Placebo effects in mental health disorders: protocol for an umbrella review

Author:

Huneke Nathan TMORCID,Amin Jay,Baldwin David S,Chamberlain Samuel R,Correll Christoph U,Garner Matthew,Hill Catherine M,Hou Ruihua,Howes Oliver D,Sinclair Julia MAORCID,Solmi MarcoORCID,Cortese Samuele

Abstract

IntroductionGiven the high prevalence of mental health disorders and their significant socioeconomic burden, there is a need to develop improved treatments, and to evaluate them through placebo-controlled trials. However, the magnitude of the placebo response in randomised controlled trials to test medications may be substantial, affecting their interpretation. Therefore, improved understanding of the patient, trial and mental disorder factors that influence placebo responses would inform clinical trial design to better detect active treatment effects. There is a growing literature exploring the placebo response within specific mental health disorders, but no overarching synthesis of this research has been produced to date. We present a protocol for an umbrella review of systematic reviews and/or meta-analyses in which we aim to understand the effect size and potential predictors of placebo response within, and across, mental health disorders.Methods and analysisWe will systematically search databases (Medline, PsycINFO, EMBASE+EMBASE Classic, Web of Knowledge) for systematic reviews and/or meta-analyses that report placebo effect size in clinical trials in patients with mental health disorders (initial search date 23 October 2022). Screening of abstracts and full texts will be done in pairs. We will extract data to qualitatively examine how placebo effect size varies across mental health disorders. We also plan to qualitatively summarise predictors of increased placebo response identified either quantitatively (eg, through meta-regression) or qualitatively. Risk of bias will be assessed using the AMSTAR-2 tool. We aim to not only summarise the current literature but also to identify gaps in knowledge and generate further hypotheses.Ethics and disseminationWe do not believe there are any specific ethical considerations relevant to this study. We will publish the results in a peer-reviewed journal.

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

General Medicine

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