Scientific Publications Database

Article Title: Harnessing the Power of Placebos in Movement Disorders: Insights From Parkinson's Disease in Clinical Research and Practice
Authors: Mestre, Tiago A.; Shamy, Michel; Benedetti, Fabrizio; Lang, Anthony E.
Journal: MOVEMENT DISORDERS Volume 33 Issue 8
Date of Publication:2018
Abstract:
The placebo effect alongside the detrimental nocebo and lessebo effects associated with the use of placebos are well-recognized phenomena. Research conducted in the last two decades has demonstrated that the placebo effect is a measurable health benefit with well-known neurobiological correlates. In this review, we describe the current knowledge about how to best make use of the placebo effect to improve clinical research and optimize clinical care. We will cover four key topics: (1) setting the stage: historical perspectives on the use of placebos; (2) optimizing the use of placebos in clinical trials; (3) use of placebos in clinical practice; and (4) how can we minimize the ethical risks of using placebos? The adoption of the placebo-controlled trial as a standard in the therapeutic development reduced the placebo effect to background noise in a therapeutic signal. Strategies to minimize the placebo effect in clinical trials have been used to obtain positive efficacy results. In more recent years, new study paradigms encouraged a change in the views on placebos and the placebo effect. Alternative study designs and the development of biomarkers for a placebo response permit a better understanding of the contribution of the placebo effect to the results of interventional studies, without minimizing it. In clinical practice, optimizing the placebo effect (and reducing nocebo effects) has the potential to improve care for our patients, but raises ethical challenges. An enhanced patient-physician relationship would be central to any evidence-based intervention used in clinical care to heighten the placebo effect. (C) 2018 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.