Publication | Open Access
The Impact of Restrictive Entry Criterion During the Placebo Lead‐in Period
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Citations
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References
2000
Year
Placebo ResponseTreatment EffectLead IdentificationPharmacotherapyMental HealthRestrictive Entry CriterionNon-pharmacological InterventionPlacebo Lead‐in PeriodClinical TrialsRandomized Controlled TrialPsychiatryDepressionOutcomes ResearchCardiovascular DiseasePharmacoepidemiologyPatient SafetyDrug TrialMedicinePsychopathologyPlacebo Lead-in Period
In the study of depression, most randomized clinical trials have design features that attempt to sample from a stable patient population. One commonly used design feature is to require patients to maintain some minimum baseline symptom severity score during a placebo lead-in period. One intent of this design feature is to evaluate the behavior of patients prior to administration of active medication. If, during the lead-in period, patients do not maintain minimum symptom severity, the patients are excluded from the remainder of the study, the theory being that the excluded patients are not part of a stable patient population and hence are not likely to demonstrate efficacy of a truly effective treatment. This presentation investigates the effectiveness of a restrictive entry criterion and proposes an alternative explanation for what is usually defined as placebo response.
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