Placebo-controlled trials and active-control trials in the evaluation of new treatments. Part 1: ethical and scientific issues
- PMID: 10975964
- DOI: 10.7326/0003-4819-133-6-200009190-00014
Placebo-controlled trials and active-control trials in the evaluation of new treatments. Part 1: ethical and scientific issues
Abstract
In recent years, several authors have argued that placebo-controlled trials are invariably unethical when known effective therapy is available for the condition being studied, regardless of the condition or the consequences of deferring treatment. Some have also disputed the value of placebo-controlled trials in such a setting, asserting that the comparison of new treatment with old treatment is sufficient to establish efficacy and is all that should be of interest. This article considers the ethical concerns about use of placebo controls and describes the limited ability of active-control equivalence (also known as noninferiority) trials to establish efficacy of new therapies in many medical contexts. The authors conclude that placebo-controlled trials are not uniformly unethical when known effective therapies are available; rather, their acceptability is determined by whether the patient will be harmed by deferral of therapy. If patients are not harmed, such trials can ethically be carried out. Furthermore, active-control trials, although valuable, informative, and appropriate in many circumstances, often cannot provide reliable evidence of the effectiveness of a new therapy.
Comment in
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Are placebo-controlled clinical trials ethical or needed when alternative treatment exists?Ann Intern Med. 2000 Sep 19;133(6):474-5. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-133-6-200009190-00017. Ann Intern Med. 2000. PMID: 10975967 No abstract available.
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Placebo-controlled trials.Ann Intern Med. 2001 Jul 3;135(1):62-4. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-135-1-200107030-00022. Ann Intern Med. 2001. PMID: 11434740 No abstract available.
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