Dictionary Definition
placebo
Noun
1 an innocuous or inert medication; given as a
pacifier or to the control group in experiments on the efficacy of
a drug
2 (Roman Catholic Church) vespers of the office
for the dead [also: placeboes (pl)]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
placere.Noun
Translations
a dummy medicine containing no active
ingredients; an inert treatment
- Finnish: lumelääke, plasebo
- French: placebo
- Spanish: placebo
anything of no real benefit which nevertheless
makes people feel better
Related terms
French
Noun
fr-noun mSpanish
Noun
Extensive Definition
A placebo is a substance or procedure which a
patient accepts as a medicine or therapy but which has no specific
therapeutic activity for the condition. Any effect is thought to be
based on the power of suggestion.
A placebo effect or placebo response is a
therapeutic and healing effect of an inert medicine or ineffective
therapy, or more generally is the psychosocial aspect of
every medical treatment. Sometimes known as non-specific effects or
subject-expectancy
effects, a placebo effect (or its counterpart, the nocebo effect), occurs when a
patient's symptoms are altered in some way (i.e., alleviated or
exacerbated) by a treatment, due to the individual expecting or
believing that it will work. The placebo effect occurs when a
patient is treated in conjunction with the suggestion from an
authority figure or from acquired information that the treatment
will aid in healing and the patient’s condition improves. This
effect has been known since the early 20th
century.
The word placebo has been used in with various
meanings; see below.
Placebos
Etymology
The word placebo is Latin for I will please. It is in Latin text in the Bible (Psalm 114:1–9, Vulgate version), from where it became familiar to the public via the Office of the Dead church service. From that, a singer of Placebo (at funeral) became associated with someone who falsely claimed a connection to the deceased to get a share of the funeral meal, and hence a flatterer.Whenever a placebo is requested in a medical
prescription it may imply a statement by the prescribing doctor that
"this patient has come to me pleading for a treatment which does
not exist or which I cannot or will not supply; I will please him
by giving him something ineffectual and claiming that it is
effectual." It could also indicate a belief that the effect was due
to a subconscious desire of the patient to please the doctor. Since
the placebo effect is in the patient not the doctor this may be
more self-consistent. Early usage of the term does not indicate why
it was chosen.
The word Obecalp, "placebo" spelled backwards, is
sometimes used to make the use or prescription of fake medicine
less obvious to the patient.
Early use
Originally, a placebo was a substance that a well-meaning doctor would give to a patient, telling him that it was a powerful drug (e.g., a painkiller), when in fact it was nothing more than a sugar pill. Thus, Hooper's medical dictionary of 1811 says placebo is "an epithet given to any medicine adapted more to please than benefit the patient." The subsequent reduction of the patient's symptoms was attributed to the patient's faith in his doctor and hence his belief in the drug. (This category, particularly before the first Medicines Act was passed, may merge into fake medicines.)Inertness
Although placebos are generally characterized as pharmacologically inert substances or formulations, sham treatments, or inactive procedures, they are only inert, sham, ineffective, or inactive in the particular sense that their cause and effect is poorly understood with respect to any of the pre-designated, biochemical, physiological, behavioural, emotional and/or cognitive outcomes of the pharmacologically active and known-to-be-efficacious intervention that might have otherwise been applied (see below).Placebos are inactive treatments or formulations;
however a patient may experience either a positive or negative
clinical effect while taking one. When a placebo is administered to
mimic a previously administered drug, it may also incur the same
side effects as the prior authentic drug. (See Pavlov.) Most of
these effects are thought to be a psychological triggering of a
physical response. Not all forms of placebo administration are
equally effective, and some disease states are entirely resistant
to the placebo effect. A placebo that involves ingestion,
injection, or incision is often more powerful than a non-invasive
technique. Placebos administered by authority figures such as
shamans, general
practitioners and other trusted figures may also be more powerful
than when the psychological or spiritual authority figure is
absent. One can see this clearly in the reaction of children to the
administration of care by their mothers. The bandaide does, in
fact, make the pain go away.
Placebos are, therefore, not inert, sham, or
inactive in any other manner of speaking; and they may well, in and
of themselves, generate considerable change within any given
subject, at any given time, under any given circumstances. There is
intensive research in this area. According to Shapiro:
Doctor-patient relationship
A study of Danish general practitioners found that 48% had prescribed a placebo at least 10 times in the past year. The most frequently prescribed placebos were antibiotics for viral infections, and vitamins for fatigue. Specialists and hospital-based physicians reported much lower rates of placebo use. (Hróbjartsson & Norup 2003) A 2004 study in the British Medical Journal of physicians in Israel found that 60% used placebos in their medical practice, most commonly to "fend off" requests for unjustified medications or to calm a patient. Of the physicians who reported using placebos, only 15% told their patients they were receiving placebos or non-specific medications. (Nitzan & Lichtenberg 2004) An accompanying editorial stated,The editorial suggested there were problems with
Hróbjartsson and Gøtzsche's methods and argued that their results
show that placebos can't cure everything, but don't prove that the
placebo effect cures nothing. The editorial concluded, "We cannot
afford to dispense with any treatment that works, even if we are
not certain how it does." (Spiegel 2004)
The editorial prompted responses on both sides of
the issue.
- Critics of the practice responded that it is unethical to prescribe treatments that don't work, and that telling a patient that a placebo is a real medication is deceptive and harms the doctor-patient relationship in the long run. Critics also argued that using placebos can delay the proper diagnosis and treatment of serious medical conditions.
- Defenders of the use of placebos suggested that placebos do not work in clinical trials because the subjects know they might be getting a placebo, but do work in medical practice where the patient believes he or she is getting an active drug. Other writers pointed to the empirical data showing that placebos can have measurable biological effects, especially in pain relief (see above), or argued that the use of a placebo to "please the patient" fosters real healing as part of a caring doctor-patient relationship. (Barfod 2005, Di Blasi 2005)
In addition, there are the impracticalities of
placebos:
- Roughly only 30% of the population seems susceptible to placebo effects, and it is not possible to determine ahead of time for whom a placebo will work and for whom it will not.
- All placebo effects eventually wear off, thus making the placebo effect impractical for long term or chronic medical matters.
- Patients rightfully want immediate relief or improvement from their illness or symptoms. A non-placebo can often provide that, while a placebo might not.
- Legitimate doctors and pharmicists could open themselves up to charges of fraud since sugar pills would cost pennies or cents for a bottle, but the price for a "real" medication would have to be charged to avoid making the patient suspicious.
- Unscrupulous medical practitioners could swindle patients with fake surgeries and sugar pills, then later claim that they only meant to help their patients by using "placebos".
About 25% of physicians in both the Danish and
Israeli studies used placebos as a diagnostic tool to determine if
a patient's symptoms were real, or if the patient was malingering. Both the
critics and defenders of the medical use of placebos agreed that
this was unethical. The British
Medical Journal editorial said, "That a patient gets pain
relief from a placebo does not imply that the pain is not real or
organic in origin...the use of the placebo for 'diagnosis' of
whether or not pain is real is misguided."
The placebo administration may prove to be a
useful treatment in some specific cases where recommended drugs can
not be used. For example, burn patients who are experiencing
respiratory problems cannot often be prescribed opioid (morphine) or opioid derivatives
(pethidine), as these
can cause further respiratory depression. In such cases placebo
injections (normal saline, etc.) are of use in providing real pain
relief to burn patients if they (those not in delirium) are told
that are being given a powerful dose of painkiller.
There is general agreement that placebo control
groups are an important tool for controlling for several types
of possible bias, including
the placebo effect, in double blind
clinical
trials.
The placebo effect is an active area of research
and discussion and it is possible that a clear consensus regarding
the use of placebos in medical practice will emerge in the
future.
Use as morale-boosters
Hooper’s (1811) Quincy’s Lexicon-Medicum defines placebo as "an epithet given to any medicine adapted more to please than benefit the patient".In the practice of medicine it had been long
understood that, as Ambroise
Paré (1510–1590) had expressed it, the physician’s duty was to
"cure occasionally, relieve
often, console always" ("Guérir quelquefois, soulager souvent,
consoler toujours").
According to Jewson, eighteenth century English
medicine was gradually moving away from the patient having a
considerable interaction with the physician—and, through this
consultative relationship, having an equal influence on the
construction of the physician’s therapeutic approach—and it was
gradually moving towards that of the patient being the recipient of
a far more standard form of intervention that was determined by the
prevailing opinions of the medical profession of the day. (Jewson
1974; Jewson 1976)
Jewson characterizes this as parallel to the
changes that were taking place in the manner in which medical
knowledge was being produced; namely, a transition all the way from
"bedside medicine", through "hospital medicine", to
"laboratory
medicine". (Jewson 1976, p.227) For more on the effect of the
development of various types of medical technology see
Medical sign#Increased reliance on signs.
From this point of view, the last vestiges of the
"consoling" approach to treatment are to be found in the
administration – often without any sort of adequate history being
taken, or any sort of appropriate physical examination being made
(Carter 1953, p.823) – of the morale-boosting and pleasing
remedies, such as the "sugar pill",
electuary or pharmaceutical
syrup; all of which had no known pharmacodynamic action.
Those doctors who provided their patients with
these sorts of morale-boosting therapies (which, whilst having no
pharmacologically active ingredients, provided reassurance and
comfort) did so either to reassure their patients whilst the vis
medicatrix naturæ (i.e., "the healing power of nature") performed
its normalizing task
of restoring them to health, or to gratify their patients’ need for
an active treatment.
Some statements about placebos in scientific
articles are:
- Cooper (1823, p.259): "''[When applying] the compound decoction of the sarsaparilla … [in cases of] irritable ulcer, … some think it placebo; others have a very high opinion of its efficacy … [when it is used] after the use of mercury, it diminishes the irritability of the constitution, and soon soothes the system into peace" (emphasis added).
- Shapiro (1968, p.656): "[This use of the term "placebo" is a form of] positioning … Introduction of the word placebo to describe a class of treatments not previously specified was an important development in the history of methodology and medicine."
- Handfield-Jones (1953): "some patients are so unintelligent, neurotic, or inadequate as to be incurable, and life is made easier for them by placebo".
- Platt (1947, p.307): "the frequency with which placebos are used varies inversely with the combined intellligence of the doctor and his patient".
- Steele (1891, pp 277–278)"To argue with a man, and especially with a woman, that there is little the matter with them might be thought injudicious, and to advise them to return at a more convenient occasion requires more time and resolution than writing out a prescription or administering a placebo."
- But Shapiro (1968, p.679): "If a placebo is prescribed by a physician because it is thought that it will help the patient, then it is a specific [remedy] and therefore not a placebo [at all]."
- An editorial in the British Medical Journal of 19 January 1952 (p.150): "But it is a fallacy to suppose that an inactive medicine can do no harm. If prescribed in a perfunctory way for a patient needing explanation and reassurance it may increase faith in his disease rather than in the remedy, and a doctor who gives a placebo in the wrong spirit may harm the patient."
- Pepper (1945, p.411): "There may be a time when during the carrying out of diagnostic tests it is undesirable to give potent medicine lest it interfere with the tests and yet the patient must be encouraged by treatment. … there is a certain amount of skill in the choice and administration of a placebo. In the first place, it must be nothing more than what the name implies a medicine without any pharmacologic action whatever. Even a mild sedative is not a true placebo. Secondly, its name must be unknown to even the most inveterate patient who knows most drugs by name and is always quick to read the prescription. If the medicines named are familiar, the type of patient who needs a placebo will promptly exclaim that this or that drug had been tried and "had not helped me" or "had upset my stomach". It is well if the drug have a Latin and polysyllabic name; it is wise if it be prescribed with some assurance and emphasis for psychotherapeutic effect. The older physicians each had his favorite placeboic prescriptions—one chose Tincture of Condurango, another the Fluidextract [sic] of Cimicifuga nigra. Certainly this latter by its Latin name might be expected to have more supratentorial action than if one merely wrote for the Black Cohosh, and Condurango would be more efficacious than sugar of milk.''" Pepper's assertion that a placebo "must be nothing more than what the name implies"—namely that it must be "a medicine without any pharmacologic action whatever"—in order for it to be called a placebo, is most significant.
- Findley (1953), p.1826 & p.1824: "''[If the placebo is not] used as an instrument of deception, but as a technique for cementing the emotional bond which must attach doctor to patient if any form of treatment is to be really successful… [it was] the most important weapon the physician has … [specifically because] in proportion as this [doctor-patient] bond is firm, the [patient's] need for drugs will likely diminish."
- Leslie (1954, p.854): "Because medicine has been so concerned with its scientific growth too little attention has been paid to advancing the art of medicine, to which therapy with placebos belongs, and consequently knowledge of the use of placebos has not progressed significantly."
- Carruthers, Hoffman, Melmon & Nierenberg (2000, p.1268): "In clinical practice, where a majority of patient visits are for conditions that cannot be explained on a pathophysiologic basis of for which no specific treatment is available, it is essential that physicians understand the concepts and principles of placebos and placebo effects and, when appropriate, use them correctly''".
"Placebo" as a pejorative
Useless decoctions, drugs, treatments, remedies, and procedures are given the pejorative label placebo.In the 14th century the English word "placebo"
denoted a sycophant
and a useless flatterer, but this usage became obsolete.
The second edition of Motherby’s (1785) New
Medical Dictionary defines "placebo" as "a common place method or
medicine" (not "a common place method of medicine" as often
misquoted.)
Because this usage does not appear in English (or
in any English, French, German, Italian, or Portuguese dictionary)
before Motherby’s 1785 edition, Shapiro (1968, pp.656–657) is
certain that this pejorative use of placebo was coined by Motherby. That Samuel
Johnson's 1755 Dictionary of the English Language has no entry
for placebo (or for placebo-singer or singer of placebo, see
Placebo
(at funeral)), strongly supports Shapiro's contention.
Placebo effect
Origin of the term "placebo effect"
Perhaps Graves was the first to speak of the placebo effect, when he spoke in 1920 of "the placebo effects of drugs" being manifested in those cases where "a real psychotherapeutic effect appears to have been produced". (Graves 1920, p.1135)In the 1930s Evans & Hoyle (1933), using 90
subjects, and Gold, Kwit and Otto (1937), using 700 subjects, each
published a study which compared the outcomes from the
administration of an active drug and a dummy simulator (which both
research groups called a placebo) in the same trial. Neither
experiment displayed any significant difference between drug
treatment and placebo treatment; leading the researchers to
conclude that the drug exerted no specific effects in relation to
the conditions being treated.
In 1946, the Yale biostatistician and
physiologist
E.
Morton Jellinek was the first to speak of either a "placebo
reaction" or a "placebo response". He speaks of a "response to
placebo" (p.88), those who "responded to placebo" (p.88), a
"reaction to placebo" (p.89), and of "reactors to placebo" (p.90).
From this, it is obvious that, to Jellinek, the terms "placebo
response" and "placebo reaction"—or the terms "placebo responder"
and "placebo reactor"—were identical and interchangeable.
The general literature commonly misattributes the
term "placebo effect" to Henry K.
Beecher's 1955 paper The Powerful Placebo, where, however, he
only speaks of placebo effects when he is contrasting them with
drug effects; otherwise, he always speaks of "placebo reactors" and
"placebo non-reactors". Beecher (1952), Beecher et al. (1953),
Beecher (1959), consistently speak of "placebo reactors" and
"placebo non-reactors"; they never speak of any "placebo effect".
Beecher (1970) simply speaks of "placebos".
Nocebo
In the opposite effect, a patient who disbelieves in a treatment may experience a worsening of symptoms. This effect, now called by analogy the "nocebo effect" (Latin nocebo = "I will harm") can be measured in the same way as the placebo effect, e.g., when members of a control group receiving an inert substance report a worsening of symptoms. The recipients of the inert substance may nullify the placebo effect intended by simply having a negative attitude towards the effectiveness of the substance prescribed, which often leads to a nocebo effect, which is not caused by the substance, but due to other factors, such as the patient's mentality towards his or her ability to get well, or even purely coincidental worsening of symptoms.Concept
An example of the placebo effect was when scientists tricked runners into thinking that they're drinking oxygenated water thus making them perform better. In actuality the runners were drinking regular tap water. When they ran they even performed better because they thought what they were drinking would enhance their performance. The same goes for the "sugar pill." When people trick their bodies into thinking that they are sick, but they actually become sick, certain doctors used to give them a basic sugar cube, disguised as a regular tablet of medicine. The patient assumed what they were taking would make them feel better, but in actuality they were tricking their bodies into getting better. Those are two good examples of a Placebo experiment. Studies published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences using advances in neuroscience (PET scans) have shown that placebos can noticeably reduce pain in humans. Researchers at Columbia and Michigan University have shown that the brains of volunteers who believed that what they were taking was pain medication were shown to be spontaneously releasing opioids, or natural pain relief. (Donaldson James 2007) According to that ABC report the Food and Drug Administration contends that as many as 75 percent of patients have had responses to sugar pills. It pointed out that all major clinical trials use placebo groups because the effect is significant and to be expected.This effect has been known since the early 20th
century. Generally, one third of a control group taking a placebo
shows improvement, and Harvard’s Herbert Benson says that the
placebo effect yields beneficial clinical results in 60–90% of
diseases, including angina pectoris, bronchial asthma, herpes
simplex, and duodenal ulcers. (Benson & Friedman 1996)
The following are some of the issues pointing to
a fundamental problem:
- Ever since Beecher's 1955 study appeared (Beecher 1955), it has been claimed that about one third of the therapeutic effect observed in a typical trial is attributable to the placebo effect. But this is not what Beecher showed at all. In the "meta-analytic" section of his paper he gave the proportion of subjects across 15 trials deemed to have "been satisfactorily relieved by placebo" as 35.2% +/- 2.2%. This, if anything, is an estimate of the frequency of 'placebo-responders' in the aggregate trial group, but says nothing about the magnitude of the effect.
- Beecher, intentionally or otherwise, gave currency to the idea that the placebo effects were roughly constant at around 35%, and that the term could be usefully applied to all those variables otherwise called "non-specific" contributors to therapeutic outcomes – the natural (and unknowable) course of diseases, regression to the mean, expectation effects, changes in effect and other unquantifiable psycho-somatic features of illness, beliefs and therapeutic communication, etc. If anything is clear from subsequent studies, it is that the placebo effect is not constant, but strikingly variable. Placebo response rates all the way from zero to 100% have been reported in virtually every clinical condition studied (the variation in Beecher's own series was 15–58%). The so-called effect appears to be both universal and utterly unpredictable.
- Beecher, who was concerned to promote the use of Randomised controlled trials (RCTs) in clinical research, made an unjustified assumption which is almost certainly false - that placebo effects in the intervention and control arms of a trial will be identical, or nearly so, and independent of the therapeutic effects. In the rationalization of RCTs which followed, this claim has never been rigorously defended, and in specific instances, can be easily refuted.
- The original 1955 article of Beecher "The Powerful Placebo" claimed a 35% placebo effect in 15 studies. The original article was in 1997 re-analysed and "no evidence was found of any placebo effect in any of the studies" used by Beecher. (Kienle & Kiene 1997) The claimed "effects" were produced by spontaneous improvement, fluctuation of symptoms, regression to the mean, additional treatment, conditional switching of placebo treatment, scaling bias, irrelevant response variables, answers of politeness, experimental subordination, conditioned answers, neurotic or psychotic misjudgment, psychosomatic phenomena, misquotation, etc.
- Kaptchuk (1998a; 1998b) has shown that both the name and the concept of placebo were transferred from at least 200 years of use in clinical practice, in the decade following the second world war, to a new role required by the methodology of what was then the new discipline of 'clinical research'. Earlier usage corresponded to its Latin etymology – a harmless pill or potion given knowingly to patients who were either hard to please or hard to cure. The first clear example cited in the OED is from 1811. But during the post-war therapeutic revolution, it became the trashcan into which all the confounding factors that disturb therapeutic assessments were tipped. In Beecher's terms, it became a powerful if enigmatic distraction to researchers, whose results would be contaminated without rigorous procedures for its exclusion. Its modern use is therefore quite recent, and closely related to the adoption of the RCT as the methodological gold standard for trials of therapy.
- A considerable body of work has attempted to elucidate the 'mechanism' of the placebo effect – but without much success. Proposals ranging from 'suggestibility' and various other psychological hypotheses, to neuro-endocrine studies, and attribution of the effect to statistical artefacts, have turned out to be flawed in various ways, so that clinical researchers have no more idea of what is really going on in the control arms of their trials than did Hippocrates. It seems unlikely that this deeply unsatisfactory situation will be resolved by a new attempt to answer the old question; instead, as has been suggested by some of the most thoughtful students, we should expect to find that some part of the conceptual landscape in which this problematic entity resides must be reconstructed before it will come into focus. This view commends itself specially to those scholars who bring to the problem a perspective from outside the clinic – from medical anthropology, history of medicine, philosophy, and statistics.
Modern clinical application
Experimenters typically use placebos in the context of a clinical trial, in which a "test group" of patients receives the therapy being tested, and a "control group" receives the placebo. It can then be determined if results from the "test" group exceed those due to the placebo effect. If they do, the therapy or pill given to the "test group" is assumed to have had an effect.Isolation of cause
According to Kleijnen and his colleagues (Kleijnen et al. 1994, p.1347), healing is an interactive process between three influences:- (1) the self-healing properties of the subject.
-
- (Here, they are referring to an inherent self-healing force (such as that which naturally staunches a bleeding cut) similar to that of the élan vital (“life force”) or the vis medicatrix naturae (“healing power of nature”), per medium of which the patient recovers entirely without the physician’s intervention, rather than to some sort of active, intentional, purposeful arousal of a subject’s optimal physiological, psychosomatic and somatopsychic healing resources by the therapist)
- (2) the non-specific effects induced by the presence of the therapist and the therapeutic setting.
-
- (The term "non-specific effects" has many advantages; e.g., psychopharmacological research that Hankoff (1999) conducted with colleagues in the 1950s, led them to conclude that “it is best to think of a range of nonspecific factors to account for the response to a medication (which can be both positive and negative), rather than speaking of a placebo reaction or a placebo reactor as an explanation” (p.199). Roberts, et al. (2001) describes these non-specific effects as “the nonpharmacologic benfits of the protocol involvement and of participants’ beliefs that they may be taking an active medication” (p.887))
- (3) the specific effects of the physical or pharmacological therapeutic interventions.
These effects are not isolated mutually-exclusive
effects and, rather than just adding, they may help or hinder each
other to various degrees. (Kleijnen et al. 1994, p.1349) Also,
Hyland (2003, p.348) notes that, in cases where “contextual factors
contribute to a strong placebo response”, due to “the potentiating
or adjunctive effect of the placebo response”, placebos can be used
“potentiate the effect of an active treatment” that would have
otherwise been far less efficacious.
From this notion that a “drug” has a specific
treatment effect (i.e., the effect for which it has been
administered), Perlman (2001, p.283) draws attention to three other
treatment effects:
- non-specific effects: these are the side effects (“which are usually considered deleterious”);
- unintended effects: these are the placebo effects (“which… are still considered to be for the most part uncontrolled and unscientific”); and
- serendipitous effects: these are the “serendipitous effects of being in therapy, such as [the] organizing effects of the therapeutic structure, inadvertent role modelling, outside knowledge of the therapist, chance remarks or encounters, and the influence of auxiliary personnel”.
In pursuit of establishing causation, the
question “Who does what, with which, and to whom?” is central to
task of identifying what are:
- specific effects (those for which the treatment was administered),
- non-specific effects (predictable "side effects"),
- unintended effects (i.e., the placebo responses),
- serendipitous
effects of treatment (i.e., effects of the subject just being "in
therapy"); Perlman (2001, p.283) in discussing this suggests these
as examples:
- the "organizing effects of the therapeutic structure",
- "inadvertent role modeling",
- "outside knowledge of the therapist",
- "chance remarks or encounters",
- "the influence of auxiliary personnel" ("this category includes doormen, receptionists, cashiers, secretaries, security guards, janitors, and child care attendants", p.287).
In experiments with the common cold
by Gold, Kwit and Otto (Gold et al. 1937), in accounting for why
those who received the placebo drug often experienced considerable
benefit, Gold and his colleagues supposed that other,
non-drug-related factors may have made a significant contribution
to the apparent efficacy of the supposedly active drug, such as:
- Spontaneous variations in the course of the pain.
- Change in the weather.
- Change of occupation or amount of work.
- Change of diet.
- Change in eating habits with increase in the amount of rest before and after meals.
- Condition of the bowels.
- Emotional stress.
- Change in domestic affairs.
- Confidence aroused in the treatment.
- Encouragement afforded by any new procedure.
- A change of the medical adviser. (Gold et al.'' 1937, p.2177)
Also, due to the difficulty in ascribing
causation, many phenomena overlap with, and are thus misattributed
to, subjects' placebo responses (the phenomena are known as
"confounders" or
"lurking
variables", such as:
- Natural termination of the disease process.
- Regression to the mean.
- Cyclical presentation of the disease.
- Errant diagnosis or prognosis.
- Temporary improvement confused with cure.
Effect on various symptoms
Careful studies have shown that the placebo effect can alleviate pain, although the effect is more pronounced with pre-existing pain than with experimentally induced pain. People can be conditioned to expect analgesia in certain situations. When those conditions are provided to the patient, the brain responds by generating a pattern of neural activity that produces objectively quantifiable analgesia. (Benedetti et al. 2003, Wager et al. 2004) Evans argued that the placebo effect works through a suppression of the acute phase response, and as a result does not work in medical conditions that do not feature this. (Evans 2005) The acute phase response consists of inflammation and sickness behaviour:- Four classic signs of ‘inflammation’: tumor, rubor, calor, and dolor – (Latin for "swelling, redness, heat, and pain").
- Sickness behaviour: lethargy, apathy, loss of appetite, and increased sensitivity to pain.
These results may indicate some learned response
concerning which withdrawal symptoms appear in a placebo group as
well as in the subjects who received therapy, with a greater effect
on pain and tiredness than on vasomotor symptoms.
Objective and subjective effects
Hróbjartsson and Gøtzsche published a study in 2001 and a follow-up study in 2004 questioning the nature of the placebo effect. (Hróbjartsson & Gøtzsche 2001; Hróbjartsson & Gøtzsche 2004) They performed two meta-analyses involving 156 clinical trials in which an experimental drug or treatment protocol was compared to a placebo group and an untreated group, and specifically asked whether the placebo group improved compared to the untreated group. Hróbjartsson and Gøtzsche found that in studies with a binary outcome, meaning patients were classified as improved or not improved, the placebo group had no statistically significant improvement over the no-treatment group. Similarly, there was no significant placebo effect in studies in which objective outcomes (such as blood pressure) were measured by an independent observer. The placebo effect could only be documented in studies in which the outcomes (improvement or failure to improve) were reported by the subjects themselves. The authors concluded that the placebo effect does not have "powerful clinical effects," (objective effects) and that patient-reported improvements (subjective effects) in pain were small and could not be clearly distinguished from bias.These results suggest that the placebo effect is
largely subjective.
This would help explain why the placebo effect is easiest to
demonstrate in conditions where subjective factors are very
prominent or significant parts of the problem. Some of these
conditions are headache, stomachache, asthma, allergy, tension, and
the experience of pain, which is often a significant part of many
mild and serious illnesses.
Mechanism for the effect
It is universally accepted that, for a placebo response to occur, the subject must believe an effective medication (or other treatment) has been administered to them. This is quite different from the case of an "active drug", where the drug response is generated even in the case of covert administration, in other words regardless of whether the patient knows or doesn't know they have received any medication.The question of just how and why placebo
responses are generated is not an abstract theoretical issue; it
has wide implications for both clinical practice and the
experimental evaluation of therapeutic interventions.
In recent times, three different hypotheses have
been offered to account for these placebo responses — i.e.,
"expectancy
theory" and classical
conditioning" and motivation — which, whilst
emphasizing different factors, are not mutually exclusive and, in
fact, overlap to a certain extent. The subject-expectancy
effect attributes the placebo effect to conscious or
unconscious manipulation by patients in reporting improvement.
Hróbjartsson and Gøtzsche argued in their article, "Most patients
are polite and prone to please the investigators by reporting
improvement, even when no improvement was felt." Subjective
bias can also be unconscious,
where the patient believes he is improving as a result of the
attention and care he has received. Classical
conditioning is a type of associative learning where the
subject learns to associate a particular stimulus with a particular
response. In this case the stimulant is the substance perceived as
medicine but is the placebo, and the response is the relief of
symptoms. It is difficult to tell the difference between
conditioning and the expectancy effect when the outcome is
subjective and reported by the patient. However, conditioning can
result in measurable biological changes similar to the changes seen
with the real treatment or drug. For example, studies showing that
placebo treatments result in changes in brain function similar to
the real drug are probably examples of conditioning resulting in
objectively measurable results. (Sauro 2005, Wager et al. 2004)
Motivational explanations of the placebo effect have typically
considered the placebo effect to be an outcome of one’s desire to
feel better, reduce anxiety, or cooperate with an experimenter or
health care professional (Price et al. 1999, Margo 1999). The
motivational perspective is supported by recent research showing
that nonconscious goals for cooperation can be satisfied by
confirming expectations about a treatment (Geers et al. 2005). The
discovery in 1975 of Endogenous
opiates alias endorphins (substances like
opiates but naturally produced in the body) have changed matters in
investing placebo effect. When patients who claimed to experience
pain relief after receiving a placebo were injected with naloxone (a drug that blocks
the effects of opiates), their pain returned, suggesting that the
placebo effect may be partly due to psychological reaction causing
release of natural opiates. (Sauro 2005)
Biological substrates of the placebo response
A placebo response can amplify, diminish, nullify, reverse, or even divert the action of an active drug, and the study of placebo responses is essentially the study of the psychosocial construct surrounding a patient. (Koshi & Short 2007) Because a placebo response is just as significant in the case of an active drug as it is in the case of an inert dummy drug, the more that we can discover about the mechanisms that produce placebo responses, the more we can enhance their effectiveness and convert their potential efficacy into actual relief, healing and cure.Recent research strongly indicates that a placebo
response is a complex psychobiological phenomenon, contingent upon
the psychosocial context of the subject, that may be due to a wide
range of neurobiological mechanisms, with the specific response
mechanism differing from circumstance to circumstance. The very
existence of these "placebo responses" strongly suggest that "we
must broaden our conception of the limits of
endogenous human
control" (Benedetti et al. 2005, p.10390); and, in recent times,
researchers in a number of different areas have demonstrated the
presence of biological substrates, unique brain processes, and
neurological
correlates for the "placebo response":
- 2001: de la Fuente-Fernández and colleagues reported their PET scan findings on test subjects with Parkinson's disease.
- 2002: Petrovic and colleagues reported their PET scan findings on test subjects in a trial of opioid analgesia.
- 2002: Mayberg and colleagues reported their PET scan findings on test subjects with unipolar depression.
- 2004: Wager and colleagues reported their fMRI scan findings on test subjects in a trial of placebo analgesia.
- 2004: Lieberman and colleagues reported their PET scan findings on test subjects with Irritable bowel syndrome.
- 2006: Bingel and colleagues reported their fMRI scan findings on test subjects in a trial of placebo analgesia.
- 2006: Zubieta and colleagues reported their PET scan findings on test subjects in a trial of placebo analgesia.
- 2006: Sarinopoulos and colleagues reported their fMRI scan findings on test subjects in a trial neural responses to a highly aversive bitter taste.
A complex fMRI-centred study by
McClure et al. (2004) on the brain responses of subjects who had
previously expressed a preference for one or other of the similar
soft drinks Pepsi and Coca-Cola,
demonstrated that "brand
information", which "significantly influences subjects’ expressed
preferences", is processed in an entirely different brain area from
the area activated in blind taste tests (when their "preferences
are determined solely from sensory information").(McClure et al.
2004, p.385) This supports the claim that there are unconscious
brain processes that activate the "placebo response".
Placebo-controlled studies
History of trial design
"Heroic medicine" had begun to fall from favour long before research scientists such as Robert Koch, Louis Pasteur, Frederick Hopkins and Casimir Funk demonstrated that the presence or the absence of specific agents could cause specific diseases, and long before the chemical laboratory orientation of Abraham Flexner’s 1910 Flexner Report had evolved into the evidence-based medicine of the 1970s. As the earliest precursors of modern, scientific, conventional medicine began to emerge, medical scholars began to routinely question:- the principles of their medical diagnosis and prognosis,
- the efficacy of their conventional medical practices,
- the correctness of their current anatomical, physiological and neurological knowledge, and
- the true scientific status of the drugs and therapies in their pharmacopoeia.
In many cases, active agents were identified in
supposedly efficacious treatments; but it was found that some
treatments had no efficacy whatsoever; and, regardless of how much
they were accepted in the medical profession, or what they were
supposed to do, they were medically useless. Many, such as Pepper
(1945, p.410) would strongly argue that, before the
Countess of Chinchón learned of the medicinal properties of
cinchona bark (perhaps
the first time a real active ingredient had been isolated and
identified), "there was [no] basis for terming anything a
placebo".
The aim of a clinical
trial is to determine what treatments, delivered in what
circumstances, to which patients, in what conditions, are the most
efficacious; as well to obtain objective evidence of what
treatments are efficacious and also specific (Chambless &
Hollon 1998), or are intentionally efficacious and also specific
(Lohr et al. 2005).
Gaddum (1954, p.195) wrote: "The first object of
a therapeutic trial is to discover whether the patients who receive
the treatment under investigation are cured more rapidly, more
completely or more frequently, than they would have been without
it." In 1747, James Lind
(1716–1794), the Naval
Surgeon on HMS
Salisbury, conducted what was most likely the first-ever
clinical
trial when he investigated the efficacy of citrus fruit
in cases of scurvy. He
randomly divided twelve scurvy patients, whose "cases were as
similar as I could have them", into six pairs. Each pair was given
a different remedy. Lind’s approach can still be seen in the way
that the comparative efficacy of various treatments for particular
sorts of cancer are
determined, by examining and comparing the five
year survival rates of those who have been treated with each of
the different interventions. He noted that the pair who had been
given the oranges and lemons were so restored to health within six
days of treatment that one of them returned to duty, and the other
was well enough to attend the rest of the sick. (Dunn 1997,
p.F65)
According to Lind’s 1753 Treatise on the Scurvy
in Three Parts Containing an Inquiry into the Nature, Causes, and
Cure of the Disease, Together with a Critical and Chronological
View of what has been Published of the Subject, the remedies were:
Gaddum (1954, p.196) wrote that the electuary had been recommended
to Lind by a hospital surgeon, and that it contained garlic, mustard,
balsam of
Peru, and myrrh. In
1784, the French Royal
Commission looked into the existence of animal
magnetism, comparing the effects of allegedly "magnetized"
water with that of plain water. (Gauld (1992), p.28) It did not
examine the practices of Franz
Mesmer, but examined the significantly different practices of
his associate Charles d'Eslon (1739–1786). In 1799, John
Haygarth investigated the efficacy of medical instruments
called "Perkins
tractors", by comparing the results from dummy wooden tractors
with a set of allegedly "active" metal tractors. (Green 2002;
Haygarth 1801) In 1863 Austin
Flint (1812–1886) conducted the first-ever trial that directly
compared the efficacy of a dummy simulator with that of an active
treatment; although Flint's examination did not compare the two
against each other in the same trial. Even so, this was a
significant departure from the (then) customary practice of
contrasting the consequences of an active treatment with what Flint
described as "the natural history of [an untreated] disease".
(Flint 1863, p.18)
Flint’s paper is the first time that either of
the terms "placebo" or "placeboic remedy" were ever used to refer
to a dummy simulator in a clinical trial.
Flint (1863, p.21) treated 13 hospital inmates
who had rheumatic
fever; 11 were "acute",
and 2 were "sub-acute". He then compared the results of his dummy
"placeboic remedy" with that of the active treatment’s already
well-understood results. (Flint had previously tested, and reported
on, the active treatment’s efficacy.) There was no significant
difference between the results of the active treatment and his
"placeboic remedy" in 12 of the cases in terms of disease duration,
duration of convalescence, number of joints affected, and emergence
of complications
(pp.32–34). In the thirteenth case, Flint expressed some doubt as
to whether the particular complications that had emerged (namely,
pericarditis,
endocarditis, and
pneumonia) would have
been prevented if that subject had been immediately given the
"active treatment" (p.36). In post-World War
II 1946,
pharmaceutical chemicals were in short supply. One U.S. headache
remedy manufacturer sold a drug that was composed of three
ingredients: a, b, and c. Chemical b was in short supply.
Jellinek was asked to test whether or not the
headache drug's overall efficacy would be reduced if ingredient b
was missing.
Jellinek set up a complex trial involving 199
subjects, all of whom suffered from "frequent headaches".
(Originally there were 200 subjects, but one did not complete the
trial.) The subjects were randomly divided into four test groups.
He prepared four test drugs, involving various permutations of the three
drug constituents, with a placebo as a scientific
control. The structure of this trial is significant because, in
those days, the only time placebos were ever used "was to express
the efficacy or non-efficacy of a drug in terms of "how much
better" the drug was than the "placebo". (Jellinek 1946, p.88)
(Note that the trial conducted by Austin Flint is an example of
such a drug efficacy vs. placebo efficacy trial.) The four test
drugs were identical in shape, size, colour and taste:
- Drug A: contained a, b, and c.
- Drug B: contained a and c.
- Drug C: contained a and b.
- Drug D: a 'simulator', contained "ordinary lactate".
Each time a subject had a headache, they took
their group’s designated test drug, and recorded whether their
headache had been relieved (or not). Although "some subjects had
only three headaches in the course of a two-week period while
others had up to ten attacks in the same period", the data showed a
"great consistency" across all subjects (Jellinek, 1946, p.88).
Every two weeks the groups’ drugs were changed; so that by the end
of eight weeks, all groups had tested all the drugs.
The stipulated drug (i.e., A, B, C, or D) was
taken as often as necessary over each two-week period, and the two
week sequences were:
- A, B, C, D
- B, A, D, C
- C, D, A, B
- D, C, B, A.
Each group took a test remedy for two weeks. The
trial lasted eight weeks, and by the end of the trial all groups
had taken each test drug for two weeks (although each group had
taken them in a different sequence). Over the entire population of
199 subjects, 120 of the subjects responded to the placebo, and 79
did not; i.e., there were 120 "subjects reacting to placebo" and 79
"subjects not reacting to placebo". (Jellinek 1946, p.89)
At first glance there was no difference between
the self-reported "success rates" of Drugs A, B, and C (84%, 80%,
and 80% respectively) (the "success rate" of the simulating placebo
Drug D was 52%); and, from this, it appeared that ingredient b was
completely unnecessary.
However, in quite a remarkable way, the trial
eventually did demonstrate that ingredient b did make a significant
contribution to the remedy’s efficacy. Examining his data more
closely, Jellinek discovered that there was a very significant
difference in responses between the 120 placebo-responders and the
79 non-responders. The 79 non-responders' reports showed that if
they were considered as an entirely separate group, there was a
significant difference the "success rates" of Drugs A, B, and C:
viz., 88%, 67%, and 77%, respectively. And because this significant
difference in relief from the test drugs could only be attributed
to the presence or absence of ingredient b, he concluded that
ingredient b was essential (thus contradicting his initial
conclusion, derived from the comparison between the "success rates"
for all test subjects, that Drugs A, B, and C were equally
efficacious).
There were two further repercussions from this
trial:
- Jellinek (1946, p.90), having identified 120 "placebo reactors", went on to suppose that all of them may have been suffering from either "psychological headaches" (with or without attendant "hypochondriasis" (p.90)) or "true physiological headaches [which were] accessible to suggestion". Thus, according to this view, the degree to which a "placebo response" is present tends to be an index of the psychogenic origins of the condition in question. (Lasagna et al. 1954, p.777)
- It indicated that, whilst any given placebo was inert, a responder to that particular placebo may be responding for a wide number of reasons unconnected with the drug's active ingredients; and, from this, it could be important to pre-screen potential test populations, and treat those manifesting a placebo-response as a special group, or remove them altogether from the test population.
Medical
anthropologist Daniel Moerman (1983) conducted a meta-study of 31
placebo-controlled trials of the gastric acid
secretion inhibitor drug Cimetidine in
the treatment of gastric or
duodenal
ulcers. His meta-study revealed that the placebo treatments
were, in many cases, just as effective in treating ulcers as the
active drug: of the 1692 patients treated in the 31 trials, 76% of
the 916 treated with the drug were "healed", and 48% of the 776
treated with placebo were "healed". These results were confirmed by
the direct post-treatment endoscopy of the treated area.
He also found that German placebos were "stronger" than others; and
that, overall, different physicians evoked quite different placebo
responses in the same clinical trial (p.15).
Further examination revealed that many of these
trials had been conducted in such a way that the gap between the
active drugs and the placebo controls was "not because [the trials'
constituents] had high drug effectiveness, but because they had low
placebo effectiveness" (p.13).
In some trials, placebos were effective in 90% of
the cases, whilst in others the placebos were only effective in 10%
of the cases. Moerman argues that "what is demonstrated in [these]
studies is not enhanced healing in drug groups, but reduced healing
in placebo groups" (p.14).
Moerman also noted the results of two studies
(one conducted in Germany, the other in Denmark), which examined
"ulcer relapse in healed
patients". Each study showed that the rate of relapse amongst those
"healed" by the active drug treatment was five times that of those
"healed" by the placebo treatment (pp.14–15). This led Moerman to
remark: “we may be able to go so far as to say that while [the
active drug] “heals” ulcers, placebo treatment can “cure” ulcer
disease” (p.14).
These results of a 90% placebo response rate, and
a placebo-healed relapse rate 20% that of the active drug seems to
indicate that the drug Cimetidine was not effective in inhibiting
gastric acid secretion.
However, as we now know, the majority of gastric
or duodenal ulcers are not due to excessive gastric acid secretion
caused by stress
or spicy
food, but are due to the bacterium Helicobacter
pylori, it is highly significant that this high response rate
and low relapse rate can now be interpreted otherwise: it was
indicating that the drug's prescribers had chosen the wrong target
for their therapeutic intervention (and, as a consequence, we now
know that they had chosen what might be termed an "inappropriate
target but correct drug", rather than a "correct target but
inappropriate drug" as was first supposed). Beecher (1955) reported
that about a quarter of patients who were administered a placebo,
for example against back pain, reported a relief or diminution of
pain. Remarkably, not only did the patients report improvement, but
the improvements themselves were often objectively measurable, and
the same improvements were typically not observed in patients who
did not receive the placebo.
Because of this effect, government regulatory
agencies approve new drugs only after tests establish not only that
patients respond to them, but also that their effect is greater
than that of a placebo (by way of affecting more patients, by
affecting responders more strongly or both). Such a test or
clinical
trial is called a placebo-controlled study.
Because a doctor's belief in the value of a
treatment can affect his or her behaviour, and thus what his or her
patient believes, such trials are usually conducted in "double-blind"
fashion: that is, not only are the patients made unaware when they
are receiving a placebo, the doctors are made unaware too.
Recently, it has even been shown that "mock" surgery can have
similar effects, and so some surgical techniques must be studied
with placebo controls (rarely double blind, due to the difficulty
involved). To merit approval, the group receiving the experimental
treatment must experience a greater benefit than the placebo
group.
Nearly all studies conducted this way show some
benefit in the placebo group. For example, Khan published a
meta-analysis
of studies of investigational antidepressants and found
a 30% reduction in suicide and attempted suicide in the placebo
groups and a 40% reduction in the treated groups. (Khan et al.
2000) However, studies generally do not include an untreated group,
so determining the actual size of the placebo effect, compared to
totally untreated patients, is difficult.
Examples of effect
In 1938, Diehl, Baker and Cowan reported the results of a study that they had conducted over a two year period into the efficacy of injected vaccines in prevention of colds. Whilst their experimental group showed a significant reduction in the number of colds per person per year, the placebo control group reported the same magnitude of reduction as the vaccinated group. (Diehl et al. 1938, p.1171) This finding was significant, because they also found that their observed level of reduction in the number of colds per person per year matched that of other "uncontrolled studies"; which, given the demonstrated level of placebo responses, meant that "there is no evidence in this study… that vaccines reduce the complications of colds… in a cold-susceptiible group". (Diehl et al. 1938, p.1173)By 1948, the term placebo effect was so widely
established that an Egyptian physician could write to The Lancet,
reporting that "The success achieved in 83% of cases cannot by any
means be ascribed to suggestion or to a placebo effect." (Ayad
1948, p.305)
In 1949, Wolf conducted a series of
investigations into the "measurable 'drug effects' that are not
attributable to the chemical properties of the agents
administered". (Wolf 1950, p.100) Wolf contrasted what he called
drug effects with what he called placebo effects.
He noted the extent to which the "[observed]
"placebo" actions depended for their force on the conviction of the
patient that this or that effect would result". (Wolf 1950, p.106)
He drew attention to the impressive frequency and magnitude of
these placebo actions and placebo effects and how they could mimic,
mask, potentiate, or prevent beneficial responses to the active
drugs. He also stressed that all of these placebo actions and
placebo effects, "which [modified] the pharmacologic action of
drugs or [endowed] inert agents with potency" were associated with
real and substantial physiological changes; and, therefore, they
were not imaginary. His study also revealed that the action of a
drug could be nullified or, even, reversed in the presence of
emotional states such as anger, hostility or resentment.
He also observed that "these effects [were] at
times more potent than the pharmacologic action customarily
attributed to the [active] agent" (Wolf 1950, p.108–9) and spoke of
the well-established understanding "that the mechanisms of the body
are capable of reacting not only to direct physical and chemical
stimulation but also to symbolic stimuli, words and events which
have somehow acquired special meaning for the individual" (Wolf
1950, p.108), in the hope that "in the future drugs will be
assessed not only with reference to their pharmacologic action but
also to the other [psychodynamic] forces at play and to the
circumstances surrounding their administration" (Wolf 1950,
p.100).
Methodology of administration
Placebos are things like sugar pills, that look like real treatments but in fact have no physical effect. They are used to create "blind" trials in which the participants do not know whether they are getting the active treatment or not, so that physical effects can be measured independently of the participants' expectations. There are various effects of expectations, and blind trials control all of these together by making whatever expectations there are equal for all cases. Placebos are not the only possible technique for creating "blindness" (= unawareness of the treatment): to test the effectiveness of prayer by others, you just don't tell the participants who has and has not had prayers said for them. To test the effect of changing the frequency of fluorescent lights on headaches, you just change the light fittings at night in the absence of the office workers (this is a real case).Related to this is the widespread opinion that
placebo effects exist, where belief in the presence of a promising
treatment (even though it is in fact an inert placebo) creates a
real result e.g. recovery from disease. Placebos as a technique for
"blinding" will remain important even if there is no placebo
effect, but obviously it is in itself interesting to discover
whether placebo effects exist, how common they are, and how large
they are. After all, if they cure people then we probably want to
employ them for that.
Claims that placebo effects are large and
widespread go back to at least Beecher (1955). However Kienle and
Kiene (1997) did a reanalysis of his reported work, and concluded
his claims had no basis in his evidence. Beecher misinterpreted his
data. Also, Beecher's methodology was very questionable. Then
Hróbjartsson & Gøtzsche (2001) did a meta-analysis or review of
the evidence, and concluded that most of these claims have no basis
in the clinical trials published to date. This opinion is widely
spread in the placebo literature. The chief points of their
skeptical argument are:
- Only trials that compare a group that gets no treatment with another group that gets a placebo can test the effect.
- Most claims are based on looking at the size of the improvement measured in placebo groups in trials comparing only placebo and experimental (active) treatments. This is misleading since (for instance) most diseases have a substantial clearup rate with no treatment: seeing improvements does not mean the placebo had an effect. (Put more technically, comparing with the baseline (pretest measure) is vulnerable to regression to the mean.)
Nevertheless, even they conclude that there is a
real placebo effect for pain (not surprising since this is partly
understood theoretically: Wall, 1999)); and for some other
continuously-valued subjectively-assessed effects. A recent
experimental demonstration was reported: Zubieta et al. (2005)
"Endogenous Opiates and the Placebo Effect" The journal of
neuroscience vol.25 no.34 p.7754–7762. This seems to show that the
psychological cause (belief that the placebo treatment might be
effective in reducing pain) causes opioid release in the brain,
which then presumably operates in an analogous way to externally
administered morphine.
A recent and more extensive review of the overall
dispute is: M. Nimmo (2005) Placebo: Real, Imagined or Expected? A
Critical Experimental Exploration Final year undergraduate Critical
Review, Dept. of Psychology, University of Glasgow. PDF copy.
Use in clinical trials
Placebo simulators are a standard control component of most clinical trials which attempt to make some sort of quantitative assessment of the efficacy of new medicinal drugs; It is a view held by many "that placebo-controlled studies often are designed in such a way that disadvantages the placebo condition" (Herbert & Gaudiano 2005, p.788–789) and, generally speaking, for a drug to be put on the market, it must be significantly more effective than its placebo counterpart.According to Yoshioka (1998), the first-ever
randomized clinical trial was the trial conducted by the
Medical Research Council (1948) into the efficacy of streptomycin in the
treatment of pulmonary
tuberculosis.There were two test groups in this trial
- those "treated by streptomycin and bed-rest", and
- those "[treated] by bed-rest alone" (the control group).
In recent times, the practice of using an
additional natural
history group as the trial's so-called "third arm" has emerged;
and trials are conducted using three randomly-selected
equally-matched trial groups, David (1949, p.28) wrote: "... it is
necessary to remember the adjective ‘random’ [in the term ‘random
sample’] should apply to the method of drawing the sample and not
to the sample itself.".
- The Active drug group (A): who receive the active test drug.
- The Placebo drug group (P): who receive a placebo drug that simulates the active drug.
- The Natural history group (NH): who receive no treatment of any kind (and whose condition, therefore, is allowed to run its natural course).
The outcomes within each group are observed, and
compared with each other, allowing us to measure:
- The efficacy of the active drug's treatment: the difference between A and NH (i.e., A-NH).
- The efficacy of the entire treatment process alone: the difference between P and NH (i.e., P-NH).
- The efficacy of the active drug's active ingredient: the difference between A and P (i.e., A-P).
- The magnitude of the placebo response: the difference between P and NH (i.e., P-NH).
In recent times, as the demands for the
scientific validation
of the various claims that are made for the efficacy of various
so-called "talking therapies" (such as hypnotherapy, psychotherapy,
counselling, and non-drug psychiatry) has significantly
increased, there is continuing controversy over what might or might
not be an appropriate placebo for such therapeutic treatments. In
2005, the Journal of Clinical Psychology, an eminent peer-reviewed
journal (founded in 1945), devoted an entire issue to the question
of "The Placebo Concept in Psychotherapy", and contained a wide
range of articles that made many valuable contributions to this
overall discussion.
Placebo response as an index
In certain clinical trials of particular drugs, it may happen that the level of the "placebo responses" manifested by the trial's subjects are either considerably higher or lower (in relation to the "active" drug's effects) than one would expect from other trials of similar drugs. In these cases, with all other things being equal, it is entirely reasonable to conclude that:- the degree to which there is a considerably higher level of "placebo response" than one would expect is an index of the degree to which the drug's active ingredient is not efficacious.
- the degree to which there is a considerably lower level of "placebo response" than one would expect is an index of the degree to which, in some particular way, the placebo is not simulating the active drug in an appropriate way.
However, in particular cases such as the use of
Cimetidine to treat ulcers (see
below), a significant level of placebo response can also prove
to be an index of how much the treatment has been directed at a
wrong target.
Technical challenges and pitfalls
Appropriate use of a placebo in a clinical trial often requires or at least benefits from a double-blind study design, which means that neither the experimenters nor the subjects know which subjects are in the "test group" and which are in the "control group". The Coronary Drug Project was intended to study the safety and effectiveness of drugs for long-term treatment of coronary heart disease in men. Those in the placebo group who adhered to the placebo treatment (took the placebo regularly as instructed) showed nearly half the mortality rate as those who were not adherent. (Coronary Drug Project 1980) A similar study of women similarly found survival was nearly 2.5 times greater for those who adhered to their placebo. (Gallagher et al. 1993) This apparent placebo effect may be caused by:- The psychological effect of adhering to the protocol, i.e. genuine placebo effect.
- Being healthy enough to follow the protocol.
- Compliant people being more diligent and scrupulous in all aspects of their lives.
A psychoactive placebo was used in the Marsh
Chapel Experiment: a double-blind
study, in which the experimental group received psilocybin while the control
group received a large dose of niacin, a substance that produces
noticeable physical effects. Walter Pahnke in 1962 described his
Marsh
Chapel Experiment in his unpublished Ph.D. dissertation "Drugs
and Mysticism: An Analysis of the Relationship between Psychedelic
Drugs and the Mystical Consciousness, and submitted it in 1963, for
his Ph.D. in Religion and Society at Harvard
University; Timothy
Leary was the principal academic advisor for his dissertation.
In it, Pahnke wrote of administering capsules that contained 30mg
of psilocybin
extracted from psychoactive
mushrooms, and contrasted their effects with those of psychoactive
placebos, which contained the chemical niacin in such a dosage that it
produced very significant physiological responses. It was intended
that these responses would lead the control subjects to believe
they had received the psychoactive drug.
The term "psychoactive placebo" is rare in the
literature; but, when it is used, it always denotes a placebo of
this type. For example, "Neither the experienced investigator nor
the naive [subject] is easily fooled on the matter of whether he
has received a psychedelic substance or
merely a psychoactive placebo such
as amphetamine."
(Harman et al. 1966, p.215)
Ethical challenges and concerns
Bioethicists have raised diverse concerns on the use of placebos in modern medicine and research. These have been largely incorporated into modern rules for the use of placebos in research but some issues remain subject to debate. The ethics of prescribing placebos in medical practice is highly debated. Some practitioners argue that the use of placebos is sometimes justified because it will do no harm and may do some good. With the publication of studies by Hróbjartsson and Gøtzsche and others, the proposition that placebos may do some good is under fire.- Disclosure. Rules that govern modern clinical trials insist on full disclosure to subjects who take part. Today, subjects are told that they may receive the drug being tested or they may receive the placebo.
- Balancing Treatment vs. Research Objectives. Ethicists have also raised concerns on the use of placebos in those circumstances in which a standard treatment exists unless there are genuine doubts of the effectivity of such standard treatment. If standard treatments exist for the disease being studied in clinical trials, a standard treatment is always used in place of a placebo for serious diseases. In research experimental studies, the method of establishing a proper control group to eliminate the placebo effect has also been difficult, particularly for surgical and therapy interventions that are not pharmaceutical in nature. Notably, there has been much debate of whether to use a placebo pill or conduct a sham procedure as a control.
Most of these concerns have been addressed in the
modern conventions for the use of placebos in research; however,
some issues remain subject to debate.
From the time of the Hippocratic
Oath questions of the ethics of medical practice have been
widely discussed, and codes of practice have been gradually
developed as a response to advances in scientific medicine. The
Nuremberg
Code, which was issued in August 1947, as a consequence of the
so-called Doctors'
Trial which examined the human
experimentation conducted by Nazi doctors during
World
War II, offers ten principles for legitimate medical research,
including informed
consent, absence of coercion, and beneficence towards
experiment participants.
In 1964, the World
Medical Association issued the Declaration
of Helsinki,http://www.wma.net/e/policy/b3.htm
which specifically limited its directives to health research by
physicians, and emphasized a number of additional conditions in
circumstances where "medical research is combined with medical
care". The significant difference between the 1947 Nuremberg Code
and the 1964 Declaration of Helsinki is that the first was a set of
principles that was suggested to the medical profession by the
"Doctors’ Trial" judges, whilst the second was imposed by the
medical profession upon itself. Paragraph 29 of the Declaration
makes specific mention of placebos:
In 2002, World Medical Association issued the
following elaborative announcement:
In addition to the requirement for informed
consent from all drug-trial participants, it is also standard
practice to inform all test subjects that they may receive the drug
being tested or that they may receive the placebo.
See also
- Adverse effect (medicine)
- Autosuggestion
- Belief
- Charm
- Confounding factor
- Culture-specific syndrome
- Efficacy
- Expectation
- Experimental design
- Hawthorne effect
- Hypnotic susceptibility
- Iatrogenesis
- Intention
- Medication
- Observer-expectancy effect
- Optimism
- Pessimism
- Pharmacology
- Post hoc ergo propter hoc
- Psychiatry
- Psychosomatic illness
- Pygmalion effect
- Scientific control
- Scientific method
- Self-fulfilling prophecy
- Simulation
- Subject-expectancy effect
- Therapeutic effect
- Thomas theorem
- Unintended consequence
External links
- The Placebo Effect at the Skeptic's Dictionary
Footnotes
References
Books
- Snake Oil Science: The Truth About Complementary and Alternative Medicine Has several chapters on the placebo effect.
- Beecher, H.K., Measurement of Subjective Responses: Quantitative Effects of Drugs, Oxford University Press, (New York), 1959.
- Beecher, H.K., Research and the Individual: Human Studies, Little, Brown, (Boston), 1970. [ISBN 0-7000-0168-9]
- Bernheim, H. (trans. by Herter C.A. from Second, revised French Edition of 1887), Suggestive Therapeutics: A Treatise on the Nature and Uses of Hypnotism, G.P. Putnam's Sons, (New York), 1889.
- Placebos and the Philosophy of Medicine: Clinical, Conceptual, and Ethical Issues
- The Placebo response
- Carruthers, S.G., Hoffman, B.B., Melmon, K.L. & Nierenberg, D.W. (eds.), Melmon and Morrelli's Clinical Pharmacology: Basic Principles in Therapeutics (Fourth Edition), McGraw-Hill, (London), 2000.
- Evans, Dylan 2004. Placebo: Mind over Matter in Modern Medicine. HarperCollins (UK) / Oxford University Press (US). ISBN 978-0007126132 / ISBN 978-0195220544.
- Gauld, A., A History of Hypnotism, Cambridge University Press, (Cambridge), 1992.
- Science of the Placebo: Toward an Interdisciplinanary Research Agenda
- Harrington, Anne, ed. 1997. The Placebo Effect: An Interdisciplinary Exploration. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 067466986X
- Haygarth, J., Of the Imagination, as a Cause and as a Cure of Disorders of the Body; Exemplified by Fictitious Tractors, and Epidemical Convulsions (New Edition, with Additional Remarks), Crutwell, (Bath), 1801.
- Meaning, Medicine and the 'Placebo Effect'
- Senn SJ. 2003. Dicing with Death: Chance, Risk and Health (Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK. ISBN 0-521-54023-2.
- Wilson, I., The Bleeding Mind: An Investigation into the Mysterious Phenomenon of Stigmata, Paladin, (London), 1991.
History of medicine
- Anonymous, "The Bottle of Medicine" [Editorial], British Medical Journal, No.4750, (19 January 1952), pp.149–150. Estimates that 40% of general practice patients receive a bottle of medicine as a placebo.
- Ayad, H., "Khellin in Angina Pectoris", The Lancet, Vol.251, No.6495, (21 February 1948), Page 305.
- Cooper, A., "Surgical Lectures", The Lancet, Vol.1, No.8, (23 November 1823), pp.253–260.
- Diehl, H.S., Baker, A.B. & Cowan, D.W., " Cold Vaccines: An Evaluation Based on a Controlled Study", Journal of the American Medical Association, Vol.111, No.13, (24 September 1938), pp.1168–1173.
- Evans, W. & Hoyle, C., "The Comparative Value of Drugs Used in the Continuous Treatment of Angina Pectoris", Quarterly Journal of Medicine, No.7 (Vol.2, No.4), (July 1933), pp.311–338.
- Flexner, A., Medical Education in the United States and Canada: A Report to the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching (Bulletin Number Four), The Merrymont Press, (Boston), 1910. http://www.carnegiefoundation.org/publications/pub.asp?key=43&subkey=977
- Flint, A., "A Contribution Toward the Natural History of Articular Rheumatism, Consisting of a Report of Thirteen Cases Treated Solely with Palliative Measures", American Journal of Medical Science, Vol.46, (July 1863), pp.17–36.
- Gold, H., Kwit, N.T. & Otto H., "The Xanthines (Theobromine and Aminophyllin) in the Treatment of Cardiac Pain", Journal of the American Medical Association, Vol.108, No.26, (26 June 1937), pp.2173–2179.
- Graves, T.C., "Commentary on a Case of Hystero-Epilepsy with Delayed Puberty: Treated with Testicular Extract", The Lancet, Vol.196, No.5075, (4 December 1920), pp.1134–1135.
- Handfield-Jones, R.P.C., "A Bottle of Medicine from the Doctor", The Lancet, Vol.262, No.6790, (17 October 1953), pp.823–825.
- Jellinek, E. M. "Clinical Tests on Comparative Effectiveness of Analgesic Drugs", Biometrics Bulletin, Vol.2, No.5, (October 1946), pp.87–91.
- Pepper, O.H.P., "A Note on the Placebo", American Journal of Pharmacy, Vol.117, (November 1945), pp.409–412.
- Platt, R., "Two Essays on the Practice of Medicine", The Lancet, Vol.250, No.6470, (30 August 1947), pp.305–307.
- Steele, Dr., "The Charitable Aspects of Medical Relief", Journal of the Royal Statistical Society, Vol.54, No.2, (June 1891), pp.263–310.
- Wolf, S., "Effects of Suggestion and Conditioning on the Action of Chemical Agents in Human Subjects; The Pharmacology of Placebos", Journal of Clinical Investigation, Vol.29, No.1, (January 1950), pp.100–109.
Modern research
- Barfod TS. 2005. Placebos in medicine: placebo use is well known, placebo effect is not. BMJ. 330:45. PMID 15626817.
- Beecher, H.K., "Experimental Pharmacology and Measurement of the Subjective Response", Science, Vol.116, No.3007, (15 August 1952), pp.157–162.
- Beecher, H. K. 1955. "The powerful placebo". Journal of the American Medical Association, 159:1602–1606. PMID 13271123. Original article describing a widespread placebo effect.
- Beecher, H.K., Keats, A.S., Mosteller, F. & Lasagna, L., "The Effectiveness of Oral Analgesics (Morphine, Codeine, Acetylsalicylic Acid) and the Problem of Placebo "Reactors" and "Non-Reactors"", Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics, Vol.109, No.4, (December 1953), pp.393–400.
- Carter, A.B., "The Placebo: Its Use and Abuse", The Lancet, Vol.262, No.6790, (17 October 1953), p.823.
- Chambless, D.L. & Hollon, S.D., "Defining Empirically Supported Therapies", Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, Vol.66, No.1, (February 1998), pp.7–18.
- Di Blasi Z, Reilly D. 2005. Placebos in medicine: medical paradoxes need disentangling. BMJ. 330:45. PMID 15626818.
- Evans D. 2005. Suppression of the acute-phase response as a biological mechanism for the placebo effect. Med Hypotheses. 64:1–7. PMID 15533601.
- Findley, T., "The Placebo and the Physician", Medical Clinics of North America, Vol.37, (November 1953), pp.1821–1826.
- Gaddum, F.M., "Walter Ernest Dixon Memorial Lecture: Clinical Pharmacology", Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine, Vol.47, No.3, (March 1954), pp.195–204.
- Geers AL et al. 2005. Goal activation, expectations, and the placebo effect. J Pers Soc Psychol. 89:143–159. PMID 16162050.
- Green, S.A., "The Origins of Modern Clinical Research", Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, Vol.405, (December 2002), pp.311–319.
- Harman, W.W., McKim, R.H., Mogar, R.E., Fadiman, J. & Stolaroff, M.J., "Psychedelic Agents in Creative Problem-Solving: A Pilot Study, Psychological Reports, Vol.19, No.1, (August 1966), pp.211–227.
- Hróbjartsson A, Gøtzsche PC 2001. "Is the placebo powerless? An analysis of clinical trials comparing placebo with no treatment". New England Journal of Medicine 344(21):1594–1602. PMID 11372012.
- Hróbjartsson A, Gøtzsche P. 2004. Is the placebo powerless? Update of a systematic review with 52 new randomized trials comparing placebo with no treatment. J Intern Med. 256:91–100. PMID 15257721
- Hróbjartsson A, Norup M. 2003. The use of placebo interventions in medical practice—a national questionnaire survey of Danish clinicians. Eval Health Prof. 26:153–165. PMID 12789709.
- Hyland, M. E. (2003). Using the placebo response in clinical practice. Clinical Medicine (London, England), 3, 347–350.
- Jewson, N.D., "Medical Knowledge and the Patronage System in 18th Century England", Sociology, Vol.8, No.3, (1974), pp.369–385.
- Jewson, N.D., "The Disappearance of the Sick Man from Medical Cosmology, 1770–1870", Sociology, Vol.10, No.2, (1976), pp.225–244.
- Khan A, Warner HA, and Brown WA. 2000. Symptom reduction and suicide risk in patients treated with placebo in antidepressant clinical trials: an analysis of the Food and Drug Administration database. Arch Gen Psychiatry 57:311–317. PMID 10768687
- Challenges (Beecher 1955).
- Lasagna, L., Mosteller, F., von Felsinger, J.M. & Beecher, H.K., "A Study of the Placebo Response", American Journal of Medicine, Vol.16, No.6, (June 1954), pp.770–779.
- Leuchter AF, Cook IA et al (2002). Changes in brain function of depressed subjects during treatment with placebo. Am J Psychiatry. 159:122–129. PMID 11772700.
- Leslie, A., "Ethics and Practice of Placebo Therapy", American Journal of Medicine, Vol.16, No.6, (June 1954), pp.854–862.
- Lohr, J.M., Olatunji, B.O., Parker, L. & DeMaio, C., "Experimental Analysis of Specific Treatment Factors: Efficacy and Practice Implications", Journal of Clinical Psychology, Vol.61, No.7, (July 2005), pp.819–834.
- Margo CE. 1999. The placebo effect. Surv Ophthalmol. 44:31–44. PMID 10466586.
- Nitzan U, Lichtenberg P. 2004. Questionnaire survey on use of placebo. BMJ 329:944–946. PMID 15377572.
- Perlman, L, "Nonspecific, Unintended, and Serendipitous Effects in Psychotherapy", Professional Psychology: Research and Practice, Vol.32, No.3, (June 2001), pp.283–288.
- Price DD et al. 1999. An analysis of factors that contribute to the magnitude of placebo analgesia in an experimental paradigm. Pain. 83:147–156. PMID 10534585.
- Sauro MD. 2005. Endogenous opiates and the placebo effect: a meta-analytic review. J Psychosom Res. 58:115–120. PMID 15820838.
- Shapiro, A.K., "Semantics of the Placebo", Psychiatric Quarterly, Vol.42, No.4, (December 1968), pp.653–695.
- Spiegel D. 2004. Placebos in practice. BMJ. 329:927–928. PMID 15499085.
- Wager TD, Rilling JK, Smith EE et al. 2004. Placebo-induced changes in FMRI in the anticipation and experience of pain. Science. 303:1162–1167. PMID 14976306
- Zubieta JK, Bueller JA et al. 2005. Placebo effects mediated by endogenous opioid activity on mu-opioid receptors. J Neurosci. 25:7754–7762. PMID 16120776.
General audience
- Brooks, Michael. New Scientist Space. March 19, 2005. 13 Things that do not make sense. URL accessed April 25, 2008.
- http://www.csicop.org/si/9701/placebo.html|accessdate=2006-05-08 An overview of the placebo effect and how it influences the study of alternative medicines.
- http://abcnews.go.com/Health/Technology/story?id=3433101
- Includes video.
- http://www.nytimes.com/library/magazine/home/20000109mag-talbot7.html|accessdate=2006-05-08
placebo in Arabic: بلاسيبو
placebo in Bulgarian: Плацебо
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placebo in Chinese:
安慰劑效應