Background: Recently, internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy (ICBT) and serious gaming interventions have been suggested to enhance accessibility to interventions and engagement in... Show moreBackground: Recently, internet-based cognitive behavioral therapy (ICBT) and serious gaming interventions have been suggested to enhance accessibility to interventions and engagement in psychological interventions that aim to promote health outcomes. Few studies, however, have investigated their effectiveness in the context of simulated real-life challenges.Objective: We aimed to examine the effectivity of a guided ICBT combined with a serious gaming intervention in improving self-reported psychophysiological and immunological health endpoints in response to psychophysiological and immune-related challenges.Methods: Sixty-nine healthy men were randomly assigned to the intervention condition, receiving ICBT combined with serious gaming for 6 weeks, or the control condition, receiving no intervention. Self-reported vitality was the primary endpoint. Other self-reported psychophysiological and immunological endpoints were assessed following various challenges, including a bacillus Calmette-Guerin vaccination evoking pro-inflammatory responses, 1 and 4 weeks after the intervention period.Results: Although the intervention did not affect vitality-associated parameters, self-reported sleep problems (P=.027) and bodily sensations (P=.042) were lower directly after the intervention compared with controls. Furthermore, wellbeing (P=.024) was higher in the intervention group after the psychophysiological challenges. Although no significant group differences were found for the psychophysiological and immunological endpoints, the data provided preliminary support for increased immunoglobulin antibody responses at the follow-up time points (P<.05). Differential chemokine endpoints between conditions were observed at the end of the test day.Conclusions: The present study provides some support for improving health endpoints with an innovative ICBT intervention. Future research should replicate and further extend the present findings by consistently including challenges and a wide range of immune parameters into the study design. Show less
Introduction: Placebo effects are powerful modulators in clinical outcomes and can either result in treatment benefits or harms, known as placebo and nocebo effects. To harness these outcomes, it... Show moreIntroduction: Placebo effects are powerful modulators in clinical outcomes and can either result in treatment benefits or harms, known as placebo and nocebo effects. To harness these outcomes, it is important to focus on the underlying processes that steer these effects, namely by learning through expectations and conditioning. In this review, we focus on the influence of placebo effects on subjective and physiological levels of immune-related conditions (e.g. lymphocyte proliferation, cytokine production or other inflammatory markers).Areas covered: A literature search is conducted in the databases PubMed and PsychInfo by making use of keywords such as ‘expectations’, ‘classical conditioning’, ‘cytokines’, ‘immune system’, ‘learned immunosuppression’, and covers studies done in animals, experimental studies in healthy controls as well as studies performed in immune-related patient populations.Expert commentary: We report on the presence of placebo effects in RCTs in immune-related conditions and review findings that demonstrate the ability to learn immune responses in both experimental animal and human placebo studies making use of conditioning paradigms with immunomodulating drug agents. We also discuss results to utilize placebo effects by means of classical conditioning principles in medication regimens for patient populations and elaborate on promising findings of preliminary studies focusing on this topic. Show less