减轻生物仿制药使用和转换中的反安慰剂效应:系统综述。

IF 3.1 Q2 PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY
Pharmaceutical Medicine Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-11-29 DOI:10.1007/s40290-024-00541-y
Elif Car, Yannick Vandenplas, Teresa Barcina Lacosta, Steven Simoens, Isabelle Huys, Arnold G Vulto, Liese Barbier
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:在生物仿制药使用和转换的背景下,患者对生物仿制药的负面认知可能引发反安慰剂效应,其中与其药理作用无关的负面预期可能导致症状恶化,导致治疗获益减少或不良事件恶化。考虑到生物仿制药在降低医疗保健成本和扩大全球获得安全生物制剂方面的关键作用,必须制定和实施有效战略,以减轻可能发生的这种反安慰剂效应。目的:本系统文献综述的目的有两个:(i)回顾在生物类似药转换背景内外的临床实践中,为最大限度地减少反安慰剂效应而应用和/或测试的策略,以及(ii)就有效的缓解策略提出建议,以最大限度地减少生物类似药转换背景下反安慰剂效应的发生。方法:对截至2023年4月底的生物医学数据库PubMed和Embase进行筛选,搜索字符串包括以下搜索词“反安慰剂”、“生物类似药”、“缓解”、“策略”和“预防”以及相关同义词。搜索策略是通过纳入研究的滚雪球来补充的。研究的质量采用乔安娜布里格斯研究所系统评价和研究综合关键评价清单、叙述性评价文章评估量表和混合方法评价工具进行评估。结果:1617份经鉴定和筛选的记录中,60份符合纳入标准。其中,10项(17%)是在生物仿制药转换的背景下进行的,其中7项专门测试了减轻反安慰剂效应的策略。在生物仿制药转换背景之外进行的其余50项研究中,46项测试了缓解策略。在纳入的研究中,确定了13种不同的缓解策略,可在生物仿制药转换的背景下采用:(一)开放的非语言沟通,(二)积极框架,(三)共情沟通,(四)确认沟通,(五)共同决策,(六)自我肯定,(七)对患者和卫生保健专业人员进行反安慰剂效应教育,(八)对患者和卫生保健专业人员进行生物仿制药教育,(九)对卫生保健专业人员进行软技能培训,(十)个性化信息,(十一)辅助信息,(十二)多学科方法,(xiii)开关的组织。结论:本综述确定了一套经过测试的缓解反安慰剂效应的策略,这些策略可由卫生保健专业人员在生物仿制药转换的背景下应用,目的是减轻反安慰剂效应的发生。我们建议患者和卫生保健专业人员在转换之前、期间和之后实施缓解策略的组合。应该指出的是,鉴于迄今为止在生物仿制药转换背景下专门测试反安慰剂缓解策略的研究数量有限,尚不可能就每种缓解策略单独或组合的效应大小得出明确的结论。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Mitigating the Nocebo Effect in Biosimilar Use and Switching: A Systematic Review.

Background: In the context of biosimilar use and switching, a patient's negative perception of a biosimilar might trigger a nocebo effect, where negative expectations unrelated to its pharmacologic action may lead to worsened symptoms, resulting in less perceived therapeutic benefit or worsened adverse events. Considering the crucial role biosimilars have in reducing health care costs and expanding access to safe biologics globally, it is essential to develop and implement effective strategies to mitigate the possible occurrence of such nocebo effects.

Objective: The aim of this systematic literature review was two-fold: (i) to review strategies that have been applied and/or tested for minimising the nocebo effect in clinical practice, within and outside the context of biosimilar switching, and (ii) to propose recommendations on useful mitigation strategies to minimise the occurrence of the nocebo effect in the context of biosimilar switching.

Methods: Biomedical databases PubMed and Embase were screened up until the end of April 2023 with a search string consisting of the following search terms "nocebo", "biosimilar", "mitigation", "strategy", and "prevention" and related synonyms. The search strategy was supplemented by snowballing of the included studies. The quality of the studies was assessed using the Joanna Briggs Institute Critical Appraisal Checklist for Systematic Reviews and Research Syntheses, the Scale for the Assessment of Narrative Review Articles, and the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool.

Results: Of the 1617 identified and screened records, 60 met the inclusion criteria. Among these, 10 (17%) were conducted within the context of biosimilar switching, 7 of which specifically tested strategies to mitigate the nocebo effect. Among the remaining 50 studies conducted outside the biosimilar switching context, 46 tested mitigation strategies. Across the included studies, 13 distinct mitigation strategies were identified, which can be employed within the context of biosimilar switching: (i) open non-verbal communication, (ii) positive framing, (iii) empathic communication, (iv) validating communication, (v) shared decision making, (vi) self-affirmation, (vii) education of patients and health care professionals about the nocebo effect, (viii) education of patients and health care professionals about biosimilars, (ix) soft-skills training for health care professionals, (x) personalised information, (xi) supporting information, (xii) multidisciplinary approach, (xiii) organisation of the switch.

Conclusion: This review has identified a set of strategies that have been tested to mitigate the nocebo effect, which can be applied by health care professionals in the context of biosimilar switching with the aim of mitigating the occurrence of a nocebo effect. We recommend implementing a combination of mitigation strategies for patients and health care professionals to utilise before, during, and after a switch. It should be noted that given the limited number of studies specifically testing nocebo mitigation strategies within the biosimilar switching context to date, it is not yet possible to draw definite conclusions about the effect size of each mitigation strategy individually or in combination.

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来源期刊
Pharmaceutical Medicine
Pharmaceutical Medicine PHARMACOLOGY & PHARMACY-
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
4.00%
发文量
36
期刊介绍: Pharmaceutical Medicine is a specialist discipline concerned with medical aspects of the discovery, development, evaluation, registration, regulation, monitoring, marketing, distribution and pricing of medicines, drug-device and drug-diagnostic combinations. The Journal disseminates information to support the community of professionals working in these highly inter-related functions. Key areas include translational medicine, clinical trial design, pharmacovigilance, clinical toxicology, drug regulation, clinical pharmacology, biostatistics and pharmacoeconomics. The Journal includes:Overviews of contentious or emerging issues.Comprehensive narrative reviews that provide an authoritative source of information on topical issues.Systematic reviews that collate empirical evidence to answer a specific research question, using explicit, systematic methods as outlined by PRISMA statement.Original research articles reporting the results of well-designed studies with a strong link to wider areas of clinical research.Additional digital features (including animated abstracts, video abstracts, slide decks, audio slides, instructional videos, infographics, podcasts and animations) can be published with articles; these are designed to increase the visibility, readership and educational value of the journal’s content. In addition, articles published in Pharmaceutical Medicine may be accompanied by plain language summaries to assist readers who have some knowledge of, but not in-depth expertise in, the area to understand important medical advances.All manuscripts are subject to peer review by international experts. Letters to the Editor are welcomed and will be considered for publication.
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