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The design of analgesic clinical trials invariably involves a comparison between placebo and active study medication. An assumption is made that treatment effects can be approximated by subtracting the response to placebo from that attained with the use of active study medication. However, the psychoactivity of cannabinoids may unmask their presence and lead to an expectation and/or conditioning of pain relief. For example, study participants biased toward the belief that cannabis is beneficial for their condition might be more inclined to report positive effects if they were to accurately identify the active treatment because of its psychoactivity. This may lead to incorrect assumptions regarding the efficacy of a cannabinoid. Methodologies designed to counteract unmasking need to be implemented in the design phase of a study. During the clinical trial, it is also important to query participants as to which treatment they believe they have received. Blinding can be considered to be preserved when the accuracy of treatment guesses is not considerably different than random guessing, which is estimated to be correct 50% of the time. After a study has been completed, the use of statistical methodologies such as regression and mediation analysis are worthy of consideration to see whether psychoactive effects biased the results.
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Wilsey et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a15d9a5caf7e3ea0ee3c6b8 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1089/can.2016.0016
Barth Wilsey
University of California, San Diego
Reena Deutsch
University of California, San Diego
Thomas D. Marcotte
University of California, San Diego
Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research
University of California, San Diego
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