Of course using placebos in clinical trials of efficacy is designed to exclude placebo effects. In the same way in discontinuation trials, having a control group which continues antidepressant is designed to control for nocebo effects. How effective these control methods are in preventing placebo/nocebo effects depends on how well blinded the participants are from knowing to which group they have been allocated. There is considerable evidence that people are not completely blinded in antidepressant efficacy trials (see eg. previous post). As far as I know, there has been no attempt to measure unblinding in an antidepressant withdrawal study. If unblinding occurs in antidepressant efficacy studies, I think it is also likely to occur in antidepressant withdrawal studies. As the blind can be broken in antidepressant efficacy trials, it cannot be said that expectancy effects have been eliminated. So my case is that it cannot be said that expectancy effects have been eliminated from antidepressant discontinuation RCTs, because I think there is also likely to be significant unblinding in these withdrawal studies as well.
Habituation to antidepressants is to be expected (see eg. previous post). It helps to explain why people take them for such long periods of time. Psychological mechanisms causing antidepressant withdrawal symptoms should not be dismissed. I have considerable doubts about antidepressants being more than placebo in their antidepressant effect (see eg. previous post). Those that argue that antidepressants cause organic physical dependence tend to say that the sense that antidepressants have stopped working, which can occur, sometimes colloquially called the "poop-out" effect, is evidence that there is tolerance with antidepressants. As I don't think antidepressants are "effective" in the sense of being more than placebo, this explanation doesn't make sense to me. I am at least consistent in my scepticism about the effects of antidepressants, which for their apparent benefit I put down to placebo, and for their withdrawal effects I am inclined to think could be due to nocebo. To emphasise again, this does not mean I am saying any experienced benefit for antidepressants is not real. Nor am I saying that the experience of antidepressant withdrawal is unreal. What brought me into the area of antidepressant withdrawal years ago was my critique of mainstream psychiatry for denying the reality of such symptoms. I just don't think that there's necessarily been much progress since in understanding the mechanisms of such withdrawal effects, and it worries me that psychological mechanisms seem to be being ignored, even within the Critical Psychiatry Network (see previous post).
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