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Placebo Drug Interaction clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT01501591 Completed - Placebo Effect Clinical Trials

Interaction Between Drug and Placebo Effect:Randomized Placebo Controlled Trials May Not be Accurate in Determining Drug Effect Size

Start date: November 2012
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The total effect of a medication is the sum of its drug effect, placebo effect (meaning response of placebo), and their possible interaction. Current interpretation of the results of clinical trials (the gold standard in evidence based medicine) assumes no such interaction. Using a novel cross-over balanced placebo design and caffeine as a model drug, the investigators have recently shown that a negative interaction does exist; suggesting that the size of drug effect as currently measured by clinical trials may not be accurate. Due to the novelty of the findings and their important clinical practice and research implications, they need to be confirmed using another drug; and the size of drug effect measured using the novel design need to be directly compared to that measured using conventional clinical trial design. The results of the study are expected to further our understanding of a widely used medical intervention, i.e., placebo, and help assess the appropriateness of randomized clinical trials in determining the size of drug effect.