Clinical Trials

Clinical Trials

Articles tagged with "Clinical Trials".

Antidepressants vs Placebo: Why the Gap Is Narrowing in Modern Trials

Tags: Antidepressant Efficacy, Placebo Effect, Clinical Trials, Drug Development

November 23, 2025

Why do modern antidepressants show smaller benefits over placebo?

Modern antidepressants show smaller benefits because clinical trials have changed - broader patient selection and different study designs have reduced the drug-placebo difference. Early trials with severely ill hospitalized patients showed larger effects. Key factors:

  • Broader patient selection - less severely ill patients included in modern trials
  • Changed study designs - regulatory and methodological changes affect results
  • Higher placebo response - placebo effects have increased over time
  • Different patient populations - early trials focused on more severely ill patients

A comprehensive overview published in World Psychiatry reveals that while early antidepressant trials with severely ill, hospitalized patients showed substantial drug-placebo differences, these robust differences have not held up in trials of the past couple of decades. The narrowing of the drug-placebo difference has been attributed to fundamental changes in clinical trial conduct, including broader diagnostic criteria and regulatory influences.

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The 1954 Salk Vaccine Trial: 1.8 Million Children as Polio Pioneers

Tags: Salk Vaccine, Clinical Trials, Polio, Medical History

November 22, 2025

How Did 1.8 Million Children Test the Salk Polio Vaccine in 1954?

The 1954 Salk polio vaccine field trial involved 1.8 million children across the United States and Canada, making it the largest medical trial in history. Led by epidemiologist Thomas Francis, the study tested Jonas Salk’s killed-virus vaccine against placebo, ultimately proving 80-90% effectiveness against paralytic polio and leading to the April 12, 1955 “V-Day” announcement that changed medical history.

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Does Rosuvastatin Prevent Heart Attacks? A Critical Review of the JUPITER Trial

Tags: Cardiovascular, Statins, CRP, Cholesterol, Clinical Trials

March 13, 2025

Dr. Kumar’s Take:

The JUPITER trial found that rosuvastatin significantly reduced heart attacks and strokes in individuals with elevated C-reactive protein (CRP - a marker of inflammation) but normal LDL cholesterol. However, the absolute risk reductions were modest, raising questions about the superiority of statins over lifestyle changes. Additionally, industry funding, conflicts of interest, and the early trial termination suggest a need for caution when interpreting results. One intriguing aspect is whether statins’ anti-inflammatory effects, rather than LDL lowering, contributed to the observed benefits.

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