Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-ttngx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-07T04:15:04.632Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Circulating cytokine levels in the treatment of comorbid anxiety disorders

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 October 2020

Sverre Urnes Johnson*
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway Research Institute, Modum Bad Psychiatric Center, Oslo, Norway
Asle Hoffart
Affiliation:
Department of Clinical Psychology, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway Research Institute, Modum Bad Psychiatric Center, Oslo, Norway
Terje Tilden
Affiliation:
Research Institute, Modum Bad Psychiatric Center, Oslo, Norway
Helge Toft
Affiliation:
Norwegian National Advisory Unit on Concurrent Substance Abuse and Mental Health Disorders, Innlandet Hospital Trust, Brumunddal, Norway National Centre for Suicide Research and Prevention, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway
Sudan P. Neupane
Affiliation:
Norwegian National Advisory Unit on Concurrent Substance Abuse and Mental Health Disorders, Innlandet Hospital Trust, Brumunddal, Norway National Centre for Suicide Research and Prevention, Institute of Clinical Medicine, University of Oslo, Oslo, Norway Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC, USA
Lars Lien
Affiliation:
Norwegian National Advisory Unit on Concurrent Substance Abuse and Mental Health Disorders, Innlandet Hospital Trust, Brumunddal, Norway Department of Health Studies, Inland Norway University of Applied Sciences, Elverum, Norway
Jørgen G. Bramness
Affiliation:
Norwegian National Advisory Unit on Concurrent Substance Abuse and Mental Health Disorders, Innlandet Hospital Trust, Brumunddal, Norway Institute of Clinical Medicine, UiT—Norway’s Arctic University, Tromsø, Norway
*
Author for correspondence: Sverre Urnes Johnson, Email: s.u.johnson@psykologi.uio.no
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Psychotherapy research aims to investigate predictors and moderators of treatment outcome, but there are few consistent findings. This study aimed to investigate cytokines in patients undergoing treatment for anxiety disorders and whether the level of cytokines moderated the treatment outcome. Thirty-seven patients with comorbid and treatment-resistant anxiety disorders were investigated using multilevel modelling. Serum cytokine levels were measured three times: pretreatment, in the middle of treatment, and at the end of treatment. Anxiety and metacognitions were measured weekly throughout treatment by self-report. The levels of monocyte chemoattractant protein-1, tumour necrosis factor-alpha, and interleukin-1 receptor antagonist did not change during therapy or were not related to the level of anxiety. Metacognitive beliefs predicted anxiety, but the relationship between metacognitions and anxiety was not moderated by cytokines. Limitations of the study include that the patients were not fasting at blood sampling, and we did not assess body mass index, which may affect cytokine levels. The lack of significance for cytokines as a predictor or moderator may be due to a lack of power for testing moderation hypotheses, a problem associated with many psychotherapy studies. Cytokines did not predict the outcome in the treatment of comorbid anxiety disorders in our sample. Furthermore, cytokines did not moderate the relationship between metacognitions and anxiety.

Type
Original Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© Scandinavian College of Neuropsychopharmacology 2020

Significant outcomes

  • Cytokines did not predict the outcome in the treatment of anxiety disorders

  • Level of cytokines did not moderate the relationship between metacognitions and anxiety.

Limitations

  • Patients were not fasting at blood sampling.

  • Body mass index was not assessed.

  • Sample size indicates reduced power to detect significant moderators.

Introduction

Anxiety disorders are among the most common mental disorders (Kessler et al., Reference Kessler, Berglund, Demler, Jin and Walters2005), and there is evidence that psychological treatments are effective (Hans & Hiller, Reference Hans and Hiller2013). The disorders often co-occur (Kessler et al., Reference Kessler, Avenevoli, McLaughlin, Green, Lakoma, Petukhova, Pine, Sampson, Zaslavsky and Merikangas2012) with substance use disorders, especially alcohol, and researchers have, therefore, started to investigate processes that are common across different anxiety disorders, so-called transdiagnostic processes (Harvey et al., Reference Harvey, Watkins, Mansell and Shafran2004). Irrespective of whether anxiety disorders are studied separately or as a syndrome, there is no single treatment effective for everyone. Thus, there is an interest to investigate what works for whom, enabling a form of more personalised medicine (Insel, Reference Insel2009). Knowledge about predictors and moderators of treatment outcome are thus needed (Kraemer et al., Reference Kraemer, Wilson, Fairburn and Agras2002). Predictor variables, clinical or biological, provide information on the associated dependent variable. Moderator variables are identified when the relationship between two variables depends on a third variable.

In psychotherapy research, metacognitions (Wells, Reference Wells2009) have been found to be an important time-varying process predictor called a within-person effect (Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Hoffart, Nordahl, Ulvenes, Vrabel and Wampold2018). Typically, in psychotherapy research, individuals are compared with other individuals, called a between-person effect (Molenaar, Reference Molenaar2004). However, a within-person effect isolates how a patient changes over the course of therapy related to their usual level. Thus, in the study by Johnson et al. (Reference Johnson, Hoffart, Nordahl, Ulvenes, Vrabel and Wampold2018), the following clinical implication could be drawn based on a within-person finding: If a clinician targets metacognition in therapy, reduction in anxiety will likely follow.

According to metacognitive therapy (MCT) (Wells, Reference Wells2009), the use of specific strategies to regulate emotions is dependent on metacognitions. Metacognition was originally defined as knowledge or beliefs about thinking and strategies used to regulate and control thinking processes (Flavell, Reference Flavell1979). Metacognitions are crucial for the development and maintenance of psychological disorders (Wells, Reference Wells2009). In therapy, two types of metacognitive beliefs are targeted, positive and negative. Positive metacognitive beliefs are beliefs about the usefulness of worry, ruminations, and threat monitoring (e.g. ‘If I worry, I will be prepared’, ‘If I ruminate, I will find a solution’). Negative metacognitive beliefs concern the uncontrollability of thoughts and their danger (e.g. ‘I cannot control my thoughts’, ‘Worry can damage my mind’). In therapy, the therapist has to identify the specific strategies to regulate emotions (e.g. worry and rumination) and the metacognitive beliefs that give rise to the use of this strategy and challenge this. Previous studies from our group have shown that metacognition, in general, and positive metacognitions, specifically, predict anxiety on a within-person level (Hoffart et al., Reference Hoffart, Johnson, Nordahl and Wells2018; Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Hoffart, Nordahl, Ulvenes, Vrabel and Wampold2018).

It is an open question whether the within-person effect of metacognitions on outcome is moderated by specific characteristic. Thus, an important research goal is to find characteristics that explain variability in within-person relationships between meta-cognitions and subsequent symptoms. A recent systematic review stated that many studies found associations between psychological treatment and inflammation (Moraes et al., Reference Moraes, Miranda, Loures, Mainieri and Mármora2018). Further, it was mentioned that little is known about the impacts of psychoneuroimmunological interventions and the effects on disease progression (Moraes et al., Reference Moraes, Miranda, Loures, Mainieri and Mármora2018). Aiming to fill this gap in the literature, the current study explores the potential moderating role of cytokines on psychological treatment in anxiety patients.

Findings regarding predictors of the outcome in anxiety disorder treatment are inconclusive. For example, some studies find associations between the degree of comorbidity or personality problems and the outcome (Bohart & Wade, Reference Bohart, Wade and Lambert2013; Goddard et al., Reference Goddard, Wingrove and Moran2015), while other studies do not (Hoffart et al., Reference Hoffart, Øktedalen, Svanøe, Hedley and Sexton2015; Johnson & Hoffart, Reference Johnson and Hoffart2019). One reason for the lack of consistent findings may be that the predictors and moderators of treatment outcome investigated have been psychological constructs (Schneider et al., Reference Schneider, Arch and Wolitzky-Taylor2015), and these psychological constructs are often poorly defined, limiting construct validity (Fried, Reference Fried2017). Anxiety disorders should be understood in a biopsychosocial framework (Engel, Reference Engel1977). It is, therefore, of clinical interest to investigate possible biological predictors of their outcome. Such biological predictors could be, for example, the immunological molecules cytokines. Cytokines constitute a group of small messenger molecules, which commonly are divided into two families, pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines. The research efforts for investigating the association between cytokines and anxiety disorders are increasing (Vogelzangs et al., Reference Vogelzangs, Beekman, de Jonge and Penninx2013).

Inflammatory cytokines may be associated with behavioural change in many ways. They may alter the metabolism of neurotransmitters such as serotonin, dopamine, and glutamate (Moron et al., Reference Moron, Zakharova, Ferrer, Merrill, Hope, Lafer, Lin, Wang, Javitch, Galli and Shippenberg2003) and also influence the hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis through their actions towards the release of corticotrophin-releasing hormone, adrenocorticotropic hormone, and cortisol (Raison et al., Reference Raison, Borisov, Woolwine, Massung, Vogt and Miller2010). Pro-inflammatory cytokines, such as interleukin-1 (IL-1), interleukin-6 (IL-6), interferon-gamma (IFN-γ), monocyte chemoattractant protein-1 (MCP-1), and tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α), enhance the immune response to help speed the elimination of pathogens and the resolution of the inflammatory challenge (Kronfol & Remick, Reference Kronfol and Remick2000; Dalgard et al., Reference Dalgard, Eidelman, Jozwik, Olsen, Srivastava, Biswas, Eudy, Rothwell, Mueller, Yuan, Drevets, Manji, Vythlingam, Charney, Neumeister, Ursano, Jacobowitz, Pollard and Bonne2017). Also, levels of anti-inflammatory cytokines have been reported to be altered in generalised anxiety disorders when compared to healthy controls, contributing to an altered cytokine balance (Hou et al., Reference Hou, Garner, Holmes, Osmond, Teeling, Lau and Baldwin2017). Therefore, the anti-inflammatory cytokine interleukin-1 receptor antagonist (IL-1RA) was also assessed in the current study. Elevated levels of cytokines have been found for panic disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder (PSTD) (Hoge et al., Reference Hoge, Brandstetter, Moshier, Pollack, Wong and Simon2009) and also for anxiety disorders in general (Vogelzangs et al. Reference Vogelzangs, Beekman, de Jonge and Penninx2013). Furthermore, an association between inflammatory dysregulation and anxiety – for example, for TNF-α – has been reported (Renna et al., Reference Renna, O’Toole, Spaeth, Lekander and Mennin2018). However, the association between TNF-α and anxiety disorders is not found in a recent paper (Glaus et al., Reference Glaus, von Känel, Lasserre, Strippoli, Vandeleur, Castelao, Gholam-Rezaee, Marangoni, Wagner, Marques-Vidal, Waeber, Vollenweider, Preisig and Merikangas2018).

Thus, the evidence concerning specific cytokines and the relationship with anxiety disorders is inconclusive. To our knowledge, no studies have investigated cytokines in relation to treatment outcome in anxiety disorders.

Aims of the study

In this exploratory study, we firstly wanted to investigate if the pretreatment level of anxiety correlated with the levels of some selected cytokines. Then we examined how cytokines developed over the course of therapy for comorbid anxiety disorders and whether the mean level of cytokines predicted anxiety. Thirdly, we investigated whether the mean level of cytokines moderated the within- and between-person relationship between a therapy process (meta-cognitions) and anxiety over the course of therapy.

Materials and method

Participants

The patients were referred to the Department of Anxiety Disorder at Modum Bad because they had not benefited sufficiently from outpatient treatment and were undergoing an 8-week inpatient treatment program for treatment resistance. Patients enrolled at the Department of Anxiety Disorders have, on average, 3.7 diagnoses at intake (Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Hoffart, Nordahl and Wampold2017). Thus, the terms comorbid anxiety and treatment-resistant anxiety disorders are used. The study included 37 patients who were undergoing treatment. The average duration of anxiety disorder problem was 16 years, and 85% of the patients were either disabled, out of work, or on sick leave when entering treatment (Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Hoffart, Nordahl and Wampold2017). Primary diagnoses treated at the department are PTSD, social phobia, panic disorder with and without agoraphobia, generalised anxiety disorder (GAD), and specific phobia. The term comorbid anxiety disorders refers to patients which is homogeneous in terms of having anxiety disorders and possible common processes underlying them but heterogeneous in terms of the composition of anxiety disorders. Thus, the patients represent a typical clinical sample. Some patients used medications which are known to have immunomodulatory properties. There were 10 patients who used Paracetamol, five patients used Paracetamol and Ibuprofen in combination, three patients used Ibuprofen, three patients used Escitalopram, one patient used Diclocil antibiotics, and one patient used Diclofenac. Since few patients used medications at all, and only five patients used Paracetamol and Ibuprofen for more than a single-occurring event, we did not take the use of medication into consideration in the analyses.

There were 17 male and 20 female patients in the study. The mean age was 43.6 years (SD = 11.0 years). The following primary diagnoses were present: 14 patients had PSTD, 7 patients had social phobia, 5 patients had panic disorder with agoraphobia, 1 patient had GAD, and 1 had a specific phobia. Nine patients did not have any specific registered diagnosis, but had either PTSD, SAD, PDA, or GAD, since that is the inclusion criteria for treatment at the Department of Anxiety Disorder.

The patients were part of a larger study investigating cytokines in psychological disorders (Toft et al., Reference Toft, Bramness, Lien, Abebe, Wampold, Tilden, Hestad and Neupane2018). The study was approved by the Norwegian Regional Ethics Committee prior to data collection (reference number 2014/2189), and the participants gave their written consent.

Treatment

At the Department of Anxiety Disorders, MCT and cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) are administered. The MCT (N = 15) consists of a manualised treatment protocol for the generic MCT model (Wells, Reference Wells2009). The CBT (N = 22) is based on disorder-specific models for panic disorder (Wells, Reference Wells1997), social phobia (Clark & Wells, Reference Clark and Wells1995), and PSTD (Foa et al., Reference Foa, Hembree and Rothbaum2007). Both treatments have in common that they are highly structured, are based on established manuals, and have shown efficacy in the treatment of anxiety disorders. In the current study, we did not separate between the two treatments; thus, the results encompass the treatment of anxiety disorders using either CBT or MCT.

Self-report measures

Anxiety and metacognitions were measured weekly throughout treatment through self-report. Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI; Beck et al., Reference Beck, Epstein, Brown and Steer1988) measures anxiety symptoms the last week with 21 items. The items are rated on a Likert scale from 0 to 3 with a maximum score of 63. The psychometric properties of the BAI are satisfactory (e.g. Steer et al., Reference Steer, Ranieri, Beck and Clark1993). The Meta-Cognitions Questionnaire 30 (MCQ-30; Cartwright-Hatton & Wells, Reference Cartwright-Hatton and Wells1997) measures metacognitive beliefs. The items are rated on a 4-point Likert scale, and the total score varies from 30 to 120. MCQ-30 has been found to have adequate psychometric properties (Wells & Cartwright-Hatton, Reference Wells and Cartwright-Hatton2004).

Serum preparation and cytokine measurements

Peripheral circulating cytokines were measured pretreatment, in the middle of treatment, and at the end of treatment. The length of stay, and thus the number of weeks between each blood sample, varied between the various enrolments due do holiday seasons and other treatment-related events. Thus, the average amount of time from baseline to T1 was 4 weeks, and from baseline to T2 was 8 weeks. The blood samples were taken at the local hospital laboratory between 08:00 a.m. and 09:00 a.m. Samples were collected in Vacuette 8 ml serum tubes, immediately turned upside down 8–10 times, and set to rest between 30 and 60 min, and lastly centrifuged in a Kubota 2420 swing-out centrifuge at room temperature for 10 min at 1917 g. The separated serum was stored in two 2 ml Nunc tubes in a −80°C freezer until assay.

Before analysis, samples were thawed on ice, vortexed, and spun down at 14 000 × g for 10 min at 4°C. Cytokines were measured by using Bio-Plex xMAP technology (Bio-Rad, Austin, TX, USA) with a Luminex IS 100 instrument (Bio-Rad, Hercules, CA, USA), powered using Bio-Plex Manager (version 6.0.1) software. The StatLIA software package (version 3.2, Brendan Scientific, Carlsbad, CA, USA), incorporating a weighted, five-parameter logistic curve-fitting method, was used to calculate sample cytokine concentrations. We present data on MCP-1, TNF-α, and IL-1RA because they are within the detectable range. Inter-assay coefficients of variability (CV) were 6.7% for MCP-1, 7.4% for TNF-α, and 10.2% for IL-1RA, all within the 21% acceptability limit. All zero values were replaced with the limit of detection (LOD). At T0, the median level of MCP-1 was 23.29, and the LOD was 6.48. There were 3 zero values which were replaced with the LOD. The median level in TNF-α was 0.18, and the LOD was 0.08. There were 15 zero values which were replaced with the LOD. The IL-1RA median level was 32.25, and the LOD was 7.87. There were no zero values. At T1, the MCP-1 median level was 24.24, and the LOD was 3.56. There was one zero value which was replaced with the LOD. The TNF-α median level was 0.42, and the LOD was 0.36. There were 13 zero values which were replaced with the LOD. The IL-1RA median level was 29.65, and the LOD was 8.32. There were no zero values. At T2, the MCP-1 median level was 23.54, and the LOD was 4.33. There were four zero values replaced with the LOD. The TNF-α median level was 0.26, and the LOD was 0.02. There were 15 zero values which were replaced with the LOD. The IL-1RA median level was 31.95. The LOD was 6.69. There were no zero values. The cytokine, which was omitted from the study, is presented together with its median values and the LODs. At T0, the IL-1β median level was 0.06, and the LOD was 0.03. At T1, the IL-1β median level was 0.08, and the LOD was 0.01. At T2, the IL-1β median level was 0.07, and the LOD was 0.03.

Statistical analysis

The data used in the process outcome analyses were nested in a two-level structure (weeks nested within patients) thus longitudinal multilevel modelling (MLM) was used for the analysis (Fitzmaurice et al., Reference Fitzmaurice, Laird and Ware2004; Curran & Bauer, Reference Curran and Bauer2011).

MLM makes use of all available data in the estimation of model parameters. Thus, a participant with missing data can be included in the analysis and affect the estimation of model parameters (Kwok et al., Reference Kwok, Underhill, Berry, Luo, Elliott and Yoon2008). In this study, the process variable, metacognition, was disaggregated in both within and between effects according to the criteria outlined by Wang and Maxwell (Reference Wang and Maxwell2015), using person-mean centering. Thus, two variables were entered into the prediction analysis, a between-patient and a within-patient effect. Disaggregation is important because the raw score reflects two sources of variance: how an individual differs from other individuals (between-person effect) and how the individual differs from their usual level (within-person effect).

Random intercepts and random slope were added to the empty models if the model fit was improved. The data were modelled for heteroscedastic residual variance over time, and quadratic time was tested for improved model fit. Covariance structure like AR1 was tested. The most parsimonious model was selected using log-likelihood tests on model fit. A fixed linear time with a heteroscedastic residual variance over time was chosen. An AR1 covariance structure of the residuals gave the best model fit for anxiety and MCP1. The covariance structure for TNF-α and IL-1RA was homoscedastic. TNF-α, IL-1RA, and MCP1 were modelled without random slope. Maximum likelihood (ML) was used as the estimation method (Fitzmaurice et al., Reference Fitzmaurice, Laird and Ware2004).

First, we examined whether anxiety, metacognition, and cytokines changed as a function of time and if anxiety and cytokines correlated at pretreatment. Second, we investigated whether the mean level of cytokine levels predicted the slope of anxiety. Third, we examined whether the between- and within-person effect of metacognitions predicted anxiety as was found in a recent paper (Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Hoffart, Nordahl, Ulvenes, Vrabel and Wampold2018). Finally, we investigated if the within-person effect and between-person effect of metacognitions on anxiety over the course of therapy was moderated by the mean level of cytokines.

The mean level of cytokines was used since the cytokines did not change over the course of therapy. We established a temporal sequence between metacognitions and anxiety to ensure that the predictor was measured before the outcome. The predictor scores were lagged and thus related to the anxiety scores 4 days later. SPSS version 25.0 (IBM, 2017) was used for all analysis. We used a p-level of 0.05.

Results

Correlations at pretreatment

The mean anxiety level at baseline was 28.7, SD = 13.4. Anxiety level did not correlate with TNF-α, r = −0.09, p = 0.59, MCP1 levels, r = 0.25, p = 0.15, or IL-1RA, r = 0.19, p = 0.26.

Change over time

First, we investigated whether the cytokines TNF-α, MCP1, IL-1RA, and anxiety changed over the course of therapy. MCP1 [β = 2.77, SE = 3.61, t(69.3)= 0.8, p = 0.44, CI (−4.4, 9.8)] did not change significantly over the course of therapy, and the same was the case for TNF-α [β = −0.09, SE = 0.20, t(66.6)= −0.5, p = 0.65, CI (−0.49, 0.31)] and IL-1RA [β = 5.56, SE = 6.02, t(70.3)= 0.9, p = 0.36, CI (−6.44, 17.56)]. However, anxiety decreased [β = −1.19, SE = 0.19, t(35.6)= −6.09, p = <0.001, CI (−1.57, −0.79)] significantly during therapy. Since the cytokines did not change over the course of therapy, the mean level from the three time points was used in the subsequent analysis.

Cytokines as predictor of outcome

We investigated whether the mean level of cytokines during treatments predicted outcome. TNF-α, MCP1 or IL-1RA did not predict anxiety over the course of therapy (Table 1).

Table 1. TNF-α, MCP1, and IL-1RA as predictors of anxiety among patients undergoing an inpatient treatment for treatment-resistant anxiety disorders

*p < 0.05. ***p < 0.001. In brackets, 95% confidence intervals.

Within-person effects of metacognitions on anxiety

Table 2 shows that metacognitions predicted anxiety over the course of therapy both on a within-person level and on a between-person level.

Table 2. Metacognitions as predictor of anxiety and MCPI, TNF-α, and IL-1RA as moderators of metacognitions on anxiety

MC, Metacognitions. In brackets, 95% confidence intervals; Mcq_bp, Metacognitions between-person effects; Mcq_wp, Metacognitions within-person effects.

*p < 0.05. ***p < 0.001.

Cytokines as predictors of within-person- and between-person effects

The cytokines (MCP1, TNF-α, IL-1RA) did not moderate the within-person effects or between-person effects of metacognitions on anxiety (Table. 2). A higher level of metacognitions predicted a higher level of anxiety through treatment (between-person effects), but this relationship was not dependent on cytokines. A lower metacognition in 1 week predicted a lower anxiety the next week (within-person effect), but this relationship was also not dependent on cytokines.

Discussion

Multiple cross-sectional studies have investigated the relationship between immune markers and anxiety disorders; we tested the hypothesis that mean levels of cytokines may predict the outcome in comorbid anxiety disorders, and also whether the level of cytokines moderated the relationship between a therapy process (metacognitions) and anxiety. No such relationships were found, although the results replicated the finding that metacognitive beliefs predicted anxiety disorders as found in Johnson et al. (Reference Johnson, Hoffart, Nordahl, Ulvenes, Vrabel and Wampold2018). Several studies have used psychological construct to predict outcome in psychotherapy, but this is the first study to investigate whether cytokines affects the outcome for comorbid anxiety disorders.

The levels of circulating cytokines did not change significantly over time, even though the anxiety symptoms subsided. One reason for the lack of change might be that the sample consisted of comorbid and previously treatment-resistant anxiety disorder patients. It might be that these patients had a more chronically increased cytokine level (e.g. Toft et al., Reference Toft, Bramness, Lien, Abebe, Wampold, Tilden, Hestad and Neupane2018) due to the duration of their problems, hence not displaying a trajectory related to treatment outcome. Furthermore, some of the patients had PTSD, and it has previously been shown that patients with PTSD increase their cytokine level during treatment (Toft et al., Reference Toft, Bramness, Lien, Abebe, Wampold, Tilden, Hestad and Neupane2018). The results from the current study of treatment-resistant patients indicate that cytokine levels in patients with anxiety disorders in general do not change over the course of treatment, even if they report fewer symptoms.

Although TNF-α, MCP-1, and IL-1RA were unrelated to the outcome in the present sample with anxiety disorder, there might be subgroups of patients where cytokines are important. For example, immune dysregulation is especially found in persons with a late-onset anxiety disorder, suggesting the existence of a specific late-onset anxiety subtype with a distinct aetiology (Vogelzangs et al., Reference Vogelzangs, Beekman, de Jonge and Penninx2013). This subgroup could not be analysed in the current sample due to low sample size.

Metacognition predicted the outcome, both on a within-person level and a between-person level. At the within-person level, a decrease of a patient’s metacognitive beliefs in a given week was associated with reduced anxiety in the subsequent week. At the between-person level, the lower level of metacognitions predicted lower overall level of anxiety. Thus, the importance of metacognition as a key process in psychotherapy was corroborated (Wells, Reference Wells2009; Johnson et al., Reference Johnson, Hoffart, Nordahl, Ulvenes, Vrabel and Wampold2018). However, the level of cytokines did not moderate this relationship.

Limitations

This study has several strengths. First, the sample consisted of comorbid anxiety disorders, which is typical in clinical practice. Moreover, cytokines were measured three times and anxiety and metacognition weekly during treatment. Limitations regarding this study should be acknowledged. We cannot rule out cytokine of other classes that may have a bearing on metacognition and treatment outcome. Even if the samples were taken at the same time of the day and were handled swiftly in accordance with recommendations (Altara et al., Reference Altara, Manca, Hermans, Daskalopoulos, Brunner-La Rocca, Hermans, Struijker-Boudier and Blankesteijn2015; Aziz et al., Reference Aziz, Detels, Quint, Li, Gjertson and Butch2016), we had little control over the patients’ food intake (Zhou et al., Reference Zhou, Fragala, McElhaney and Kuchel2010) and body mass index. Due to sample size and power limitations, we could not meaningfully separate between MCT and CBT in the analysis, making possible interactions with treatment unknown.

Some somatic diagnoses are likely to exert a chronic inflammatory effect, for instance, hepatitis, cancer, HIV, or cardiovascular disease, but unfortunately, we did not acquire any somatic diagnostic information. Further, we did not run any tests for excluding patients with ongoing somatic infection, for instance, C-reactive protein analysis. Further, this study lacks a group of healthy controls. Comparing cytokine levels between healthy controls and patients could have provided interesting information about differences between mentally ill and healthy people. However, the aims of the study were met regardless of such limitations. The lack of significance for cytokines as a predictor or moderator may be due to a lack of power for testing moderation hypotheses, a problem associated with many psychotherapy studies (Cuijpers et al., Reference Cuijpers, Ebert, Acarturk, Andersson and Cristea2016). However, as Arntz et al. (Reference Arntz, Stupar-Rutenfrans, Bloo, van Dyck and Spinhoven2015) argue, predictors could be accumulated across different studies to build an empirical knowledge base. In future research, a larger sample of patients with anxiety disorders should be investigated, separating late or early onsets of anxiety disorders. Furthermore, it should be investigated whether the inflammatory levels depend on what kind of mechanisms are targeted in therapy (Lasselin et al. Reference Lasselin, Kemani, Kanstrup, Olsson, Axelsson, Andreasson, Lekander and Wicksell2016)

Conclusion

The clinical implication from this study is that variability in cytokines is not related to the outcome in the treatment of anxiety disorders.

Acknowledgement

We thank the individuals who participated in the study and the Department of Anxiety Disorder at Modum Bad for data collection.

Author contributions

SJ and AH designed the study. HT collected the data. SJ wrote the first draft. All authors (SJ, AH, HT, TT, SPN, LL, and JB) participated in analysis and interpretation of data and revised the manuscript. All authors approved the final version of the manuscript.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.

Conflict of interest

None.

Ethical standards

The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008.

References

Altara, R, Manca, M, Hermans, KC, Daskalopoulos, EP, Brunner-La Rocca, HP, Hermans, RJ, Struijker-Boudier, HA and Blankesteijn, MW (2015) Diurnal rhythms of serum and plasma cytokine profiles in healthy elderly individuals assessed using membrane based multiplexed immunoassay. Journal of Translational Medicine 13, 129.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Arntz, A, Stupar-Rutenfrans, S, Bloo, J, van Dyck, R and Spinhoven, P (2015) Prediction of treatment discontinuation and recovery from Borderline Personality Disorder: results from an RCT comparing Schema Therapy and Transference Focused Psychotherapy. Behaviour Research and Therapy 74, 6071.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Aziz, N, Detels, R, Quint, JJ, Li, Q, Gjertson, D and Butch, AW (2016) Stability of cytokines, chemokines and soluble activation markers in unprocessed blood stored under different conditions. Cytokine 84, 1724.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Beck, AT Epstein, N Brown, G Steer, RA (1988) An inventory for measuring clinical anxiety: psychometric properties. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology 56, 893897.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bohart, A and Wade, AG (2013) The client in psychotherapy. In Lambert, ML (ed), Bergin and Garfield’s Handbook of Psychotherapy and Behavior Change, 6th Edn. Hoboken, New Jersey, Wiley, pp 219257.Google Scholar
Cartwright-Hatton, S Wells, A (1997) Beliefs about Worry and Intrusions: The Meta-Cognitions Questionnaire and its Correlates. Journal of Anxiety Disorders 11(3), 279296.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Clark, DM and Wells, A (1995) A cognitive model of social phobia. Social Phobia: Diagnosis, Assessment, and Treatment 41, 68.Google Scholar
Cuijpers, P, Ebert, DD, Acarturk, C, Andersson, G and Cristea, IA (2016) Personalized psychotherapy for adult depression: a meta-analytic review. Behavior Therapy 47, 966980.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Curran, JP and Bauer, D (2011) The disaggregation of within-person and between-person effects in longitudinal models of change. Annual Review of Psychology 62, 583619.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Dalgard, C, Eidelman, O, Jozwik, C, Olsen, CH, Srivastava, M, Biswas, R, Eudy, Y, Rothwell, SW, Mueller, GP, Yuan, P, Drevets, WC, Manji, HK, Vythlingam, M, Charney, DS, Neumeister, A, Ursano, RJ, Jacobowitz, DM, Pollard, HB and Bonne, O (2017) The MCP-4/MCP-1 ratio in plasma is a candidate circadian biomarker for chronic post-traumatic stress disorder. Translational Psychiatry 7(2), e1025.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Engel, G (1977) The need for a new medical model: a challenge for biomedicine. Science 196, 129136.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fitzmaurice, G, Laird, N and Ware, J (2004) Applied Longitudinal Analysis . New York: John Wiley and Sons.Google Scholar
Flavell, JH (1979) Metacognition and cognitive monitoring: a new area of cognitive–developmental inquiry. American Psychologist 34(10), 906911.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foa, EB, Hembree, EA and Rothbaum, BO (2007) Prolonged Exposure Therapy for PTSD: Emotional Processing of Traumatic Experiences Therapist Guide (Treatments that Work) . USA: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fried, EI (2017) What are psychological constructs? On the nature and statistical modelling of emotions, intelligence, personality traits and mental disorders. Health Psychology Review 11, 130134.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Glaus, J, von Känel, R, Lasserre, AM, Strippoli, MF, Vandeleur, CL, Castelao, E, Gholam-Rezaee, M, Marangoni, C, Wagner, EN, Marques-Vidal, P, Waeber, G, Vollenweider, P, Preisig, M and Merikangas, KR (2018) The bidirectional relationship between anxiety disorders and circulating levels of inflammatory markers: results from a large longitudinal population-based study. Depression and Anxiety 35(4), 360371.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Goddard, E, Wingrove, J and Moran, P (2015) The impact of comorbid personality difficulties on response to IAPT treatment for depression and anxiety. Behaviour Research and Therapy 73(Suppl. C), 17.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hans, E and Hiller, W (2013) A meta-analysis of nonrandomized effectiveness studies on outpatient cognitive behavioral therapy for adult anxiety disorders. Clinical Psychology Review 33, 954964.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Harvey, AG, Watkins, ER, Mansell, W and Shafran, R (2004) Cognitive-Behavioral Processes Across Psychological Disorders: A Transdiagnostic Approach to Research and Treatment . Oxford: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoffart, A, Johnson, SU, Nordahl, HM and Wells, A (2018) Mechanisms of change in metacognitive and cognitive behavioral therapy for treatment-resistant anxiety: the role of metacognitive beliefs and coping strategies. Journal of Experimental Psychopathology 9.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoffart, A, Øktedalen, T, Svanøe, K, Hedley, LM and Sexton, H (2015) Predictors of short- and long-term avoidance in completers of inpatient group interventions for agoraphobia. Journal of Affective Disorders 181, 3340.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hoge, EA, Brandstetter, K, Moshier, S, Pollack, MH, Wong, KK and Simon, NM (2009). Broad spectrum of cytokine abnormalities in panic disorder and post-traumatic stress disorder. Depression and Anxiety 26, 447455.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hou, R, Garner, M, Holmes, C, Osmond, C, Teeling, J, Lau, L and Baldwin, DS (2017) Peripheral inflammatory cytokines and immune balance in Generalised Anxiety Disorder: case-controlled study. Brain, Behavior, and Immunity 62, 212218.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
IBM (2017) IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 25.0 . Armonk, NY: IBM Corp.Google Scholar
Insel, TR (2009) Translating scientific opportunity into public health impact: a strategic plan for research on mental illness. Archives of General Psychiatry 66(2), 128133.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Johnson, SU and Hoffart, A (2019) Moderators and predictors of outcome in metacognitive and cognitive behavioural therapy for co-morbid anxiety disorders. Clinical Psychology & Psychotherapy 26, 110.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Johnson, SU, Hoffart, A, Nordahl, HM, Ulvenes, PG, Vrabel, K and Wampold, BE (2018) Metacognition and cognition in inpatient MCT and CBT for comorbid anxiety disorders: a study of within-person effects. Journal of Counseling Psychology 65, 8697.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Johnson, SU, Hoffart, A, Nordahl, HM and Wampold, BE (2017) Metacognitive therapy versus disorder-specific CBT for comorbid anxiety disorders: a randomized controlled trial. Journal of Anxiety Disorders 50, 103112.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kessler, RC, Avenevoli, S, McLaughlin, KA, Green, JG, Lakoma, MD, Petukhova, M, Pine, DS, Sampson, NA, Zaslavsky, AM and Merikangas, KR (2012). Lifetime co-morbidity of DSM-IV disorders in the US National Comorbidity Survey Replication Adolescent Supplement (NCS-A). Psychological Medicine 42, 19972010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kessler, RC, Berglund, P, Demler, O, Jin, R and Walters, EE (2005). Lifetime prevalence and age-of-onset distributions of DSM-IV disorders in the national comorbidity survey replication. Archives of General Psychiatry 62, 593602.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kraemer, HC, Wilson, GT, Fairburn, CG and Agras, WS (2002) Mediators and moderators of treatment effects in randomized clinical trials. Archives of General Psychiatry 59, 877883.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kronfol, Z and Remick, DG (2000) Cytokines and the brain: implications for clinical psychiatry. American Journal of Psychiatry 157, 683694.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kwok, OM, Underhill, AT, Berry, JW, Luo, W, Elliott, TR and Yoon, M (2008) Analyzing longitudinal data with multilevel models: an example with individuals living with lower extremity intra-articular fractures. Rehabilitation Psychology 53, 370386.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lasselin, J, Kemani, MK, Kanstrup, M, Olsson, GL, Axelsson, J, Andreasson, A, Lekander, M and Wicksell, RK (2016) Low-grade inflammation may moderate the effect of behavioral treatment for chronic pain in adults. Journal of Behavioral Medicine 39(5), 916924.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Molenaar, PCM (2004) A manifesto on psychology as idiographic science: bringing the person back into scientific psychology, this time forever. Measurement: Interdisciplinary Research and Perspectives 2, 201218.Google Scholar
Moraes, LJ, Miranda, MB, Loures, LF, Mainieri, AG and Mármora, CHC (2018) A systematic review of psychoneuroimmunology-based interventions. Psychology, Health & Medicine 23(6), 635652.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Moron, JA, Zakharova, I, Ferrer, JV, Merrill, GA, Hope, B, Lafer, EM, Lin, CZ, Wang, JB, Javitch, JA, Galli, A and Shippenberg, TS (2003) Mitogen-activated protein kinase regulates dopamine transporter surface expression and dopamine transport capacity. Journal of Neuroscience 23, 84808488.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Raison, CL, Borisov, AS, Woolwine, BJ, Massung, B, Vogt, G and Miller, AH (2010) Interferon-alpha effects on diurnal hypothalamic–pituitary–adrenal axis activity: relationship with proinflammatory cytokines and behavior. Molecular Psychiatry 15, 535547.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Renna, ME, O’Toole, MS, Spaeth, PE, Lekander, M and Mennin, DS (2018) The association between anxiety, traumatic stress, and obsessive-compulsive disorders and chronic inflammation: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Depression and Anxiety 35(11), 10811094.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Schneider, RL, Arch, JJ and Wolitzky-Taylor, KB (2015) The state of personalized treatment for anxiety disorders: a systematic review of treatment moderators. Clinical Psychology Review 38, 3954.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Steer, RA Ranieri, WF Beck, AT Clark, DA (1993) Further evidence for the validity of the beck anxiety inventory with psychiatric outpatients. Journal of Anxiety Disorders 7(3), 195205.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Toft, H, Bramness, JG, Lien, L, Abebe, DS, Wampold, BE, Tilden, T, Hestad, K and Neupane, SP (2018) PTSD patients show increasing cytokine levels during treatment despite reduced psychological distress. Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment 14, 23672378.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Vogelzangs, N, Beekman, ATF, de Jonge, P and Penninx, BWJH (2013) Anxiety disorders and inflammation in a large adult cohort. Translational Psychiatry 3, e249.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wang, L and Maxwell, SE (2015) On disaggregating between-person and within-person effects with longitudinal data using multilevel models. Psychological Methods 20, 6383.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wells, A (1997) Cognitive Therapy of Anxiety Disorders: A Practice Manual and Conceptual Guide . Chichester, UK: Wiley.Google Scholar
Wells, A (2009) Metacognitive Therapy for Anxiety and Depression . New York: The Guilford Press.Google Scholar
Wells, A Cartwright-Hatton, S (2004) A short form of the metacognitions questionnaire: properties of the MCQ-30. Behaviour Research and Therapy 42 (4), 385396.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zhou, X, Fragala, MS, McElhaney, JE and Kuchel, GA (2010) Conceptual and methodological issues relevant to cytokine and inflammatory marker measurements in clinical research. Current Opinion in Clinical Nutrition and Metabolic Care 13(5), 541547.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Figure 0

Table 1. TNF-α, MCP1, and IL-1RA as predictors of anxiety among patients undergoing an inpatient treatment for treatment-resistant anxiety disorders

Figure 1

Table 2. Metacognitions as predictor of anxiety and MCPI, TNF-α, and IL-1RA as moderators of metacognitions on anxiety