Predictors of the placebo response in a nutraceutical randomized controlled trial for depression

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 INTEGRATIVE & COMPLEMENTARY MEDICINE Journal of Integrative Medicine-Jim Pub Date : 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1016/j.joim.2024.01.007
Rosemary Arnold , Jenifer Murphy-Smith , Chee H. Ng , David Mischoulon , Gerard J. Byrne , Chad A. Bousman , Con Stough , Michael Berk , Jerome Sarris
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Abstract

Objective

The placebo response in depression studies is the change in symptoms amongst those who receive an inactive treatment. Many well-designed randomized controlled trials (RCTs) of depression have a high proportion of placebo responders, with little understanding as to why. The present study assesses characteristics associated with the placebo response in a nutraceutical trial with a large proportion of placebo responders.

Methods

This is a secondary analysis of a nutraceutical depression RCT which identified no overall treatment benefit relative to placebo (n = 69 in placebo group). We investigated participant characteristics such as socio-demographics, clinical features, and recruitment methods, and their association with the placebo response. Monoaminergic genetic polymorphisms were also assessed. Placebo response was measured based on change in Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale score. The association of these hypothesis-driven variables of interest and the placebo response was examined using linear mixed effects models.

Results

Greater levels of education, particularly pursuing post-high school education, better self-reported general health, marriage/de facto, greater improvement in the first trial week, and more failed antidepressant therapies in the current depressive episode were associated with greater placebo response. An increased placebo response was not found in those recruited via social media nor in those with concomitant antidepressant therapy. Single nucleotide polymorphisms from the tryptophan hydroxylase 1 (TPH1) gene (A779C and A218C) were weakly associated with greater placebo response, although the evidence was attenuated after accounting for multiple comparisons.

Conclusion

This is, to our knowledge, the first study within nutraceutical research for depression to assess the association between participant characteristics and variation in the placebo response. Several variables appeared to predict the placebo response. Such findings may encourage future trial designs which could dampen placebo response, improve assay sensitivity, and allow for treatment effects to be potentially more detectable.

Please cite this article as: Arnold R, Murphy-Smith J, Ng CH, Mischoulon D, Byrne GJ, Bousman CA, Stough C, Berk M, Sarris J. Predictors of the placebo response in a nutraceutical randomized controlled trial for depression. J Integr Med. 2024; 22(1): 46–53.

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抑郁症营养保健品随机对照试验中安慰剂反应的预测因素
目标抑郁症研究中的安慰剂反应是指接受非活性治疗者的症状变化。许多精心设计的抑郁症随机对照试验(RCT)中,安慰剂反应者的比例很高,但人们对其原因却知之甚少。本研究评估了在一项安慰剂应答者比例较高的营养保健品试验中与安慰剂应答相关的特征。方法这是一项营养保健品抑郁症随机对照试验的二次分析,该试验发现相对于安慰剂而言,总体治疗效果并不理想(安慰剂组 n = 69)。我们调查了参与者的特征,如社会人口学、临床特征和招募方法,以及它们与安慰剂反应的关系。我们还评估了单胺能基因多态性。安慰剂反应根据蒙哥马利-阿斯伯格抑郁量表评分的变化进行测量。使用线性混合效应模型检验了这些假设驱动的相关变量与安慰剂反应之间的关系。结果受教育程度较高(尤其是接受过高中后教育)、自我报告的一般健康状况较好、已婚/事实婚姻、第一周试验的改善程度较大以及在当前抑郁发作中抗抑郁疗法失败次数较多与安慰剂反应较强相关。通过社交媒体招募的受试者和同时接受抗抑郁治疗的受试者均未发现安慰剂反应增加的情况。色氨酸羟化酶1(TPH1)基因的单核苷酸多态性(A779C和A218C)与安慰剂反应的增加有微弱的相关性,尽管在考虑多重比较后证据有所减弱。有几个变量似乎可以预测安慰剂反应。这些发现可能会鼓励未来的试验设计,从而抑制安慰剂反应,提高检测灵敏度,并使治疗效果更容易被检测到。
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来源期刊
Journal of Integrative Medicine-Jim
Journal of Integrative Medicine-Jim Medicine-Complementary and Alternative Medicine
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
4.20%
发文量
3319
期刊介绍: The predecessor of JIM is the Journal of Chinese Integrative Medicine (Zhong Xi Yi Jie He Xue Bao). With this new, English-language publication, we are committed to make JIM an international platform for publishing high-quality papers on complementary and alternative medicine (CAM) and an open forum in which the different professions and international scholarly communities can exchange views, share research and their clinical experience, discuss CAM education, and confer about issues and problems in our various disciplines and in CAM as a whole in order to promote integrative medicine. JIM is indexed/abstracted in: MEDLINE/PubMed, ScienceDirect, Emerging Sources Citation Index (ESCI), Scopus, Embase, Chemical Abstracts (CA), CAB Abstracts, EBSCO, WPRIM, JST China, Chinese Science Citation Database (CSCD), and China National Knowledge Infrastructure (CNKI). JIM Editorial Office uses ThomsonReuters ScholarOne Manuscripts as submitting and review system (submission link: http://mc03.manuscriptcentral.com/jcim-en). JIM is published bimonthly. Manuscripts submitted to JIM should be written in English. Article types include but are not limited to randomized controlled and pragmatic trials, translational and patient-centered effectiveness outcome studies, case series and reports, clinical trial protocols, preclinical and basic science studies, systematic reviews and meta-analyses, papers on methodology and CAM history or education, conference proceedings, editorials, commentaries, short communications, book reviews, and letters to the editor. Our purpose is to publish a prestigious international journal for studies in integrative medicine. To achieve this aim, we seek to publish high-quality papers on any aspects of integrative medicine, such as acupuncture and traditional Chinese medicine, Ayurveda medicine, herbal medicine, homeopathy, nutrition, chiropractic, mind-body medicine, taichi, qigong, meditation, and any other modalities of CAM; our commitment to international scope ensures that research and progress from all regions of the world are widely covered. These ensure that articles published in JIM have the maximum exposure to the international scholarly community. JIM can help its authors let their papers reach the widest possible range of readers, and let all those who share an interest in their research field be concerned with their study.
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