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Research on Antidepressants "Embarrassingly Biased"
Get this...antidepressants work better for those who have 'faith' in them.
Are Antidepressants Faith-Based Treatment?
By Bruce E. Levine, AlterNet. Posted February 28, 2008.
Bruce E. Levine, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist
and author of Surviving America's Depression
Epidemic: How to Find Morale, Energy, and
Community in a World Gone Crazy
(Chelsea Green, 2007).
Bias in drug studies may mask the mind's role in overcoming
depression.
While millions of people swear by Prozac, Zoloft, and other
antidepressants, do they work any better than a placebo or no
treatment at all?
Answering that question would be much easier if: (1) the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) revealed all drug study
findings without requiring a Freedom of Information Act request,
(2) drug studies with negative results were routinely published
in medical journals, (3) the FDA did not rely on drug company
studies employing biased research designs, (4) FDA advisory
panels did not include advisers financially connected to drug
companies and (5) the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
did not fund drug studies by researchers who have financial
relationships with drug companies.
The good news? There are antidepressant researchers without ties
to drug companies, and there is wisdom about overcoming
depression that remains available.
On Jan. 17, 2008, the New England Journal of Medicine analyzed
both published and unpublished antidepressant studies registered
with the FDA between 1987-2004. Examining 12 antidepressants,
Dr. Erick H. Turner, a former FDA medical reviewer, and his
research team included data gained via the Freedom of Information Act.
Dr. Turner discovered that most studies with negative results
were never published in journals, and so doctors had no way of
knowing how poorly antidepressants have actually fared. While 94
percent of antidepressant studies published in journals show
antidepressants to be more effective than placebos, only 51
percent of all registered studies were determined by the FDA to
show antidepressants superior to placebos.
Why are most negative results not published in journals? Drug
studies are routinely funded by the drug's manufacturer, which
has no interest in the publication of negative results. Also,
medical journals are increasingly dependent on advertising
revenue from drug companies, which results in a disincentive to
publish negative results.
Antidepressant advocates point out that when comparing all
research subjects, antidepressants retain an advantage -- albeit
a modest one -- over placebos. However, that belief is based on
studies funded by drug companies, utilizing research designs
biased in favor of antidepressants.
One such research-design bias is the use of depression
measurements that weigh heavily depression symptoms most likely
to improve with antidepressants (such as sleep problems and
agitation), and weigh less heavily depression symptoms not as
likely to improve with antidepressants (such as suicidal
thoughts and joylessness).
Why does the FDA allow measurement bias and other dice loading
that favors antidepressants? Marcia Angell, former editor in
chief of the New England Journal of Medicine, concludes that the
FDA has been compromised by drug companies. Dr. Angell reports
that, for example, in the majority of FDA drug-approval advisory
meetings through 2000, half or more of the FDA advisers
had conflicts of interest -- financial relationships with drug
companies.
A critical scientific standard in drug studies is the double-
blind control (neither subject nor experimenter knows who is
getting the drug and who is getting the placebo), but drug-
company antidepressant studies use blinds that can be peeked
through. How? Inactive placebos such as sugar pills, which don't
create side effects, are used, and so subjects can more easily
guess if they are getting the actual drug. In order to make it
more difficult to penetrate the blind, an active placebo, which
creates side effects, should be used. In 2000, a Psychiatric
Times article concluded: "In fact, when antidepressants are
compared with active placebos, there appear to be no differences
in clinical effectiveness."
In addition to biased depression measurements and an absence of
a true double blind control, the FDA also accepts antidepressant
research in which subjects who respond favorably to placebos
are weeded out from final trials.
Thus, it is especially embarrassing for antidepressant
manufacturers that despite research-design biases in favor of
antidepressants, these drugs achieve superiority to placebos
in only 51 percent of the studies.
In a widely covered announcement in March 2006, NIMH reported
that 50 percent of depressed people experience remission of
symptoms in a two-step treatment study (which ultimately would
include four steps) called Sequential Treatment Alternatives to
Relieve Depression (STAR*D). Unannounced by NIMH and STAR*D
researchers -- who had financial relationships with
antidepressant manufacturers -- was that for each of these
antidepressant treatment steps, remission rates were lower than
or equal to the customary placebo performance in other
antidepressant studies (there was no placebo control in this $35
million U.S. taxpayer-funded STAR*D study).
Moreover, NIMH and STAR*D researchers neglected to mention that
in the same time it took to complete steps one and two of STAR*D
(slightly over six months), previous research shows that
depressed people receiving no treatment at all have a
spontaneous remission rate of 50 percent -- this identical to
STAR*D results over that same time span. Worse yet, by the time
all four STAR*D's treatment steps had been completed, relapse
rates were so high that the November 2006 American Journal of
Psychiatry calculated the actual cumulative remission rate to
be, at best, 43 percent.
The most benign thing that one can say about drug companies'
efforts in creating faith in antidepressants is that faith is a
significant reason these antidepressants are effective at all.
In 2004, the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry reported that among
those depressed patients expecting an experimental
antidepressant to be "very effective," 90 percent had a
positive response (not necessarily remission); while among
those expecting the medication to be "somewhat effective,"
only 33 percent had a positive response. Depressed people
with "no faith" in antidepressants were not included in this
study, but such nonbelievers rarely tell me about having a
positive response with antidepressants. As one might expect,
drug companies do nothing to ensure that depressed people who have little or no faith in antidepressants are proportionately
included in studies.
More than a century ago, psychologist and philosopher William
James understood the importance of belief, faith and
expectations, or what scientists now call the "placebo effect." "Faith in a fact can help create the fact," James
famously observed in his essay, "The Will to Believe."
James was a tough-minded scientist, but when it came to
discovering an antidote to his own, often debilitating,
states of depression, he came to "believe in belief." James,
however, knew that while any given belief may "work," it also
may have undesirable side effects. So he pragmatically
considered many beliefs before choosing to believe that "life
shall [be built in] doing and suffering and creating."
Different faiths fit different temperaments. I know people who
have overcome depression with antidepressants, psychotherapy, prayer, philosophy, political activism, dietary supplements,
art, exercise and other approaches. Science has no clear favorites and invites pluralism. However, we should not be
cavalier in what we choose to believe, because our beliefs
determine in no small way what kind of people we are and what
kind of effect we have on society.
Bruce E. Levine, Ph.D., is a clinical psychologist and author of Surviving America's Depression Epidemic: How to Find Morale,
Energy, and Community in a World Gone Crazy (Chelsea Green,
2007).
Pasted from http://www.alternet.org/healthwellness/77800?
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