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When a clinical trial setting involves use of a placebo, patients' expectation of a negative outcome caused by the potential for receiving the placebo is referred to as the “lessebo effect.” To study this effect, researchers conducted a meta-analysis of double-blind, randomized, controlled trials of dopamine agonists for Parkinson disease (PD). They compared changes on the motor section of the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale (mUPDRS) between trials with active-treatment control arms and those with placebo control arms.
A total of 28 study arms (3277 patients) used an active comparator, and 42 study arms (4554 patients) used placebo controls. The mean mUPDRS score change from baseline to treatment end was 1.6 units greater in the act…