Dr. Klein argued that three of our 43 studies were "problematic" and should not have been included in the meta-analysis and that another study should have been included. We agree with Dr. Klein that the Black et al. study
+(3) should have been included and are unclear as to why our original MEDLINE search did not capture this study. We also agree with Dr. Klein that the subjects in the study by Charney et al.
+(4) were not properly randomized and should be excluded. Dr. Klein argued that the study by Klosko et al.
+(5) should not be included for several reasons, one of which was that "Since alprazolam is effective in the treatment of panic disorder, this trial lacked assay sensitivity (i.e., the ability to detect specific treatment effects)" (p. 1206). Was Dr. Klein saying that a pharmacotherapy study was invalid if it did not replicate previous pharmacotherapy findings? We agree with McNally’s comments
+(6) that Dr. Klein’s assertions
+(7) about assay sensitivity suffered from circular reasoning: when a manipulation check and an outcome measure are the same, there exists an inherent tautology. Independent criteria are needed to establish assay sensitivity.