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Dorsomedial Prefrontal Neuromodulation in Treatment-resistant Depression

Dorsomedial Prefrontal Neuromodulation in Treatment-resistant Depression

Recruiting
21-70 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a common and troublesome disorder, with high risk of physical and psychiatric comorbidity. At least one-third of patients could not achieve a response after several antidepressant trials, so-called treatment-refractory depression (TRD). The high-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) or intermittent theta-burst stimulation (iTBS) at left-sided dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) have a response rate of 40-60%. Obviously, not all TRD patients achieve the remitted state after treatment with antidepressants or DLPFC-rTMS, which may result from the heterogeneity of MDD. More and more evidence, such as brain lesion studies, deep brain stimulation, open-labeled rTMS case series, and neuroimaging studies, suggests that dorsomedial prefrontal cortex (DMPFC) might play a more central role in the pathophysiology of major depression. The DMPFC demonstrated as a "dorsal nexus" phenomenon in depression, which means a unique brain region where cortical networks for affect regulation, default mode control and cognitive control coverage in depressed subjects but not in healthy persons. In addition, another meta-analysis of resting-state functional MRI (fMRI) demonstrated the abnormal functional connectivity from DMPFC. These abnormalities of networks were highly associated with several depressive symptoms such as anhedonia, emotional regulation, somatic markers, rumination, self-reflection, poor attention and poor decision-making. However, only a handful of studies investigated the brain stimulation targeting DMPFC and the further changes in brain functional connectivity. The clinical efficacy and the fMRI changes of prolonged intermittent theta-burst stimulation (piTBS) and 20Hz- rTMS targeting bilateral DMPFC were investigated, and the predictive value of baseline networks by fMRI for antidepressant responses was also assessed to find a reliable approach to gauge treatment response prospectively.

Description

Several open label studies showed the preliminary clinical efficacy of DMPFC stimulation, but there was no randomized sham-control trial to confirm the clinical efficacy in Asian people. In addition, there were also few fMRI studies to express the brain circuit changes after DMPFC stimulation. The clinical efficacy and the fMRI changes of prolonged intermittent theta-burst stimulation (piTBS) and 20Hz- rTMS targeting bilateral DMPFC were investigated, and the predictive value of baseline networks by fMRI for antidepressant responses was also assessed to find a reliable approach to gauge treatment response prospectively. All patients with TRD who failed at least one antidepressant trial are randomized to three groups (Group-A: piTBS treatment; Group-B: 20Hz-rTMS treatment; Group-C: sham treatment). Before and after 20 sessions targeting bilateral DMPFC over ten days, structural and functional magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is arranged for each participant. In addition, pre- and post-treatment fMRI data are analyzed for each patient to investigate the networks and local brain activity changes between groups.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria:

  1. Diagnosed with a recurrent major depressive disorder based on Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) criteria. Diagnoses were established after taking a thorough medical history and conducting a semistructured interview by administering the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI);
  2. Recruited participants had to have a Clinical Global Impression - Severity score of at least four and a total score of at least 18 on the 17-items Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS-17);
  3. Patients were qualified if they failed to respond to at least one adequate antidepressant treatment in their current episode (for example, failed to achieve 50% improvement of depression to an equivalent daily dose of 10 to 20 mg of escitalopram for at least eight weeks);
  4. Stabilized treatment: keeping current antidepressant drug treatment, including the dose at least for four weeks before this trial and during the trial period; keep the stabilized psychotherapy at least for three months and no anticipated adjustment of types of psychotherapy and the frequency.

Exclusion Criteria:

  1. Patients with Bipolar I and II disorder, schizophrenia, organic brain syndromes, or other major physical illnesses;
  2. Patients who had received or will receive brain surgery or receive brain metal implantation (for example, neurostimulator) or received cardiac pacemakers;
  3. Patients who had strong suicidal ideation within one week ( 3 points for third item of HDRS-suicidality)
  4. Patients who had abnormal finding in the brain ( for example, brain tumor or arteriovenous malformation) or neurological disease ( for example, history of meningitis, encephalitis, epilepsy, stroke or neurodegenerative disease)
  5. Pregnancy;
  6. Patients who have metal implantation in the body, including cochlear implant, prosthetic heart valve, neurostimulator, clips.. etc
  7. Patients who also failed to respond after receiving one completed course of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) treatment or left dorsolateral prefrontal brain stimulation (adequate dose and adequate duration of ECT or DLPFC-rTMS and had followed up to monitor the efficacy at least for three months)
  8. Claustrophobia for MRI screening;
  9. Those who cannot follow the protocols, and did not sign informed consent proved by the institutional review board (IRB)

Study details
    Treatment-resistant Depression
    Major Depressive Disorder

NCT05422417

Taipei Veterans General Hospital, Taiwan

28 January 2024

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