4.8 Article

Effects of placebo administration on immune mechanisms and relationships with central endogenous opioid neurotransmission

Journal

MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages 831-839

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41380-021-01365-x

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Michigan Comprehensive Depression Center Rachel Upjohn Clinical Scholars Award
  2. National Institutes of Health [K99/R00 DA033454, R61 NS113316, R01 DA016423, R01 DA022520, R01 AR48267, R01 CA193522, R01 NS073939]
  3. Phil F. Jenkins Foundation
  4. Frederick G.L. Huetwell and William D. Robinson Professorship at the University of Michigan
  5. Veterans Administration Research Service
  6. National Institutes of Health Cancer Center Support (CORE) grant [P30 CA016672]

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Behavioral conditioning and positive expectation can influence disease pathology through placebo effects, involving modulation of inflammatory proteins. Neuroimaging studies reveal that placebo-induced reduction in IL-18 levels, correlated with endogenous opioid release, may play a key role in pain relief and mood regulation via neuroimmune interactions.
Behavioral conditioning and expectation can have profound impact on animal and human physiology. Placebo, administered under positive expectation in clinical trials, can have potent effects on disease pathology, obscuring active medications. Emerging evidence suggests placebo-responsive neurotransmitter systems (e.g., endogenous opioid) regulate immune function by manipulating inflammatory proteins including IL-18, a potent pro-inflammatory, nociceptive cytokine implicated in pathophysiology of various diseases. Validation that neuroimmune interactions involving brain mu-opioid receptor (MOR) activity and plasma IL-18 underlie placebo analgesic expectation could have widespread clinical applications. Unfortunately, current lack of mechanistic clarity obfuscates clinical translation. To elucidate neuroimmune interactions underlying placebo analgesia, we exposed 37 healthy human volunteers to a standardized pain challenge on each of 2 days within a Positron Emission Tomography (PET) neuroimaging paradigm using the MOR selective radiotracer, C-11-Carfentanil (CFN). Each day volunteers received an intervention (placebo under analgesic expectation or no treatment), completed PET scanning, and rated their pain experience. MOR BPND parametric maps were generated from PET scans using standard methods. Results showed placebo reduced plasma IL-18 during pain (W-74 = -3.7, p < 0.001), the extent correlating with reduction in pain scores. Placebo reduction in IL-18 covaried with placebo-induced endogenous opioid release in the left nucleus accumbens (T-148 = 3.33; p(uncorr) < 0.001) and left amygdala (T-148 = 3.30; p(uncorr) < 0.001). These findings are consistent with a modulating effect of placebo (under analgesic expectation in humans) on a potent nociceptive, pro-inflammatory cytokine (IL-18) and underlying relationships with endogenous opioid activity, a neurotransmitter system critically involved in pain, stress, and mood regulation.

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