Placebo effect in chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy: The PATH study and a systematic review

Richard A. Lewis,David R. Cornblath,Hans Peter Hartung, Takuji Ito, John Philip Lawo,Orell Mielke,Billie L. Durn,Vera Bril,Ingemar S. J. Merkies,Paul Bassett,Alexa Cleasby,Ivo N. van Schaik, Arman Sabet, Koshy George,Leslie Roberts, Ross Carne,Stefan Blum,Robert D. Henderson,Philip Van Damme, Jelle Demeestere, Sandrine Larue, C. D’Amour, Pavel Kunc,Martin Vališ, J Süssová, T. Kalous,Radomír Taláb, Michal Bednar, Toomas Toomsoo, Inna Rubanovits,Katrin Gross‐Paju, U. Sorro, Mika Saarela, Mari Auranen,Jean Pouget,Shahram Attarian,Gwendal Le Masson, A. Wielanek,Claude Desnuelle, E. Delmon,Pierre Clavelou, D. Aufauvre, J. Schmidt, J. Zschuentzsch, C. Sommer, Daniela Krämer, Olaf Hoffmann, C. Goerlitz,Judith Haas, M. Chatzopoulos, Richard S. Yoon,Ralf Gold,Peter Berlit, Andrea Jaspert-Grehl, David Liebetanz,Anna Kutschenko,Martin Stangel,Corinna Trebst,Petra Baum,Florian Then Bergh,Juliane Klehmet,Andreas Meisel, Fabian Klostermann,Johanna Oechtering,Helmar C. Lehmann,Michael Schroeter,Tim Hagenacker, Daniel Mueller, Anne‐Dorte Sperfeld, F. Bethke, I Drory, Avi Algom,David Yarnitsky,Beth B. Murinson,Antonio Di Muzio, Fausta Ciccocioppo, Sandro Sorbi,Sabrina Matà,Angelo Schenone,Marina Grandis,Giuseppe Lauria,Daniele Cazzato,Giovanni Antonini, Stefania Morino,Dario Cocito,Maurizio Zibetti,Takanori Yokota,Takuya Ohkubo,Takashi Kanda, Motoharu Kawai,Kenichi Kaida, Hiroyuki Onoue,Satoshi Kuwabara,Masahiro Mori,Masahiro Iijima,Ken Ohyama,Masayuki Baba,Masahiko Tomiyama,Kazutoshi Nishiyama, Tsugio Akutsu, Kazumasa Yokoyama, Kazuaki Kanai,Ivo N. van Schaik,Filip Eftimov,Nicolette C. Notermans, Nora A. Visser,Catharina G. Faber, Janneke G. J. Hoeijmakers, Konrad Rejdak, U. Chyrchel-Paszkiewicz, C. Casanovas Pons, Antonia Mourtzikou, Josep Gamez, María Salvadó, C. Márquez Infante, Susana Benítez,Michael P Lunn, Jasper M. Morrow, David Gosal, Timothy Lavin,Isaac Melamed, Alessandro Testori, Senda Ajroud‐Driss, Daniela M. Menichella, Ericka Simpson, Eleonora Lai,Mazen M. Dimachkie,Richard J. Barohn, Said R. Beydoun, H. Johl, Dale J. Lange, Alexander Shtilbans,Suraj Muley,Shafeeq Ladha, Miriam Freimer, John T. Kissel,Norman Latov,Russell L. Chin, Eroboghene E. Ubogu, S. Mumfrey, T. Rao, Paul C. MacDonald, Khema R. Sharma, G. Gonzalez,Jeffrey A. Allen,David Walk, Lisa D. Hobson‐Webb,Karissa Gable

Journal of the Peripheral Nervous System(2020)

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摘要
Abstract The Polyneuropathy And Treatment with Hizentra (PATH) study required subjects with chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy (CIDP) to show dependency on immunoglobulin G (IgG) and then be restabilized on IgG before being randomized to placebo or one of two doses of subcutaneous immunoglobulin (SCIG). Nineteen of the 51 subjects (37%) randomized to placebo did not relapse over the next 24 weeks. This article explores the reasons for this effect. A post‐hoc analysis of the PATH placebo group was undertaken. A literature search identified other placebo‐controlled CIDP trials for review and comparison. In PATH, subjects randomized to placebo who did not relapse were significantly older, had more severe disease, and took longer to deteriorate in the IgG dependency period compared with those who relapsed. Published trials in CIDP, whose primary endpoint was stability or deterioration, had a mean non‐deterioration (placebo effect) of 43%, while trials with a primary endpoint of improvement had a placebo response of only 11%. Placebo is an important variable in the design of CIDP trials. Trials designed to show clinical improvement will have a significantly lower effect of this phenomenon than those designed to show stability or deterioration.
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关键词
placebo effect,chronic inflammatory
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