Modifying Informed Consent to Help Address Functional Unmasking in Psychedelic Clinical Trials

IF 22.5 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY JAMA Psychiatry Pub Date : 2025-01-08 DOI:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2024.4312
Michelle Matvey, D. Parker Kelley, Ellen R. Bradley, Winston Chiong, Aoife O’Donovan, Josh Woolley
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Abstract

ImportanceThere is unprecedented clinician, industry, and patient interest in the therapeutic development of psychedelic drugs. This is due to a combination of promising clinical trial results, positive media coverage, and the lack of novel pharmacologic treatments for psychiatric disorders in recent decades. However, the field faces a key methodological challenge: masking participants to treatment conditions in psychedelic clinical trials has been largely unsuccessful.ObjectiveWhen participants can tell whether they received active drug or placebo, their responses to clinical assessments, questionnaires, and even their functional imaging and biological data can be influenced by preconceptions about treatment effects. Positive patient expectancies combined with ineffective masking may skew outcomes and inflate effect sizes. This complicates efforts to determine the safety and efficacy of psychedelic drugs. Here, we explore a method to help address this problem: modifying informed consent to obscure information about the study design.Evidence ReviewWe reviewed all contemporary (2000-2024) clinical trials of psychedelic or methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) therapy and corresponded with the investigators to compile information on the use of modifications to informed consent in these studies.FindingsModifying informed consent to obscure details of the study design has been implemented in several psychedelic clinical trials and may offer a way to strengthen masking. However, this approach poses significant ethical risks. We examine examples of modifications used in the psychedelic literature, discuss the current regulatory landscape, and suggest strategies to mitigate risks associated with modified informed consent.Conclusions and RelevanceIncorporating modified informed consent in future psychedelic clinical trials may improve interpretability and impact, but this has not been explicitly tested. Modifications to informed consent may not be appropriate in all cases, and risks to participants should be minimized by implementing appropriate guardrails.
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修改知情同意有助于解决致幻剂临床试验中的功能揭露问题
临床医生、工业界和患者对致幻剂的治疗发展产生了前所未有的兴趣。这是由于有希望的临床试验结果,积极的媒体报道,以及近几十年来精神疾病缺乏新的药物治疗。然而,该领域面临着一个关键的方法论挑战:在迷幻药临床试验中,掩盖参与者的治疗条件在很大程度上是不成功的。目的:当参与者能够分辨出他们接受的是有效药物还是安慰剂时,他们对临床评估、问卷调查的反应,甚至他们的功能成像和生物学数据都可能受到对治疗效果的先入为主的影响。积极的患者期望与无效的掩蔽相结合可能会扭曲结果并夸大效应大小。这使得确定致幻剂的安全性和有效性的工作变得复杂。在这里,我们探索了一种方法来帮助解决这个问题:修改知情同意来模糊有关研究设计的信息。我们回顾了所有当代(2000-2024年)迷幻药或亚甲基二氧甲基苯丙胺(MDMA)治疗的临床试验,并与研究者进行了通信,以收集这些研究中知情同意修改的使用信息。修改知情同意以模糊研究设计的细节已经在几个迷幻药临床试验中实施,可能提供一种加强掩盖的方法。然而,这种方法带来了重大的伦理风险。我们研究了迷幻药文献中使用的修改实例,讨论了当前的监管格局,并提出了降低与修改后的知情同意相关的风险的策略。在未来的迷幻药临床试验中纳入修改后的知情同意可能会提高可解释性和影响,但这尚未得到明确的测试。对知情同意的修改可能并不适用于所有情况,应通过实施适当的护栏将参与者的风险降至最低。
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来源期刊
JAMA Psychiatry
JAMA Psychiatry PSYCHIATRY-
CiteScore
30.60
自引率
1.90%
发文量
233
期刊介绍: JAMA Psychiatry is a global, peer-reviewed journal catering to clinicians, scholars, and research scientists in psychiatry, mental health, behavioral science, and related fields. The Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry originated in 1919, splitting into two journals in 1959: Archives of Neurology and Archives of General Psychiatry. In 2013, these evolved into JAMA Neurology and JAMA Psychiatry, respectively. JAMA Psychiatry is affiliated with the JAMA Network, a group of peer-reviewed medical and specialty publications.
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