 |
 |

Control Group Bias in Randomized Atypical Antipsychotic Medication Trials for Schizophrenia
Scott W. Woods, MD;
Ralitza V. Gueorguieva, PhD;
C. Bruce Baker, JD, MD;
Robert W. Makuch, PhD
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2005;62:961-970.
Context It has been suggested that the need for concurrent placebo control groups in new schizophrenia studies might be minimized by making comparisons with external placebo. This strategy requires an assumption of constancy, that the novel medication will perform the same way in a study with only active controls as it would have in a placebo-controlled trial.
Objective To test this constancy assumption in active- and low dosecontrolled trials vs placebo-controlled trials of atypical antipsychotic medications.
Data Sources A comprehensive search of bibliographic databases, conference proceedings, and Food and Drug Administration databases through November 24, 2003.
Study Selection English-language, randomized, double-blind clinical trials of newer atypical antipsychotic medications in otherwise unselected acutely ill adults with schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder that reported baseline and intent-to-treat end point change values for the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale.
Data Extraction Study number, sample size, reported dosage for each arm, trial duration, percentage of men, average age, trial arm treatment completion rate, baseline and within-arm end point change in the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, method of scoring the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale, and date of publication were extracted from each study independently by 2 of us (S.W.W. and C.B.B.) each.
Data Synthesis There were 32 studies comprising 66 risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine, and ziprasidone arms including 7264 patients. Random-effects analysis revealed that in atypical antipsychotic medication arms, the degree of improvement was nearly double in active-controlled trials than that seen with the same drugs and dosages in placebo-controlled studies. An effect of design was also observed in low dosecontrolled studies vs placebo-controlled studies in ineffective and intermediate antipsychotic medication dose ranges.
Conclusions The observed control group bias indicates that the constancy assumption does not hold in recent antipsychotic medication trials. These results suggest that caution is indicated when considering active- or low dosecontrolled studies requiring comparisons with external placebo as alternatives to placebo-controlled trials for establishing efficacy of new medications for schizophrenia.
Author Affiliations: Treatment Research Program, Department of Psychiatry (Drs Woods and Baker) and Biostatistics Division, Department of Epidemiology and Public Health (Drs Gueorguieva and Makuch), Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, Conn.
THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES
Dropout Rates in Randomized Clinical Trials of Antipsychotics: A Meta-analysis Comparing First- and Second-Generation Drugs and an Examination of the Role of Trial Design Features
Rabinowitz et al.
Schizophr Bull 2008;0:sbn005v1-sbn005.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
Aripiprazole in the treatment of the psychosis prodrome: An open-label pilot study
WOODS et al.
Br. J. Psychiatry 2007;191:s96-s101.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
Childhood-Onset Schizophrenia: A Double-Blind, Randomized Clozapine-Olanzapine Comparison.
Shaw et al.
Arch Gen Psychiatry 2006;63:721-730.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
Ethics of Medication-Free Research in Schizophrenia
Chen and Moreno
Schizophr Bull 2006;32:307-309.
FULL TEXT
|