Researchers focused on what they dubbed the "nocebo" effect, or the
potential for people to complain of treatment-related side effects
when they think they're taking a specific drug but are actually
given a placebo, or dummy pill, without any active ingredients.
"It has been recognized for many years that when patients are warned
about possible adverse reactions to a drug, they are much more
likely to complain of these side effects than when they are unaware
of the possibility that such side effects might occur," said senior
study author Dr. Peter Sever, a researcher at Imperial College
London.
To test this "nocebo" effect, researchers first randomly assigned
about 10,000 trial participants in the UK, Ireland and Scandinavia
to take either a statin pill to lower cholesterol or a placebo, then
followed people for around three years to see how often they
complained of four known statin side effects: muscle aches, erectile
dysfunction, sleep problems and cognitive impairment.
Patients on statins and on placebo pills reported similar rates of
muscle aches and erectile dysfunction, the study found. People
taking placebo also reported higher rates of sleep difficulties than
patients on statins.
But when doctors offered statins to every patient, people who
knowingly took these pills reported higher rates of muscle aches
than people who opted not to take the drugs over about a two-year
period.
"This is not a unique phenomenon associated with statins," Sever
said by email. "It can occur with any drug."
All of the participants in the study were between 40 and 79 years
old and had high blood pressure as well as at least three other risk
factors for heart disease. At the start of the study, they were not
taking statins and had no history of heart attacks.
During the first phase of the study, from 1998 to 2002, patients
didn't know whether they were taking a statin or a placebo. For the
second part of the study, from 2002 to 2005, every person on a
statin knew they were taking a statin.
Each year, for example, 2 percent of patients on the placebo and
2.03 percent of statin users reported muscle aches, a difference too
small to rule out the possibility that it was due to chance.
But then during the second portion of the study, 1.26 percent of
statin users reported muscle aches compared with just 1 percent of
people not taking the pills. This difference was too big to be
random.
One limitation of the study is there were too few cases of cognitive
impairment to assess how patients' knowledge of statin use
influenced their reporting of this side effect.
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Even so, the study offers fresh insight into how an expectation of
side effects may make patients more likely to perceive these adverse
symptoms, said Dr. Ian Kronish, of the Center for Behavioral
Cardiovascular Health at Columbia University Medical Center in New
York.
"Given the blockbuster popularity of statins, it is not surprising
that patients hear a mixture of good and bad things about these
pills both from the press and their social networks," Kronish, who
wasn't involved in the study, said by email.
"Among these, it is common for patients to hear that statins can
cause muscle aches," Kronish added. "This can create an expectation
among certain patients that they will have this adverse side
effect."
It's unclear whether this expectation of harm might cause a
biological reaction that makes people feel aches in their muscles,
or if it might lead people to blame statins for pain that's really
caused by something else, Kronish said.
"Once patients knew they were taking the statin, they became
susceptible to this expectation bias," Kronish said.
The nocebo effect is not innocuous, Juan Pedro-Botet and Juan
Rubies-Prat of Hospital del Mar in Barcelona write in an
accompanying editorial. It can lead to patients failing to take
their medications regularly or discontinuing them entirely, which is
tied to higher rates of heart attacks, strokes and death, they note.
“Therefore, clinicians should be fully informed about potential
nocebo effects, including patients’ previous knowledge or
perceptions of statin therapy, and discuss the evidence for (side
effects) with patients,” they write.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2qTTLmh and http://bit.ly/2qouvB3 The Lancet,
online May 2, 2017.
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