AI Article Synopsis

  • The placebo response significantly influences treatment outcomes in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD), but research on its mediators is limited.
  • A study analyzed 88 participants from a placebo-controlled trial of cannabinoid treatment, finding that children's understanding of the treatment purpose correlated with positive placebo responses.
  • Interestingly, parental expectations and other factors like previous treatment experiences and patient-physician relationships did not affect the placebo response, suggesting that improving communication about treatment purpose could enhance clinical efficacy.

Article Abstract

The placebo response has a substantial impact on treatment outcome. However, data regarding mediators of the placebo response in children with autism spectrum disorder (ASD) are sparse. This retrospective study investigated possible mediators of the placebo response among participants of a placebo-controlled trial of cannabinoid treatment for behavioral problems in children with ASD (CBA trial, age 5-21 years). We used a specifically designed questionnaire to explore possible mediators of the placebo response in 88 participants of the CBA trial who received a placebo and had valid outcome scores. The parents of 67 participants completed the questionnaire. The placebo response was positively associated with the child's comprehension of the treatment purpose ( = 0.037). There was also a trend for participants who had a relative aggravation of symptoms before treatment onset to improve following placebo treatment ( = 0.053). No other domains, including parental expectations, previous positive experience with similar treatments (behavioral conditioning), parental locus of control, quality of the patient-physician relationships, and adherence to study medications were associated with placebo-response. This finding suggests that efforts to explain the treatment purpose to children with disabilities may enhance treatment efficacy in clinical practice and decrease differences in the placebo response between study arms. Contrary to our hypothesis, parental expectations regarding cannabinoid treatment were not associated with the placebo response.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10179251PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/jcm12093098DOI Listing

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