Psychiatric drugs are as effective as drugs used to treat many
physical health problems, according to
a major review
published in the February issue of the
British Journal of
Psychiatry.
Researchers from the Technische Universität
Munich in Germany looked at 33 meta-analyses of 16 different drugs
to treat psychiatric disorders (including schizophrenia, bipolar
disorder, major depressive disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder,
Alzheimer’s disorder and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder),
and 94 meta-analyses of 48 drugs to treat medical diseases
(including cardiovascular disease, hypertension, rheumatoid
arthritis, chronic asthma, type 2 diabetes and hepatitis C). A
meta-analysis is a “trial of trials” where all properly conducted
clinical trials of a particular treatment are studied to calculate
the true benefits of that intervention.
The research team, led by Professor Stefan Leucht, compared the
effect sizes of the different drugs. An effect size of 0.2 is
considered significant but low, and an effect size of 0.8 or above
is considered high.
Some general medicine drugs had very high
effect sizes, for example an effect size of 1.39 for proton pump
inhibitors to treat reflux oesophagitis (commonly known as acid
reflux), and an effect size of 2.27 of interferon to treat
hepatitis C. But many commonly used general medicine drugs, such as
statins and aspirin to prevent cardiovascular disease and stroke,
had small effect sizes (0.12 for aspirin for secondary prevention
of cardiovascular events and 0.15 for statins for cardiovascular
events).
Overall, the effect sizes for the psychiatric
drugs were found to be in the same range as the general medicine
drugs. For example, antidepressants used as ‘maintenance treatment’
to prevent patients having a relapse of major depressive disorder
had an effect size of 0.64, and antipsychotics used to prevent
relapse in schizophrenia had an effect size of 0.92.
Taking all diseases, the mean effect sizes
were only of medium size for both psychiatric and general medicine
drugs.
Professor Leucht said: “We believe our study
puts the effectiveness of psychiatric drugs and general medical
drugs into perspective. There is a deep mistrust of psychiatry,
fostered by reports suggesting that the efficacy of psychiatric
drugs is very small. Psychiatrists, patients, carers and the media
are often unsettled by these findings, and some may think that
psychiatric medication is not worth the bother.
“There are reasons why people should be
critical about psychiatric drug treatment, such as a lack of
diagnostic tests, commercial conflict of interest, unclear
mechanism of drug action and side-effects. But our study shows that
the psychiatric drugs were not generally inferior to those used in
other medical specialties, and the effectiveness of psychiatric
drugs is supported by randomised controlled trials.”
For further information, please
contact:
Liz Leicester
or Deborah Hart in the Communications
Department.
Telephone: 020 7235 2351 Extensions. 6298 or 6127
References:
Leucht S, Hierl S, Kissling W, Dold M and Davis JM. Putting the efficacy of psychiatric and general medicine medication into perspective: review of meta-analyses. British Journal of Psychiatry 2012; 200: 97-106