Why do doctors use treatments that do not work?
Jenny Doust and Chris
Del Mar argue that doctors use treatments for many
reasons-including their inability to stand idle and do
nothing
One of the surprising
things about James Lind's celebrated trial
of citrus fruit for scurvy was not just that he
ignored the evidence from his own trial but that in clinical practice
he continued to advocate treatments that he himself had found
ineffective, including those containing sulphuric acid.w1
The history of medicine is replete with examples of treatments once
common practice but now known not to work. Or worse, cause harm. Only
because the French surgeon Paré ran out of boiling oil did he
discover that not cauterising gun shot wounds with it created much less
pain and suffering.w2 Leeches and blood letting were used
for thousands of years for almost everything. Attempts to show that
they were ineffective were resisted with great passion by the medical
profession.w3 More recently, we have had treatment with
insulin for schizophrenia and vitamin K for myocardial
infarction.w4 w5 In case we are all feeling too smug
about silliness in the bad old days, we have the recent crisis on
finding that hormone replacement therapy does not prevent
cardiovascular disease.w6 Why do we still use ineffective
treatments?

GIRAUDON/BAL
Expectations
are too high
One reason is that our
expectations for the benefits of treatment are too high. As Voltaire
said, "The art of medicine consists in amusing the patient while
nature cures the disease." Or, in modern parlance, most drugs
work in only 30% or 50% of people.w7 Because
patients so often get better or worse on their own, no matter what we
do, clinical experience is a poor judge of what does and does not work.
Hence the need for adequately powered randomised controlled
trials.
A second reason is we are
taught that because medicine is based on the sciences, understanding
the pathophysiology of disease is essential to effective treatment. And
so it is for many treatments. Use of insulin for diabetic coma needs a
full understanding of the pathophysiology. Similarly, our appreciation
of how parachutes slow falls means we do not need a placebo controlled
trial of parachutes.w8 But we have many examples where this
approach, without empirical testing, is wrong. Until recently medical
students were taught the pathophysiological reasons why &bgr; blockers
are contraindicated in heart failure (it is good treatment for heart
failure); why colloid is more effective than crystalloid for fluid
replacement (it is worse); and that because the vascular supply of the
scaphoid places it at risk of non-union, any suspected fracture
requires a cast (active mobilisation results in better
outcomes.)w9 w10 Lind's belief in the humoral
basis of disease caused his resistance to his own trial evidence, and
the medical profession to reject Louis's data on blood
letting.w11
Looking
at the wrong outcome
Even when
empiricism is satisfied we can be misled by looking at the wrong
outcome. Fluoride increases bone density. But it also increases the
fracture rate.w12 Flecainide for the treatment of
supraventricular tachycardia makes the electrocardiogram look normal,
but only after clinical trials (that some thought unethical) did it
emerge that it increases
mortality.w13
Some
treatments have harms that outweigh their benefits and are not evident
in trials. It was only after licensing in the United States and
postmarketing surveillance that troglitazone was found to cause liver
failure and had to be
withdrawn.w14
Let us not
stop at ineffective treatments. Much of the clinical examination and
diagnostic testing is more of a ritual than diagnostically useful. We
continue to order routine blood tests before surgery without controlled
trials to show benefit, and several case series that show that these
tests rarely change outcomes or even management.w15
Alternatively what was once perhaps useful is now superseded by better
investigation. When did whispering pectoriloquy last clinch a diagnosis
of
pneumonia?

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Detail from
'Caring for the Sick' from Abbaye de Port-Royal c 1710.
Louise Madelaine Cochin
Difficult to do
nothing
Clinicians want to relieve
suffering. We find it difficult to do nothing (the aphorism
"Don't just do something, stand there!" seems
ludicrous). So we send in the counselling teams after psychological
trauma, probably making things worse.w16 Perhaps it is
societal opinion (on which one ear of the medical profession is always
pricked) that errors of omission are more reprehensible than errors of
commission that is at fault. Is missing a rare diagnosis so much worse
than harm from
overtesting?w17
What hope
is there for not using treatments and tests that don't work?
Medicine is not just a science-it is a human activity. It entails
ritual, custom, and the expectations of doctors, patients, and society.
To safeguard against ineffective or harmful health care we need doctors
who want to do the best they can for their patients, who are willing to
continually question their own managements, and who have readily
available sources of information about what does
work.
Jenny Doust, senior research fellow, general practice
Chris Del Mar, professor of general practice Centre for General Practice, University of Queensland, Medical School, Herston, Queensland 4006, Australia
Email: j.doust@sph.uq.edu.au
studentBMJ 2004;12:133-176 April ISSN 0966-6494
- Jones K. Insulin coma therapy in schizophrenia. J R Soc Med 2000;93:147-9.
- Wasserman AJ, Gutterman LA, Yoe KB, Kemp VE Jr, Richardson DW. Anticoagulants in acute myocardial infarction. The failure of anticoagulants to alter mortality in a randomized series. Am Heart J 1966;71:43-9.
- Rossouw JE, Anderson GL, Prentice RL, LaCroix AZ, Kooperberg C, Stefanick ML, et al. Risks and benefits of estrogen plus progestin in healthy postmenopausal women: principal results from the women’s health initiative randomized controlled trial. JAMA 2002;288:321-33.
- Connor S. Glaxo chief: our drugs do not work on most patients. Independent 2003 8 December:1.
- Smith GC, Pell JP. Parachute use to prevent death and major trauma related to gravitational challenge: systematic review of randomised controlled trials. BMJ 2003;327:1459-61.
- Sjolin SU, Andersen JC. Clinical fracture of the carpal scaphoid-supportive bandage or plaster cast immobilization? J Hand Surg Br 1988;13:75-6.
- Clay NR, Dias JJ, Costigan PS, Gregg PJ, Barton NJ. Need the thumb be immobilised in scaphoid fractures? A randomised prospective trial. J Bone Joint Surg Br 1991;73:828-32.
- Haguenauer D, Welch V, Shea B, Tugwell P, Wells G. Fluoride for treating postmenopausal osteoporosis. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2003;(4):CD002825.
- Echt DS, Liebson PR, Mitchell LB, Peters RW, Obias-Manno D, Barker AH, et al. Mortality and morbidity in patients receiving encainide, flecainide, or placebo. The cardiac arrhythmia suppression trial. N Engl J Med 1991;324:781-8.
- Munro J, Booth A, Nicholl J. Routine preoperative testing: a systematic review of the evidence. Health Technol Assess 1997;1:1-62.
- Hobbs M, Mayou R, Harrison B, Worlock P. A randomised controlled trial of psychological debriefing for victims of road traffic accidents. BMJ 1996;313:1438-9.
- Feinstein AR. The "chagrin factor" and qualitative decision analysis. Arch Intern Med 1985;145:1257-9.