The importance of context (placebo effects) in conservative interventions for musculoskeletal pain: A systematic review and meta‐analysis of randomized controlled trials

Author:

Saueressig Tobias1ORCID,Owen Patrick J.2ORCID,Pedder Hugo3ORCID,Tagliaferri Scott2ORCID,Kaczorowski Svenja4ORCID,Altrichter Adina4,Richard Antonia4,Miller Clint T.2ORCID,Donath Lars5ORCID,Belavy Daniel L.4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Physio Meets Science GmbH Leimen Germany

2. School of Exercise and Nutrition Sciences, Institute for Physical Activity and Nutrition (IPAN) Deakin University Geelong Victoria Australia

3. Population Health Sciences, Bristol Medical School University of Bristol Bristol UK

4. Department of Applied Health Sciences, Division of Physiotherapy Hochschule für Gesundheit (University of Applied Sciences) Bochum Germany

5. Department of Intervention Research in Exercise Training German Sport University Cologne Cologne Germany

Abstract

AbstractBackground and ObjectiveContextual effects (e.g. patient expectations) may play a role in treatment effectiveness. This study aimed to estimate the magnitude of contextual effects for conservative, non‐pharmacological interventions for musculoskeletal pain conditions. A systematic review and meta‐analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that compared placebo conservative non‐pharmacological interventions to no treatment for musculoskeletal pain. The outcomes assessed included pain intensity, physical functioning, health‐related quality of life, global rating of change, depression, anxiety and sleep at immediate, short‐, medium‐ and/or long‐term follow‐up.Databases and Data TreatmentMEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, Web of Science Core Collection, CENTRAL and SPORTDiscus were searched from inception to September 2021. Trial registry searches, backward and forward citation tracking and searches for prior systematic reviews were completed. The Cochrane risk of bias 2 tool was implemented.ResultsThe study included 64 RCTs (N = 4314) out of 8898 records. For pain intensity, a mean difference of (MD: −5.32, 95% confidence interval (CI): −7.20, −3.44, N = 57 studies with 74 outcomes, GRADE: very low) was estimated for placebo interventions. A small effect in favour of the placebo interventions for physical function was estimated (SMD: −0.22, 95% CI: −0.35, −0.09; N = 37 with 48 outcomes, GRADE: very low). Similar results were found for a broad range of patient‐reported outcomes. Meta‐regression analyses did not explain heterogeneity among analyses.ConclusionThe study found that the contextual effect of non‐pharmacological conservative interventions for musculoskeletal conditions is likely to be small. However, given the known effect sizes of recommended evidence‐based treatments for musculoskeletal conditions, it may still contribute an important component.SignificanceContextual effects of non‐pharmacological conservative interventions for musculoskeletal conditions are likely to be small for a broad range of patient‐reported outcomes (pain intensity, physical function, quality of life, global rating of change and depression). Contextual effects are unlikely, in isolation, to offer much clinical care. But these factors do have relevance in an overall treatment context as they provide almost 30% of the minimally clinically important difference.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine

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