Nicolas Badre Profile picture
Oct 23, 2024 15 tweets 5 min read Read on X
STAR*D a 🧵

If you don’t read the thread - super short: they claimed that antidepressants as used in common practice worked 67%, when the result actually was 35%. Image
Problem #1

#1 The biggest problem, the extra 931. We were told that STAR*D was about 4,041 patients with depression when in reality 931 (99+508+324) did not score high enough on a depression scale (HSRD of less than 14), so it should have been 3,110 patients. Image
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Imagine a trial of disease X (e.g. cancer), where patients are recruited from all over the country. They are given medications Z (e.g. chemotherapy) as part of the trial. What if we later found out that 931 (almost ¼) of those 4,041 recruited did not have the disorder?
#2 the missing 370. As you can see in this picture of Step 1, it suggests that only 3,671 patients received citalopram. This is misleading, in reality all 4,041 received a prescription of citalopram and should have been included in the results for intent-to-treat analysis. Image
#3 HAM-D v QIDS. The study reported outcomes using the QIDS rather than HSRD. Fundamentally, the scales are equivalent. However, they should have made it much clearer that the QIDS was not blinded. So they inappropriately used a non-blinded QIDS when a blinded HSRD was available.Image
#4 The definition of healed in STAR*D is less than ideal. A patient denies depression for just 1 visit, it is considered a remission. Sadly, this is common in depression trials. With ketamine, you can even be considered in remission for denying depression for just a few hours. Image
#5 The STAR*D trial also looked at folks who recovered and how long they stayed well. The results were less than ideal. Only 108 (out of 4,041) did not relapse. To be fair to the author, this was included in the paper (though not well outlined or explained). Image
#6 “Theoretical” results. The conclusion in the abstract and in the conclusion has an interesting word change - “theoretical.” When you read the paper, you may not realize its significance, but it meant that individuals who dropped out were assumed to have also been able to obtain remission (the opposite of intent-to-treat analysis). Without this statistical voodoo (not including the other problems) the remission rate would have been 51%.Image
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#7 Pharma. The disclosure as described by the authors was 850 words (that is 850 words more than my disclosures). Image
When you put all those problems together you get - they claimed that antidepressants as used in common practice worked 67%, when the result actually was 35%. Image
A few more thoughts on STAR*D. This is mostly a critic of the main paper of STAR*D: Rush et al. (2006). Acute and longer-term outcomes in depressed outpatients requiring one or several treatment steps: a STAR* D report. American Journal of Psychiatry
There are many others paper written about STAR*D, which do not have those mistakes. Sometimes people believe that the study should be retracted, when it would be more appropriate to say that only papers that wrongly describe the study should be.
This thread is based on the important work of Piggott et al. (2023) A reanalysis of the STAR* D study’s patient-level data with fidelity to the original research protocol. BMJ open
Read both Rush et al and Piggott et al then make your own conclusions. This is important. STAR*D is highly cited and only getting more cited. Image
Also consider reading my article on the story.

psychiatrictimes.com/view/star-d-it…

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More from @BadreNicolas

Mar 6
A reminder of some of the pharma fines in psychiatry:
• $2.2B J&J Risperdal, antipsychotic, 2013
• $3B GSK Paxil, Wellbutrin, antidepressants 2012
• $500M AstraZeneca Seroquel, antipsychotic, 2010
• $1.4B Eli Lilly Zyprexa, antipsychotic, 2010
• $2.3B Pfizer Geodon, antipsychotic 2009

Links and details below 1/6
$2.2B Johnson & Johnson for Risperdal, antipsychotic, 2013

Risperdal: inappropriately promoted for “anxiety, agitation, depression, hostility and confusion” in dementia as well as “downdplayed” risks, as well as inappropriately promoted in “children” 2/6

justice.gov/archives/opa/p…
$3B GlaxoSmithKline for Paxil and Wellbutrin, antidepressants 2012

Paxil: unlawful promotion for use in minors, failure to reveal unsuccesful trials, payments to doctors

Wellbutrin: inappropriately promoted for “weight loss, the treatment of sexual dysfunction, substance addictions and Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder”, payments to doctors
3/6
justice.gov/archives/opa/p…
Read 6 tweets
Feb 4
Are we wrong about addiction? Should treatment guidelines only be based on the minority who go to rehab and have high rates of relapse, or the larger group who use drugs but don't become addicted?

Maybe we are making a mistake by conflating the two groups./1
In 1974, Robins stated, "We can no longer justify applying policies to every narcotics user that are based only on information about addicts who present to treatment facilities and show an inability to terminate their addiction." /2 Image
She studied the many veterans returning with opioid addiction. It was a major concern then. There was a fear that many veterans returned from Vietnam addicted to heroin, leading to the creation of the White House Special Action Office for Drug Abuse Prevention (SAODAP). /3
Read 10 tweets
Dec 14, 2024
Why did I write an article that required the response of a lobbying group, past APA presidents, and DSM chair?

“The involuntary use of long-term antipsychotic treatment for relapse prevention for an asymptomatic patient with severe mental illness is rarely justifiable.” 1/
I have the perspective that psychiatry is anchored on truth. I (the psychiatrist) am honest with you; in return, you trust me with your most intimate thoughts. This is an great responsibility. To live up to this task, psychiatrists must be as fair as possible to the evidence. 2/
This is especially important if we are going to be entrusted with the highest possible responsibility of removing civil rights from individuals who did not commit a crime. 3/
Read 14 tweets
Nov 14, 2024
The US/UK Diagnostic Project. Every psychiatrist should know about this: a study that changed the course of psychiatry and showed its limits. 🧵

Summary: 1971, 600 psychiatrists reviewed 8 interviews of patients. They came to very different conclusions -> It led to the checklists in the DSM. 1/
If I do a study of schizophrenia in the US and you do a study of schizophrenia in the UK. Can we rely on each other’s work?

Well, we can't if schizophrenia doesn't mean the same thing to you and to me. That is the premise of the US/UK diagnostic project. 2/10
They took 8 interviews of patients and asked 600 psychiatrists from the US & UK (mostly New York and London) to assess the patients on 89 scales, and for the presence of 116 terms. But most importantly, they decided to ask the psychiatrists about the diagnoses. 3/10
Read 10 tweets

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