MARCO ISLAND, FLA. — Semistructured group therapy improves mood state in HIV-positive men, which improves cortisol levels and immune function and thereby reduces viral load, Karl Goodkin, M.D., said at the annual meeting of the Academy of Psychosomatic Medicine.
Bereavement outside of HIV has long been known to be associated with immunosuppression. Bereavement is also associated with increased mortality risk for surviving partners. The risk increases 40% for the first 6 months and 10-fold in the first year, the same time frame as observed decrements in the immune system, said Dr. Goodkin, who is professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences, neurology, and psychology at the University of Miami.
In a randomized controlled trial, Dr. Goodkin and his colleagues compared the intervention with usual care in HIV-positive and HIV-negative gay men who had experienced a loss in the previous 6 months.
Although the effects of grief were similar, the two-tier group intervention decreased overall psychological stress—which improved mood and immune measures, including CD4 counts and viral loads—and reduced physician health visits, compared with the usual-care control group, he said.
Participants attended a 90-minute session once weekly for 10 weeks. The groups consisted of 6–10 attendees and two professional coleaders. Enrollment was ongoing throughout the study. The first tier of the intervention fostered grief resolution; the second tier fostered stressor management, including identification of stressor impact and maladaptive behaviors.
In addition to specific grief-related topics for each session, including past experiences of personal loss, reactions to surviving and implications for one's spirituality and mortality, non-bereavement-related stressor management was planned as a major focus of this unique group intervention, he said.
The usual-care group received any medical and psychosocial care that they had begun prior to initial assessment (if used consistently for 1 month or longer). Furthermore, they received four telephone calls during the 10-week intervention period to assess their clinical status. The total time for these calls was limited to 90 minutes over the 10-week period. Study staff avoided any therapeutic interactions during these calls and maintained a log documenting call content.
In the study, 166 participants (97 HIV-positive and 69 HIV-negative) completed the intervention or community usual-care group conditions.
Participants were primarily in their late 30s, employed, and college educated. More than one-third were members of an ethnic minority.
The Stressor-Support-Coping model appears to have utility “with or without bereavement. We found increase in positive life events in HIV-positive men after the intervention. Social support increased in the intervention group and declined in controls,” Dr. Goodkin noted.
The investigators' theoretical model also predicts specific psychosocial treatment needs. If a person has a high life-stressor burden, stressor management would help. If a person has low social support, a social support group would be beneficial. Finally, if a participant demonstrated high passive maladaptive coping or low active coping, coping skills enhancement training would be helpful.
Evidence from the study suggests that increased serum cortisol from stress is associated with decreases in lymphocyte proliferation in response to the artificial stimulant phytohemagglutinin in HIV-positive men and women. This is a functional measure of immunity that tends to decrease before CD4 count, Dr. Goodkin said.
The intervention decreased overall psychological distress in HIV-negative men, compared with controls, according to scores on the Distress-Grief Composite Measure. However, the decreases in grief, specifically, were less prominent than those for distress or the composite of the two measures for both the HIV-positive and -negative men.
In terms of immune effects, HIV-positive people had a true increase in their lymphocyte proliferation response up to 2 years, and the intervention provided HIV-positive participants with a buffer against decreases in CD4 levels seen in controls. The decrement among HIV-positive participants was smaller, compared with HIV-negative groups, where there was a larger spread, Dr. Goodkin explained.
The researchers also looked for an effect at the physical health level. “There was a transition of the neuroendocrine changes to the immune level and, in turn, to the physical health level,” he pointed out.
All participants were asked to self-report physician health care visits in the 6 months prior to assessment; among HIV-positive participants, there was an increase in the control group that was not as great in the intervention group. Researchers found that the same pattern held true among HIV-negative individuals. There was increased health care utilization among control participants and a decrease among the intervention group.
“We did not anticipate this. It indicated that this type of intervention is not only effective for improving the health of HIV-positive people but possibly for the entire population of people who lose a loved one,” he said.