote publically those that make their product look
good. They often choose to bury those
that do not make their product look good.
In a situation such as that involving antidepressants where efficacy
appears marginal, one would really want to make sure that all the data was being
evaluated. As Angell points out:
“If two trials show that the
drug is more effective than a placebo, the drug is generally approved. But
companies may sponsor as many trials as they like, most of which could be
negative—that is, fail to show effectiveness. All they need is two positive
ones.”
“This practice greatly biases
the medical literature, medical education, and treatment decisions.”
Unfortunately, the FDA allows drug companies to treat all
results as proprietary data that can be withheld from the public. Kirsch’s next step was to look at the broader
set of data held by the FDA using the freedom of information path to gain
access. He examined data on six drugs: Prozac,
Paxil, Zoloft, Celexa, Serzone, and Effexor.
“Altogether, there were forty-two
trials of the six drugs. Most of them were negative. Overall, placebos were 82
percent as effective as the drugs, as measured by the Hamilton Depression Scale
(HAM-D), a widely used score of symptoms of depression. The average difference
between drug and placebo was only 1.8 points on the HAM-D, a difference that,
while statistically significant, was clinically meaningless. The results were
much the same for all six drugs: they were all equally unimpressive. Yet
because the positive studies were extensively publicized, while the negative
ones were hidden, the public and the medical profession came to believe that
these drugs were highly effective antidepressants.”
Kirsch took advantage of other studies that indicated
drugs that had no relation to the treatment of depression performed as well as
the antidepressants on subjects. What
these various drugs had in common was the fact that they produced side effects
in those who took them. Kirsch suspected
that it was the presence of side effects that was critical. A fraction of the subjects receiving a
placebo in a clinical trial might be concluding that the absence of a side
effect was evidence that they had received a placebo, thus limiting the
validity of the trial’s results.
“To further investigate whether side effects bias responses, Kirsch
looked at some trials that employed ‘active’ placebos instead of inert ones. An
active placebo is one that itself produces side effects, such as atropine—a
drug that selectively blocks the action of certain types of nerve fibers.
Although not an antidepressant, atropine causes, among other things, a
noticeably dry mouth. In trials using atropine as the placebo, there was no
difference between the antidepressant and the active placebo. Everyone had side
effects of one type or another, and everyone reported the same level of
improvement. Kirsch reported a number of other odd findings in clinical trials
of antidepressants, including the fact that there is no dose-response
curve—that is, high doses worked no better than low ones—which is extremely
unlikely for truly effective drugs.”
Kirsch is not the
only investigator to take the trouble to look at all the data, not just that
publicized by the drug companies, and conclude that antidepressants work no
better than a placebo. Such a conclusion
poses ethical and medical problems for those who prescribe such drugs. Daniel J. Carlat is a psychiatrist who
addresses these issues in his book Unhinged: The Trouble with Psychiatry - ADoctor's Revelations about a Profession in Crisis.
Carlat does not seem to be aware of Kirsch’s work, but he
is familiar with a similar effort by the psychiatrist Erick Turner that came to
the same conclusion.
“Eventually, Turner and his
colleagues tracked down the fate of all the research that had been submitted to
the FDA about twelve newer antidepressants approved from 1987 to 2004. This included all the SSRIs, both of the dual
reuptake inhibitors (Effexor and Cymbalta), and several other antidepressants,
such as Wellbutrin, Remeron, and serzone.”
Carlat defines the problem he faces as a psychiatrist:
“If I relied on the published
medical literature for information (and what else can I rely on), it would
appear that 94 percent of all antidepressant trials were positive. But if I had access to all the suppressed data,
I would see that the truth is that only about half—51 percent—of trials are
positive. Turner calls this the ‘dirty
little secret’ of the psychiatric world.”
Carlat recognizes that Turners findings suggest that
antidepressant drugs are acting as no more than a placebo—an expensive and
dangerous placebo. He deals with this by
concluding that the clinical trials run by the drug companies are irrelevant to
the “real” depression patients he sees.
“Companies have found by
experience that if they want to be sure their drug outperforms a placebo, they
have to be very picky about which patients are allowed into the study.”
He describes a study by Mark Zimmerman, a psychiatrist at
Brown University, who applied the exclusions that drug companies usually apply
to subjects for clinical studies and concluded that only 8.3 percent of a
population 346 patients who showed up at a hospital for treatment of depression
would have qualified for a clinical study.
This allowed Carlat to draw the following conclusion:
“The bottom line is that
antidepressant research studies are not generalizable to real patients, meaning
that few of their results, whether positive or negative, are reliable
indicators of what would happen to your
mood on antidepressants.”
Given this, Carlat decides that he and other
psychiatrists are the best judges of the efficacy of prescribing
antidepressants. And even though most,
or perhaps all, of the effect of the drugs might be due to a placebo effect,
they believe it is still appropriate to prescribe them.
“….if you ask any psychiatrist
in clinical practice, including me, whether antidepressants work for their
patients, you will hear an unambiguous ‘yes.’
We see people getting better all the time. True, much of the response is due to the
placebo effect, but it would be deceptive for me to prescribe a sugar pill to
my patients while telling them that it is a real medication. So I am stuck with prescribing active
psychotropic drugs in order to activate the placebo, with the main disadvantage
being that such drugs have far more side effects.”
What this discussion should make clear is that placebo
effects are strong. Perhaps that is why
witch doctors managed to stay in business for so long.
Placebo effects are important but not well understood. Their existence suggests that the brain has
means to either accentuate or alleviate feelings of pain and discomfort. Placebo effects can often compete with
surgery and powerful drugs in controlling symptoms. Given that, it is disturbing that no one
seems to be interested in discovering ways to activate them that do not involve
surgeries and powerful drugs.
Unfortunately, to understand the medical industry it is
necessary to follow the money. There are
fortunes to be made in delivering drugs and procedures. The interest is more in eliminating placebo
effects because they interfere with business plans.
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