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Flying under the radar

Placebo. As a pharmaceutical research tool it’s dismissed as nothing but a sugar pill. What could be more innocuous or benign? Even the sound of the word is comforting somehow. In fact, it comes from the Latin word meaning “I shall please.” Everything about the word is guileless.

Or so I thought. If you’re like me, you’ll be shocked – actually more like flabbergasted – to find out that drug research trials bring a whole new meaning to the old Latin idea of “I shall please.”Take two SweetTarts and call me in the morning

There was a time long ago when doctors would prescribe phony medication – sugar pills – to their patients who they regarded as hypochondriacs. They called the pills “placebo” and when the patients reported positive results the idea of the placebo effect was born.

These days, placebo pills are used in clinical trials to measure the true effect of a drug or supplement. They are thought to be made of inert substances designed to have no effect. That’s the idea, anyway. But consider this: there’s no such thing really as an inert substance. For instance, placebo pills are still called sugar pills. Is sugar inert? Far from it, of course. If you take a sugar pill, your body will have a reaction, especially if you happen to have an insulin disorder. But if you’re given that same pill as part of a drug research trial, your reaction becomes a factor in the research.

That may seem like nothing (what real difference could a little boost of sugar make?) but sugar and other supposedly inactive ingredients are not the problem. Not in the least.

Not exactly what we thought it was

 

When a pharmaceutical company tests its products, where do you suppose they get placebo pills? Do they place an order with a placebo pill manufacturer? Or does Nestle’s candy company run a little side business to supply researchers with sugar pills?

Would it surprise you to learn that drug companies make their own placebo pills for research purposes? And that THEY choose the ingredients? And sometimes they purposely put ingredients into the placebos that match those in the drug and will affect the outcome of the trial. And they are not required to disclose the ingredients they use.

Does that sound “inert” or “inactive” to you? Suddenly the idea of a “sugar pill” doesn’t seem so innocent anymore.

Before conducting human trials for drugs, pharmaceutical companies are often fully aware of many of the side effects of the products they’re testing. So, for instance, if a drug is known to cause dizziness and hypertension, the drug company running the test wants the placebo to have the same side effects. And they have an explanation for this. They say the placebo should mimic the drug being tested so that the control group of the experiment will have side effects similar to the placebo group. Without that, they claim, the results of a blind study would be compromised.

There are plenty of gray areas to debate in that logic, but for the moment let’s focus on the idea of what they call an “active placebo,” designed to mimic the side effects of a tested drug. And with that in mind let’s look at an advertising campaign for the allergy medication called Claritin. In all their TV spots, when it comes to the moment to list the side effects, the voice-over says, “The most common side effects with Claritin, including headache, drowsiness, fatigue and dry mouth, occurred about as often as they did with a sugar pill.”

A sugar pill? Really? Just what kind of “sugar pill” were they using that caused headache, drowsiness, fatigue and dry mouth? Sounds to me like a sugar pill with a little something added. But they want us to believe that their powerful medication will produce side effects no more serious than what you’d get with a little dab of sugar.

 

The cat is still in the bag
I have to thank HSI Panelist Dr. Allan Spreen, MD, who first tipped me off about the little-known world of placebos. Since then, we’ve also spoken with Dr. Beatrice Golomb, MD, PhD, an assistant professor of medicine at the University of California, San Diego, who has been actively fighting the research establishment’s claim that placebos are inactive substances. Dr. Golomb wants scientists to provide a list of placebo ingredients so trial results can be properly evaluated.

To level the playing field, Dr. Golomb suggests that drug companies start divulging all placebo ingredients. She also recommends that a standardized set of placebos be developed that would have known and predictable side effects. This would go a long way toward eliminating the pharmaceutical industry’s cynical manipulation of test data.

As you might suspect, the drug companies are not very receptive to her idea of letting go of this aspect of product testing that they have full control over.

Meanwhile, what about physicians and researchers who work independently from the pharmaceutical giants – do they know the truth about placebos supplied by drug companies? Right now it’s hard to tell just how widespread this knowledge is. According to the National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine at the National Institutes of Health (NIH), the placebo effect is defined as “desirable physiological or psychological effects attributable to the use of inert medications.” From that statement it would appear that the NIH either believes that placebos are genuinely inactive, or they’re not saying.

Or maybe they’re just feeling drowsy, dizzy, irritable and nauseous from a sugar pill someone gave them.


To Your Good Health,

Jenny Thompson
Health Sciences Institute

 

 

Copyright 1997-2002 by Institute of Health Sciences, L.L.C.

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