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Placebo effect characteristics observed in a single, international, longitudinal study in Huntington's disease

✍ Scribed by Esther Cubo; Miguel González; Inés del Puerto; Justo Garcia de Yébenes; Olga Fernández Arconada; José María Trejo Gabriel y Galán; on behalf of the European Huntington's Disease Initiative Study Group


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2011
Tongue
English
Weight
844 KB
Volume
27
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-3185

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Background:

Classically, clinical trials are based on the placebo‐control design. Our aim was to analyze the placebo effect in Huntington's disease.

Methods:

Placebo data were obtained from an international, longitudinal, placebo‐controlled trial for Huntington's disease (European Huntington's Disease Initiative Study Group). One‐hundred and eighty patients were evaluated using the Unified Huntington Disease Rating Scale over 36 months. A placebo effect was defined as an improvement of at least 50% over baseline scores in the Unified Huntington Disease Rating Scale, and clinically relevant when at least 10% of the population met it.

Results:

Only behavior showed a significant placebo effect, and the proportion of the patients with placebo effect ranged from 16% (first visit) to 41% (last visit). Nondepressed patients with better functional status were most likely to be placebo‐responders over time.

Conclusions:

In Huntington's disease, behavior seems to be more vulnerable to placebo than overall motor function, cognition, and function © 2011 Movement Disorder Society


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