BMC Complement Altern Med. 2016; 16: 125.
Published online 2016 May 4. doi: 10.1186/s12906-016-1104-2
PMCID: PMC4855343
Lamiae Grimaldi-Bensouda, Lucien Abenhaim, Jacques Massol, Didier Guillemot, Bernard Avouac, Gerard Duru, France Lert, Anne-Marie Magnier, Michel Rossignol, Frederic Rouillon, Bernard Begaud, and for the EPI3-LA-SER group
LA-SER, 10 place de Catalogne, 75014 Paris, France
Conservatoire national des arts et métiers (CNAM), 292 Rue Saint-Martin, 75003 Paris, France
LA-SER Europe Limited, 66 Chiltern St, London, W1U 4JT UK
Department of Epidemiology, London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, Keppel St, Bloomsbury London, WC1E 7HT UK
Faculty of Medicine, University of Franche Comté, 9 Rue Ambroise Paré, 25000 Besançon, France
Pasteur Institute, 28 rue du Docteur Roux, 75015 Paris, France
University of Paris-île-de-France-Ouest, 9 boulevard d’Alembert 78280, Guyancourt, France
Cyklad group, 16 Rue André Le Nôtre, 69140 Rillieux-la-Pape, France
INSERM
U1018, Centre for Epidemiology and Population Health, Hôpital Paul
Brousse, Bât 15/16, 16 Avenue Paul Vaillant Couturier, 94807 Villejuif,
France
Faculty of Medicine, University Pierre and Marie Curie, 4 Place Jussieu, 75005 Paris, France
Department
of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Occupational Health, McGill
University, Purvis Hall, 1020 Pine Avenue West, Montreal, QC H3A 1A2
Canada
Sainte-Anne Hospital, University of Paris V René Descartes, 100 rue de la Santé, 75674 Paris, France
INSERM U657, University Victor Segalen Bordeaux 2, 146 rue Léo Saignat, 33076 Bordeaux, France
Lamiae Grimaldi-Bensouda, Phone: +33 155 425 300, Fax: +33 155 425 301, Email: moc.res-al@idlamirG.eaimaL.
Corresponding author.
Abstract
Background
The
purpose of the study was to compare utilization of conventional
psychotropic drugs among patients seeking care for anxiety and
depression disorders (ADDs) from general practitioners (GPs) who
strictly prescribe conventional medicines (GP-CM), regularly prescribe
homeopathy in a mixed practice (GP-Mx), or are certified homeopathic GPs
(GP-Ho).
Methods
This
was one of three epidemiological cohort studies (EPI3) on general
practice in France, which included GPs and their patients consulting for
ADDs (scoring 9 or more in the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale,
HADS). Information on all medication utilization was obtained by a
standardised telephone interview at inclusion, 1, 3 and 12 months.
Results
Of
1562 eligible patients consulting for ADDs, 710 (45.5 %) agreed to
participate. Adjusted multivariate analyses showed that GP-Ho and GP-Mx
patients were less likely to use psychotropic drugs over 12 months, with
Odds ratio (OR) = 0.29; 95 % confidence interval (CI): 0.19 to 0.44,
and OR = 0.62; 95 % CI: 0.41 to 0.94 respectively, compared to GP-CM
patients. The rate of clinical improvement (HADS <9) was marginally
superior for the GP-Ho group as compared to the GP-CM group (OR = 1.70;
95 % CI: 1.00 to 2.87), but not for the GP-Mx group (OR = 1.49; 95 % CI:
0.89 to 2.50).
Conclusions
Patients
with ADD, who chose to consult GPs prescribing homeopathy reported less
use of psychotropic drugs, and were marginally more likely to
experience clinical improvement, than patients managed with conventional
care. Results may reflect differences in physicians’ management and
patients’ preferences as well as statistical regression to the mean.
Keywords: Anxiety, Depression, Homeopathy, Primary care
Background
Anxiety
and depressive disorders (ADDs) are highly prevalent worldwide and
represent a leading reason for consultation in primary care [1, 2]. Although systematic reviews and guidelines [3, 4]
recognise the efficacy of antidepressant and psychotropic drugs for
specific ADDs, heterogenity in the diagnostic approach of these patients
in primary care is partly responsible for the non-optimal utilization
of these drugs, particularly in mild and moderate cases [5]. The prevalence of ADDs in homeopathic care also ranks high, only surpassed by low-back pain [6].
Patients who seek homeopathic care differ from those preferring
conventional medicine, but the diagnostic make-up of their consultations
has been described as similar [7].
Evidence summarized in systematic reviews conducted to assess the
benefit of homeopathy in ADDs is too limited to sufficiently draw firm
conclusions regarding the efficacy or effectiveness of homeopathy in
this indication [8–11].
However, its potential to reduce psychotropic drug utilization in ADD
patients who opt for this type of care has been identified with minimal
adverse effects, and potential economic impacts on healthcare resources [12, 13].
In France, homeopathy is practiced exclusively by physicians and is
partly reimbursed by National Health Insurance. Physicians who prescribe
homeopathy are either occasional prescribers or have completed a
certification in homeopathic medicine accessible through private
organisations (see, eg, www.cedh.org/).
This
1-year, population-based cohort study compared patients’s real-life
utilization of conventional psychotropic drugs and clinical progression
of ADDs between those seeking care from general practitioners (GPs) who
rarely prescribe homeopathy (strict prescribers of conventional
medicines) (GP-CM), and those seeing regular prescribers of homeopathy
within a mixed practice (GP-Mx) or certified homeopathic GPs (GP-Ho).
Methods
Study design and selection of study subjects
This
cohort study was conducted in France between 2007 and 2008 within the
nationwide EPI3 survey of primary care practice in a representative
sample of GPs and their patients [1].
The EPI3 survey included three epidemiological follow-up cohort studies
(hence the name EPIdemiologic study – three cohorts) of common reasons
for consultation in primary care, one of which focused on patients with
ADDs (the two others being musculoskeletal disorders and respiratory
infections). The EPI3 survey was an observational study where no
instructions were given to participating physicians or patients in order
to prevent interference in usual clinical practice. The sample was
drawn using a two-stage sampling process. First, a random sample of GPs
was drawn from the French National Directory of Physicians in primary
care. Sampling of GPs was stratified according to their declaration of
prescribing preferences, obtained by telephone at the time of
recruitment and categorized into three groups: strict prescribers of
conventional medicine (GP-CM) who declared they never or rarely used
homeopathy; regular prescribers of homeopathy in a mixed practice
(GP-Mx); and certified homeopathic GPs (GP-Ho). This classification of
GPs by type of management served as the basis for comparing their
patients. As GPs in the three groups were free to prescribe conventional
and/or homeopathic drugs, this study did not compare patients by the
type of prescription issued but only by the type of physician
(prescribing preferences) they have chosen to consult. The second-stage
sampling consisted of a 1-day survey of all patients attending the
medical practice of each participating GP during which a trained
research assistant surveyed all patients in the waiting room. For this
cohort study, consenting adult patients consulting for all types of
anxiety and depression symptoms were invited to a baseline telephone
interview within 72 h of recruitment, which included the French
adaptation of the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS)
questionnaire [14, 15].
The HADS is composed of two sub-scales, one for anxiety and one for
depression. The subscales were only used for describing the study
population. All other analyses used the combined HADS anxiety and
depression scores. Patients scoring nine or more in the HADS
questionnaire were then invited to follow-up interviews at 1, 3 and
12 months. Diagnoses of anxiety and depression symptoms by GPs were
based on the GPs’ own clinical judgement, with no attempt at
standardization or external validation. This strategy was aimed at being
representative of all patients consulting for ADD symptoms who were the
most likely to receive a prescription for a psychotropic drug in
real-life primary care.
Information collected
At
inclusion, GPs completed a medical questionnaire for each patient
surveyed, including the main reason for consultation and up to five
other diagnoses (co-morbidities), and all drugs prescribed that day.
Diagnoses were coded by a trained archivist using the ninth revision of
the International Classification of Diseases. All consenting patients
completed a self-administered questionnaire at inclusion (waiting room),
collecting information on lifestyle, occupation, hospitalization
history, number of GP consultations in the past year, and the
health-related quality of life Short Form-12 (SF-12) [16].
Follow-up telephone interviews included the HADS and spanned the
patient’s history since the previous interview regarding drug
utilization (conventional and homeopathy) and injuries (resulting from a
fall, motor vehicle collision, sport, or occupation). Moreover, the
12-month questionnaire evaluated lifetime history of suicide attempts,
specifying any such occurrence since entry into the cohort. Drug
utilization, whether prescribed or obtained over the counter or from the
family pharmacy, was assessed using a standardized method known as
Progressive Assisted Backward Active Recall (PABAR), previously
validated against medical prescriptions [17, 18],
and drugs were automatically recorded using the anatomical therapeutic
chemical classification index (ATC), 2009 revision. For patients
participating in this ADD cohort study, particular emphasis was put on
psychotropic and homeopathic drugs commonly used in ADDs by specifically
asking patients if they had taken any drug from a list of 36 products
that was read to them after they had spontaneously reported medication
taken in that period.
Statistical analysis
Differences
at baseline between GP-CM, GP-Mx and GP-Ho groups were assessed using
multivariate logistic regression analyses. A propensity score was
computed for each participant in the study on their probability of
belonging to either GP-Mx or GP-Ho groups compared to the GP-CM group,
according to all variables listed in Table 1.
The score was used to adjust for differences between the groups in all
subsequent analyses. Given the imbalance between the groups for severity
of ADD at baseline, analyses were stratified in two groups using the
HADS score from 9 to 11 and 12 and above [19].
Baseline characteristics of patients with anxiety and depressive disorders (ADDs) by type of medical practicea (N = 710)
At
each follow-up, a patient was declared to have clinically improved if
the HADS score fell below the value of nine. Consumption of psychotropic
drugs was defined at each interview interval as the proportion of
patients declaring at least one utilization, since the previous
interview, of drugs belonging to the ATC classes N05B (anxiolytics),
N05C (hypnotics and sedatives) and N06A (antidepressants). ADD’s
clinical improvement at the 12-month follow-up, utilization of
psychotropics and occurrence of traumatic events (any during the
12-month follow-up) were compared across the three groups using the
GP-CM group as the reference in logistic regression adjusted for
baseline characteristics (propensity score) and stratified for the
severity of the ADD at baseline. Clustering effects resulting from
recruiting several patients consulting the same GP, and autocorrelation
between responses to the four consecutive interviews, were controlled
for using Generalized Estimating Equations (GEE) in the multivariate
models. The Odds ratios produced (and their 95 % confidence interval
(CI)) are then interpreted as the differences in the likelihood of
clinical improvement and use of psychotropic drugs in the groups GP-Mx
and GP-H0 compared to the group GP-CM. All analyses were performed using
SAS version 9.1 (SAS Institute, Inc., Cary, North Carolina, USA).
Results
Study population
The
general EPI3 health survey included 825 GPs and 8559 patients. Among
the patients, 1562 adults fulfilled the specific inclusion criteria
established for the ADD cohort and 710 (45.5 %) who scored nine or
higher on the HADS agreed to participate and responded to at least one
follow-up interview, of which 660 were diagnosed by the physician with
an anxiety disorder and 467 with a depressive disorder (not mutually
exclusive). Participants were slightly more often females (79.7 %) than
were non-participants (72.6 %), but the two groups were very similar
otherwise (Table 1).
Compared to the GP-CM group, patients who consulted a GP-Ho were more
often non-smoking females with a higher level of education and a lower
body mass index (BMI); differences that were statistically significant
after taking into account all other factors (Table 1).
In addition, GP-Ho participants were less likely to report the
attending GP as their regular physician (47.1 %) compared to GP-CM
(84.5 %). Overall, no significant difference was observed between
patients of the GP-Mx and GP-CM groups.
Clinical characteristics at baseline
Compared
to the patients in the GP-CM group, those consulting a GP-Ho were less
likely to have a HADS score equal to or above 12 (52.3 % versus 57.8 %,
respectively), to have a history of suicide attempts (14.2 % versus
23.0 %, respectively), another ADD (53.6 % versus 60.3 %, respectively)
or primary insomnia (34.3 % versus 40.4 %, respectively), all
differences being statistically significant (Table 2).
Patients in the GP-Ho group also had a lower number of co-morbidities,
and fewer visits to a GP and hospitalizations in the previous year,
compared to the GP-CM group. The profile of GP-Mx patients was similar
to that of GP-CM patients, except for history of suicide attempt and
hospitalization (all causes) and a concomitant ADD, for which they
resembled patients from the GP-Ho group. Prescribing preferences of
physicians in the three groups were confirmed at baseline by their
respective prescribing rates of conventional psychotropic drugs (GP-CM:
80.8 %; GP-Mx: 71.9 %; GP-Ho: 32.9 %) and homeopathic drugs (GP-CM:
0.0 %, GP-Mx: 13.1 % and GP-Ho: 55.7 %).
Clinical evolution and outcomes
Figure 1
shows, for each group of patients, the evolution of crude proportions
for ADD clinical improvement (HADS <9) at each follow-up point (Fig. 1a), and proportions of patients reporting at least one psychotropic drug utilization (Fig. 1b). Trends towards clinical improvement over time were statistically significant within each group (Chi-square for trend: P
<0.001), with faster clinical evolution for the GP-Ho group in the
first 3 months, and highest improvement rate for the GP-Mx group at
12 months. Crude clinical improvement rates remained the lowest in the
GP-CM group throughout follow-up. Crude trends in psychotropic drug
utilization in the GP-CM and GP-Mx groups shadowed clinical evolution to
reach relatively similar values at 12 months (68.0 and 63.5 %
respectively), while it remained well under 50 % at all times in the
GP-Ho group.
Proportions of patients experiencing clinical improvement§ of their anxiety and depressive disorders (a) and proportions of those who used at least one psychotropic drug (b) during the 12-month follow-up by type of medical practice* (N = 710). ...
After
controlling for potential confounders and baseline characteristics, the
probability of ADD clinical improvement (HADS <9) over the 12-month
follow-up was 1.7 times more likely among GP-Ho patients compared to
GP-CM [OR = 1.70 (95 % CI: 1.00 to 2.87)], a result of borderline
statistical significance (Table 3).
The probability of clinical improvement among GP-Mx patients did not
differ from that observed in GP-CM patients after controlling for all
other factors [OR = 1.49 (95 % CI: 0.89 to 2.50]. Consumption of
psychotropic drugs was significantly lower in both GP-Ho and GP-Mx
groups compared to the GP-CM group, being respectively less than one
third as likely [OR = 0.29 (95 % CI: 0.19 to 0.44)] and less than two
thirds as likely [OR = 0.62 (95 % CI: 0.41 to 0.94)]. These effect sizes
were not affected by the severity of ADD at baseline, with similar
results for patients with initial HADS scores above and below the value
of 12 within each group. Self-reported injuries and suicide attempts
were insufficient in number to allow modelling in regression analyses;
14.8, 7.11 and 9.45 % declared injuries while 4.97, 1.92 and 1.38 %
declared a suicide attempt in the GP-CM, GP-Mx and GP-Ho groups,
respectively. None of those differences was statistically significant in
unadjusted statistical analyses.
Discussion
This
population-based, prospective cohort study described the real-life
clinical management of patients with ADD consulting primary care
physicians with prescribing preferences for homeopathy. Our results
first showed that patients who chose GP-Ho differed substantially from
other patients, a finding well described elsewhere [20].
The original finding of this large cohort study is that the lower use
of conventional psychotropic drugs in that group of patients did not
compromise the evolution of their ADD once stratified by its severity at
baseline. Indeed, patients in the GP-Ho group were marginally more
likely to experience clinical improvement than patients managed with
conventional care. Beside the different nature of these patients, two
other factors could explain the results. First, homeopathic physicians
probably diagnose ADDs differently and may transmit different
information to their patients regarding prognosis. In the context of the
present study, homeopathy is practiced by GPs who are all trained in
conventional medicine and have access to all diagnostic and therapeutic
resources recommended for ADDs in primary care. The GP-Ho group of
physicians represented a distinct type of management and
patient–physician interaction, which in itself may account for a large
part of the therapeutic results observed. In addition, inefficacy of
psychotropic drugs and statistical regression to the mean are two other
potential contributions to the results.
A second
explanation derives from the acknowledgment that conventional drugs lack
efficacy in a large number of ADD patients seen in primary care [21]. In addition, although clinical guidance on ADD is widely available in general practice [4, 22],
there is evidence to suggest a lack of implementation in real-life
situations with regard to access to treatment and to poor patient
compliance with psychotropic drugs, including early drop-out from
treatment and overdosing [5, 23–25].
Therefore, a lower utilization of a largely ineffective therapy should
not compromise the clinical evolution of ADD overall. In those
conditions, homeopathy can be viewed as an additional tool to support
patients inclined to use this type of care without resorting to
conventional drugs when they are not indicated. The potential positive
impact on healthcare costs of this drug-sparing strategy remains to be
estimated at the population level [12, 13].
Another
important difference for patients in the GP-Ho group was the low
proportion (47.1 %) declaring the attending physician as their regular
GP, nearly half of that observed in the GP-CM and GP-Mx groups (84.5 and
83.1 %, respectively). One potential explanation for this difference
might be that some patients who consult in homeopathic care do so after a
subjective perception of failure to improve with the treatment
prescribed by their regular physician, an effect that has been observed
elsewhere [26],
or who do not see a GP regularly. However, the influence of healthcare
prior to entry in this cohort study, positive or negative, could not be
assessed and remains only a potential explanation for the results.
Systematic
reviews have shown inconsistent results for the effectiveness of
homeopathy in depression and anxiety. The quality of the evidence is
limited in part by inadequate study designs and insufficient number of
patients [8, 9].
The results of this study cannot be interpreted as effectiveness of
conventional against homeopathic care. Patients in the three groups of
physicians were compared on the basis of the prescribing preferences for
homeopathy by their GPs, all of whom were free to prescribe
conventional drugs also (indeed, 32.9 % of GPs certified in homeopathy
did prescribe a conventional psychotropic drug at inclusion). The
category of GPs who declared themselves as regular prescribers of
homeopathy without being trained as homeopathic practitioners (GP-Mx)
became an interesting group as it allowed the observation of patients in
a naturally mixed setting combining homeopathic and conventional
medicine. That group differed little from the GP-CM group, which would
indicate that it was mostly the type of management rather than the type
of prescription that might explain the results. Patients in the GP-Mx
group also used less psychotropic drugs, indicating that patients’
preference for homeopathy plays an important role in these results, as
suggested by some authors [27, 28].
Strengths and limitations
As
the study was appended to a population health survey, it provided a
unique opportunity to assemble a pool of potential patients seen in
primary care, with no selection criteria applied prior to the invitation
to join this cohort study. The distribution of physicians and patients
participating to the EPI3 general survey was close to what is known
about medical demography and reasons for consultation in France [1].
A strength of this study was the variety of information collected at
baseline, covering socio-demographic and clinical characteristics which
allowed the differences between the groups to be described in detail.
Care was also taken to ensure quality of outcome measures. HADS has been
shown to be highly sensitive and specific for diagnoses of ADDs in
previous primary care studies [15].
Drug utilization was obtained from patient interviews using a
methodology that had been previously validated, although not
specifically for psychotropic drugs [17, 18].
The quality of psychotropic drug reporting should not differ much
across the three groups of patients, as they were unaware of the
specific hypotheses regarding drug consumption. The methodology has
shown excellent recall capacity up to 2-year follow-up and has the
advantage of identifying drugs purchased over the counter and from the
family pharmacy, which are not accounted for in prescription databases
and potentially represent an important source of psychotropic drug
utilization [29]. It should be noted that while psychotropic drug utilization described at baseline (Table 2)
was obtained from physicians’ reports, patients’ reporting was
preferred for the analyses of evolution of psychotropic utilization over
time.
One of the main limitations of this study was
its low participation rate, at 45 % of eligible patients. Although
generally considered acceptable for a general health survey of this
type, in which patients are asked to participate in a 1-year follow-up
study, the participation rate leaves the results open to potential
selection bias. Differences between participants and non-participants
were small, however, and participation rates were almost identical
across the three groups of GPs, which made comparison biases unlikely.
Also, co-morbidity and SF-12 scores were similar between the groups and
consistent with other French and European studies [30–33].
Nevertheless, sample size was sufficient to compare groups for
psychotropic drug utilization and rates of clinical improvement, but not
for safety outcomes such as occurrence of injuries and suicide attempts
that were too few to allow proper statistical modelling.
Another
limitation of this study was the nature of patients’ ADD symptoms and
GPs’s diagnoses; these were the basis for patients’ recruitment and
could have differed in the three groups of physicians. The recruitment
strategy was chosen to reflect primary care practice in real life, but
could have introduced a bias with systematic differences in the
diagnostic make-ups of the groups. In effect, patients in the GP-Ho
group had less severe ADD on almost all indicators, including the
lifetime history of a suicide attempt, which was almost half in the
GP-Ho and GP-Mx groups compared to the conventional practice (GP-CM)
group (Table 2).
This imbalance at baseline could explain a lower use of psychotropic
drugs (bias by indication) and better clinical outcomes in those two
groups, even when controlling for this potential bias in the analyses.
Stratification of the analyses in lower and higher HADS patients at
inclusion was an attempt to better view the effect of this potential
bias. Similarity of results in the two populations of patients indicated
that baseline differences alone could probably not explain the results.
Conclusions
Patients
with ADDs choosing to consult GPs who prescribe homeopathy in addition
to conventional medicine reported use of fewer psychotropic drugs and
were marginally more likely to experience clinical improvement than
patients managed with conventional care. These findings may result from
the combined effect of inefficacy of conventional psychotropic drugs and
statistical regression to the mean as well as from effective
homeopathic management.
Declarations
Ethics approval and consent to participate
The
study was approved by the French National Data-Protection Commission
(CNIL) and the French National Medical Council (CNOM). Participating
physicians received compensation fees for their participation. Patients
were not compensated for their participation in the study. All patients
have given informed consent to take part in the study.
Consent for publication
Not applicable.
Availability of data and materials
None available.
Acknowledgements
Not applicable.
Funding
This
study was sponsored by Laboratoires Boiron, France and run
independently by the authors who take the sole responsibility for its
design, data collection, analyses, interpretation, and writing of the
manuscript.
Abbreviations
AAD | anxiety and depression disorder |
ATC | anatomical therapeutic chemical |
BMI | body mass index |
CI | confidence interval |
CMU | complementary health insurance |
CNIL | French National Data-Protection Commission |
CNOM | French National Medical Council |
EPI3 | EPIdemiologic study – 3 cohorts |
GEE | generalized estimating equations |
GP | general practitioner |
GP-CM | general practitioner who strictly prescribes conventional medicines |
GP-Ho | certified homeopathic GP |
GP-Mx | general practitioner who regularly prescribes homeopathy in a mixed (conventional and homeopathic) practice |
HADS | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale |
OR | odds ratio |
PABAR | progressive assisted backward active recall |
SF-12 | short form-12 |
Footnotes
Competing interests
Lamiae
Bensouda-Grimaldi was the recipient of a research fellowship grant from
INSERM (French National Institute of Health and Medical Research) at
the time of the study. All authors, members of the LASER-Research
network, have no commercial or other interest in any drug or products
mentioned in this study. This study was sponsored by Laboratoires
Boiron, France, and run independently by the authors who take the sole
responsibility for the study design, data collection, analyses,
interpretation, and writing of the manuscript.
Authors’ contributions
All
authors are members of the scientific committee that developed the
study protocol and the analyses plan, discussed and interpreted the
results and revised the manuscript. MR drafted the manuscript. LBG
supervised all operational aspects of the study including recruitments,
data collection and management. MR supervised data analyses. All authors
read and approved the final manuscript.
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