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Reducing Nocebo Effects on Pressure Pain

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Pain
Hyperalgesia
Interventions
Behavioral: Closed-label nocebo conditioning
Behavioral: Closed-label extinction
Behavioral: Open-label counterconditioning
Behavioral: Closed-label counterconditioning
Registration Number
NCT05284383
Lead Sponsor
Leiden University
Brief Summary

Nocebo effects are known to adversely affect the experience of various physical symptoms, such as pain and itch. Nocebo effects can be induced by associative learning mechanisms of classical conditioning. Furthermore, recent studies have shown that counterconditioning can successfully reduce nocebo effects, and to a larger extent than mere extinction, which suggests counterconditioning can be an innovative method for desensitization of symptoms. When using such procedures in clinical practice, deception of patients should be avoided as much as possible. The use of open-label procedures could provide a promising alternative. While previous studies have already shown that open-label placebos are effective, the effects of open-label counterconditioning and closed-label counterconditioning are not extensively investigated in comparison to other strategies, such as extinction, and not yet compared amongst each other. Before implementing such a procedure in clinical practice, it would be relevant to get an insight in the efficacy of both open- and closed-label counterconditioning in healthy participants as compared to extinction and to investigate whether open-label counterconditioning can be equally effective as closed-label counterconditioning. Furthermore, it would be relevant to study the induction and reduction of nocebo effects using a pain modality that mimics the type of pain that people suffering from several chronic pain conditions experience, such as pressure pain. The main aim of the current study is to investigate whether open- and closed-label counterconditioning are more effective in reducing nocebo effects than extinction. To this aim, it will be investigated whether open- and closed-label counterconditioning lead to stronger reductions in nocebo effects on pressure pain than (closed-label) extinction, and whether all three successfully reduce nocebo effects. Finally, it will be tested whether open- and closed label counterconditioning are comparable in effectivity.

Detailed Description

The primary objective of the study is to investigate whether open- and closed-label counterconditioning are more effective in reducing nocebo effects than extinction.

The experimental (open- and closed-label counterconditioning) and control (extinction) groups will be compared on the change in the nocebo effect from before to after counterconditioning. The nocebo effect is defined as the mean difference in self-reported pain ratings (on a numeric rating scale from 0 (no pain) to 10 (worst pain imaginable))during all experimental trials and control trials in the test phase of nocebo conditioning and the test phase of counterconditioning/extinction. The reduction of the nocebo effect will be determined by calculating the mean difference between the nocebo effect after conditioning and after counterconditioning/extinction. It is expected that participants in both counterconditioning groups will show a larger reduction of the nocebo effect than participants in the extinction group. A one-way ANOVA will be conducted, to examine the main effect of group on the amount of change in nocebo effects. Then, post-hoc analyses will be conducted after the primary analysis, to test for differences between the three forms of nocebo reduction.

Secondary, it will be tested whether all three procedures (open- and closed-label counterconditioning and extinction) lead to a significant reduction of the nocebo effect, by comparing the amount of reduction to test value 0. It is hypothesized that all groups show a significant reduction.

Finally, it will be investigated whether open- and closed-label counterconditioning procedures are comparable in terms of their ability to reduce nocebo effects on pressure pain. Both groups are expected to be comparable in efficacy of reducing the nocebo effect.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
Female
Target Recruitment
69
Inclusion Criteria
  • Aged 18-35 years
  • Good understanding of written and spoken Dutch or English
Exclusion Criteria
  • Severe somatic or psychiatric morbidity (e.g., heart/lung diseases, DSM-V psychiatric disorders)
  • Raynaud's disease, chronic pain complaints at present or in the past
  • Current pain complaints (> 2 on NRS)
  • Current use of medication (except for birth-control pill)
  • Injuries on the non-dominant hand
  • Refusal/inability to remove nail polish or artificial nails for the experiment
  • Pregnancy or breastfeeding

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Closed-label counterconditioningClosed-label nocebo conditioningClosed-label conditioning followed by closed-label counterconditioning, using moderately painful stimuli (during conditioning) and non-painful stimuli (during counterconditioning), combined with closed-label nocebo suggestions and closed-label nocebo reduction suggestions
Closed-label extinctionClosed-label extinctionClosed-label conditioning followed by closed-label extinction, using moderately painful stimuli (during conditioning) and slightly-painful stimuli (during extinction), combined with closed-label nocebo suggestions during conditioning and no/neutral suggestions during extinction
Open-label counterconditioningOpen-label counterconditioningClosed-label conditioning followed by open-label counterconditioning, using moderately painful stimuli (during conditioning) and non-painful stimuli (during counterconditioning), combined with closed-label nocebo suggestions and open-label nocebo reduction suggestions
Closed-label counterconditioningClosed-label counterconditioningClosed-label conditioning followed by closed-label counterconditioning, using moderately painful stimuli (during conditioning) and non-painful stimuli (during counterconditioning), combined with closed-label nocebo suggestions and closed-label nocebo reduction suggestions
Open-label counterconditioningClosed-label nocebo conditioningClosed-label conditioning followed by open-label counterconditioning, using moderately painful stimuli (during conditioning) and non-painful stimuli (during counterconditioning), combined with closed-label nocebo suggestions and open-label nocebo reduction suggestions
Closed-label extinctionClosed-label nocebo conditioningClosed-label conditioning followed by closed-label extinction, using moderately painful stimuli (during conditioning) and slightly-painful stimuli (during extinction), combined with closed-label nocebo suggestions during conditioning and no/neutral suggestions during extinction
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Nocebo reduction; group comparisonOn the testing day; testing phase of nocebo induction and reduction

The change in nocebo effects from after nocebo conditioning (part 1) to after either form of counterconditioning or extinction (part 2) will be compared between groups. The nocebo effect is defined as the difference between the pain scored during experimental trials (on a 0-10 NRS) and during control trials (same NRS). The change is calculated by subtracting the nocebo effect after counterconditioning from the nocebo effect after nocebo conditioning.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Nocebo reductionOn the testing day; testing phase of nocebo induction and reduction

For all three groups separately, it will be tested whether the nocebo effect is significantly reduced from test phase of nocebo conditioning to the test phase of either form of counterconditioning or extinction. The nocebo effect is defined as the difference between the pain scored during experimental trials (on a 0-10 NRS) and during control trials (same NRS). Nocebo reduction is calculated by subtracting the nocebo effect after counterconditioning from the nocebo effect after nocebo conditioning. For all groups separately, the amount of reduction will be compared to test value 0.

Nocebo reduction; equivalence of the two forms of counterconditioningOn the testing day; testing phase of nocebo induction and reduction

It will be tested whether the change in nocebo effects from the test phase of conditioning to the test phase of counterconditioning in the open- and closed-label groups is comparable. The nocebo effect is defined as the difference between the pain scored during experimental trials (on 0-10 NRS) and during control trials (same NRS). The change is calculated by subtracting the nocebo effects after counterconditioning from the nocebo effect after nocebo conditioning.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Leiden University

🇳🇱

Leiden, Netherlands

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