This is an archived news article. For the latest UConn News, click here.

University of Connecticut

Antidepressant drugs effective mainly as a placebo effect of treatment (Released: 8/13/98)


by Renu Aldrich, Office of University Communications.


Storrs , Conn. -- The effectiveness of antidepressants is mainly in the placebo effect of treatment, not in the medication itself, according to a new study by a University of Connecticut psychologist.

Seventy-five percent of the response to medication for depression was a result of the patient being in treatment, while at the most 25 percent of the response was a true drug affect, asserts the study by UConn psychologist Irving Kirsch and former UConn graduate student Guy Sapirstein.

"This means that for a typical patient, 75 percent of the benefit obtained from the active drug would also have been obtained from an inactive placebo," Kirsch says. AWhether the remaining 25 percent of the drug response is a true effect of the drug or a psychologically triggered response to side effects alone cannot yet be determined."

More placebos have been administered to research participants than any single experimental drug. "However, although almost everyone controls for placebo effects, almost no one evaluates them. With this in mind, we set about the task of evaluating the magnitude of the placebo response to antidepressant medication," he says.

The study analyzed the possibility that antidepressants act as active placebos, which produce side effects but do not cause any actual drug effect on the problem.

"Data from other studies indicate that most participants in studies of antidepressant medication are able to deduce whether they have been assigned to the drug condition or the placebo condition," according to the study.

"So if a patient takes a pill that causes side effects, he or she feels better because they believe they have been given an actual antidepressant and that the pill must be working," Kirsch says. "The study suggests that antidepressants might function as active placebos, in which the side effects amplify the placebo effect by convincing patients of that they are receiving a potent drug."

The study, Listening to Prozac but Hearing Placebo: A Meta-Analysis of Antidepressant Medication, was published in the electronic journal Prevention & Treatment, http://journals.apa.org/prevention/, a publication of the American Psychological Association.

Kirsch and Sapirstein analyzed the changes in 2,318 patients whose primary diagnosis was depression and who had been randomly assigned to either antidepressant medication or placebo in 19 double-blind clinical trials. Sapirstein, a graduate student when they conducted the study, is now a psychologist at Westwood Lodge Hospital in Needham, Mass.

The study was a meta-analysis, a way of mathematically combining results from different studies with different measures. This analysis included 19 studies in which 858 participants received placebos and 1,460 participants received medication. Medication included antidepressants such as Prozac and imipramine and potential active placebos such as lithium.