Background: There is controversy about the implications of relatively small average drug-placebo differences observed in randomised controlled trials of antidepressant medications.
Aims: To investigate whether efficacy is better understood as a large effect in a subgroup of patients.
Method: The mixture model was used to identify patient subgroups (patients benefiting or not benefiting from treatment) to directly model the skewness of Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) scores at week 8.
Results: The MADRS scores improved by 15.9 points (95% CI 15.2-16.6) among patients who benefited from treatment. The proportion of patients who benefited from escitalopram and not from placebo treatment was 19.5%, corresponding to a number needed to treat of 5.
Conclusions: This model gave a considerably better fit to the data than the analysis of covariance model in which all patients were assumed to benefit from treatment. The small average antidepressant-placebo difference obscures a much larger effect in a clinically meaningful subgroup of patients.