Home > Baseline severity and the prediction of placebo response in clinical trials for alcohol dependence: A meta-regression analysis to develop an enrichment strategy.

Scherrer, Bruno and Guiraud, Julien and Addolorato, Giovanni and Aubin, Henri-Jean and de Bejczy, Andrea and Benyamina, Amine and van den Brink, Wim and Caputo, Fabio and Dematteis, Maurice and Goudriaan, Anna E and Gual, Antoni and Kiefer, Falk and Leggio, Lorenzo and Lesch, Otto-Michael and Maremmani, Icro and Nutt, David J and Paille, François and Perney, Pascal and Poulnais, Roch and Raffaillac, Quentin and Rehm, Jürgen and Rolland, Benjamin and Simon, Nicolas and Söderpalm, Bo and Sommer, Wolfgang H and Walter, Henriette and Spanagel, Rainer (2021) Baseline severity and the prediction of placebo response in clinical trials for alcohol dependence: A meta-regression analysis to develop an enrichment strategy. Alcoholism, Clinical and Experimental Research, 45, (9), pp. 1722-1734. doi: 10.1111/acer.14670.

External website: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/acer.1...

BACKGROUND: There is considerable unexplained variability in alcohol abstinence rates (AR) in the placebo groups of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) for alcohol dependence (AD). This is of particular interest because placebo responses correlate negatively with treatment effect size. Recent evidence suggests that the placebo response is lower in very heavy drinkers who show no "spontaneous improvement" prior to treatment initiation (high-severity population) than in a mild-severity population and in studies with longer treatment duration. We systematically investigated the relationship between population severity, treatment duration, and the placebo response in AR to inform a strategy aimed at reducing the placebo response and thereby increasing assay sensitivity in RCTs for AD.

METHODS: We conducted a systematic literature review on placebo-controlled RCTs for AD.We assigned retained RCTs to high- or mild-severity groups of studies based on baseline drinking risk levels and abstinence duration before treatment initiation. We tested the effects of population severity and treatment duration on the placebo response in AR using meta-regression analysis.

RESULTS: Among the 19 retained RCTs (comprising 1996 placebo-treated patients), 11 trials were high-severity and 8 were mild-severity RCTs. The between-study variability in AR was lower in the high-severity than in the mild-severity studies (interquartile range: 7.4% vs. 20.9%). The AR in placebo groups was dependent on population severity (p = 0.004) and treatment duration (p = 0.017) and was lower in the high-severity studies (16.8% at 3 months) than the mild-severity studies (36.7% at 3 months).

CONCLUSIONS: Pharmacological RCTs for AD should select high-severity patients to decrease the magnitude and variability in the placebo effect and and improve the efficiency of drug development efforts for AD.


Item Type
Article
Publication Type
International, Open Access, Review, Article
Drug Type
Alcohol
Date
21 August 2021
Identification #
doi: 10.1111/acer.14670
Page Range
pp. 1722-1734
Volume
45
Number
9
EndNote

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