The ethics of some placebo-controlled randomized controlled trials

IF 3.6 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Elliot M. Levine, Carlos M. Fernandez
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

It has been well-recognized that a randomized controlled trial (RCT) represents the best investigative format to establish medical evidence. In an RCT, essential variables can be controlled and bias minimized. When testing for the efficacy and safety of a medication, it is often compared to a blinded placebo. There is little argument to challenge the role of an RCT in this regard. When a subject is enrolled in an RCT investigating the therapeutic value of a medication for the treatment of a condition, it is often compared to a placebo, so as to best measure whatever benefit this new medication can have, independent of a possible placebo or contextual effect.1 There are many examples of RCTs performed for the testing of a medication being measured for its efficacy in treating a condition when compared to a placebo. However, when there is a known effective medication that can be used with which that comparison can be made, it may be difficult to justify the use of a placebo in that instance, and there are many examples of this circumstance in all medical specialties, including as referenced in these gynecologic examples.2, 3 The putative medications that can be used for such a comparison (instead of placebo), have themselves been compared with placebo in prior Investigational New Drug (IND) trials performed for Federal Drug Administration (FDA) approval.

It is fair to recognize that the ethical principle of nonmaleficence (“first, do no harm”) may be violated by the physicians involved in that RCT.4 Simply put, if the comparison being made in this sort of a study was between a standard medication and a newer medication (possibly being better), then that would certainly be acceptable. Many studies are not performed in that way, however. As a physician-scientist, duty-bound to provide standard-of-care medications to patients and also to see innovative medical treatment be properly tested in order to advance evidence-based medical science, a placebo-controlled investigation fails in this regard, especially for conditions with currently available therapies of proven medical benefit. To not provide available therapy to a patient presenting with a properly documented condition may be an example of harm to that patient.

According to a principle of Logic (Transitive Property of Equality), if A = B, and B = C, then A = C.5 While that tenet may refer to an objective mathematical concept, it may still be useful to apply to the circumstance being described, in that if a FDA-approved medication was objectively found to be efficacious for treating a particular condition in a placebo-controlled investigation, it can itself be used (rather than a placebo) in future studies. Of course, this logical principle may only apply for those investigations showing a medication found to be either more effective or noninferior when compared with that same FDA-approved medication. However, there would not need to have a placebo-controlled trial to find a new medication to be efficacious. Nonetheless, RCTs continue to be conducted in which a patient having a documented disturbing condition (e.g., endometriosis) is provided a placebo by a physician researcher (∼50 % of the time), rather than using a known-to-be therapeutic medication. It should be recognized that this action (i.e., denial of a proper medication to use in that circumstance) represents a violation of the ethical principle of nonmaleficence. This occurs regularly in RCTs. The pursuit of logically derived medical evidence is desirable, but it should not be done while abandoning the ethical principle of nonmaleficence.

Perhaps it is time to re-examine the standard conduct of the placebo controlled RCT, with regard to the role of Medical Ethics and Logic.

一些安慰剂对照随机对照试验的伦理问题。
众所周知,随机对照试验(RCT)是确立医学证据的最佳调查形式。在随机对照试验中,基本变量可以得到控制,偏差也可以降到最低。在测试药物的疗效和安全性时,通常会将其与盲法安慰剂进行比较。在这方面,几乎没有人质疑 RCT 的作用。当受试者被纳入一项研究药物治疗某种疾病的治疗价值的 RCT 时,通常会将该药物与安慰剂进行比较,以便最好地衡量这种新药所能带来的益处,而不受可能的安慰剂或环境效应的影响。然而,如果有一种已知的有效药物可以与之进行比较,那么在这种情况下使用安慰剂就很难自圆其说了,在所有医学专科中都有很多这种情况的例子,包括在这些妇科例子中提到的情况、3 可用于此类比较的假定药物(而非安慰剂)本身已在之前为获得联邦药品管理局(FDA)批准而进行的新药研究(IND)试验中与安慰剂进行过比较。4 简单地说,如果此类研究中的比较对象是一种标准药物和一种更新的药物(可能更好),那么这当然是可以接受的。然而,许多研究并不是这样进行的。作为一名医生兼科学家,我们有责任为患者提供标准治疗药物,也有责任看到创新医疗方法得到适当的测试,以推动循证医学科学的发展,但安慰剂对照研究在这方面是失败的,尤其是对于目前已有治疗方法且已被证实具有医疗益处的疾病。根据逻辑学原理(相等的传递属性),如果 A = B,B = C,那么 A = C。虽然该原则可能指的是一个客观的数学概念,但应用到目前描述的情况中可能仍然有用,因为如果在安慰剂对照研究中客观地发现一种美国食品及药物管理局批准的药物对治疗某种特定病症有疗效,那么它本身就可以在未来的研究中使用(而不是安慰剂)。当然,这一逻辑原则可能只适用于那些显示某种药物与 FDA 批准的同类药物相比更有效或无劣效的研究。但是,如果发现一种新药具有疗效,则不需要进行安慰剂对照试验。尽管如此,仍有研究人员继续进行 RCT 试验,由医生研究人员向患有有记录的令人不安的疾病(如子宫内膜异位症)的患者提供安慰剂(50% 的情况下),而不是使用已知的治疗药物。应该认识到,这种行为(即拒绝在这种情况下使用适当的药物)违反了 "非善意 "伦理原则。这种情况在 RCT 中经常出现。也许是时候重新审视安慰剂对照 RCT 的标准行为了,同时考虑到医学伦理和逻辑的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Evidence‐Based Medicine
Journal of Evidence‐Based Medicine MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL-
CiteScore
11.20
自引率
1.40%
发文量
42
期刊介绍: The Journal of Evidence-Based Medicine (EMB) is an esteemed international healthcare and medical decision-making journal, dedicated to publishing groundbreaking research outcomes in evidence-based decision-making, research, practice, and education. Serving as the official English-language journal of the Cochrane China Centre and West China Hospital of Sichuan University, we eagerly welcome editorials, commentaries, and systematic reviews encompassing various topics such as clinical trials, policy, drug and patient safety, education, and knowledge translation.
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