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Targeting Specific Brain Networks to Treat Specific Symptoms in Depression

Targeting Specific Brain Networks to Treat Specific Symptoms in Depression

Recruiting
18-65 years
All
Phase N/A

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Overview

Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is a way of non-invasively stimulating specific brain networks and is an established treatment for Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). This proposal will reveal network mechanisms of the therapeutic effects of rTMS by investigating how stimulating each network specifically changes network connectivity and behavior. This will be done in a highly individualized manner in depressed and healthy patients, leading to more effective and more individualized treatments for depression.

Description

Network models are increasingly invoked to characterize the neurobiological underpinnings of mental illnesses. Dysfunction within specific circuits promotes the formation of specific symptoms. This suggests an opportunity to treat specific symptoms by modulating specific circuits. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is capable of circuit-specific neuromodulation. It is also an established treatment for Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). Clinical experience suggests that rTMS treats different symptom constructs by stimulating different circuits. However, there remains a critical lack of mechanistic evidence to support putative network mechanisms of rTMS, limiting its ability to treat patients with more personalized and optimized approaches. This mechanistic proposal will first use resting-state functional connectivity (FC) MRI and customized analytic pipelines to characterize functional network topography in healthy and depressed individuals at high resolution.This data will be used to derive rTMS targets functionally situated in discrete prefrontal networks (e.g., control, default, salience, limbic/reward). Next, patients will take part in a within-subject design in which they undergo rTMS to each target on separate days. Each target will be stimulated four times on a given day, and after each stimulation changes will be measured with: (1) REST-BOLD MRI (to assess FC changes), (2) TASK-BOLD MRI (to assess changes in BOLD activation on paradigms validated to test RDoC constructs), (3) state-based questionnaires or (4) neuropsychological tests. This work will facilitate individualized neuromodulation approaches based on network topography. This will pollinate large-scale clinical trials assessing the effects of differential circuit modulation. It will also illuminate circuit-construct relationships across neuropsychiatric disorders.

Eligibility

Inclusion Criteria for healthy participants:

  • 18-65 years of age
  • Capacity to provide informed consent form to participate in the study

Inclusion Criteria for participants with Major Depressive Disorder (MDD):

  • 18-65 years of age
  • Capacity to provide informed consent form to participate in the study
  • Currently in a major depressive episode. Comorbid anxiety disorders and personality disorders will be allowed provided that MDD is the primary diagnosis.

Exclusion Criteria for all participants:

  • Meeting criteria, in the past or currently, for bipolar affective disorder, hypomania or mania.
  • Meeting criteria, in the past or currently, for a primary psychotic disorder (e.g., schizophrenia).
  • Neurological conditions with known structural brain lesions, e.g., intracranial masses, multiple sclerosis.
  • Any personal history of seizures or a family history of epilepsy in a first-degree relative.
  • Metal in the body that is ferromagnetic or metallic injury to the eyes.
  • Implanted pacemakers, medication pumps, vagal stimulators, deep brain stimulators, or ventriculoperitoneal shunts, etc.
  • Substance abuse or dependence that is current and active within the last six months, as indicated by self-report (e.g., heroin, cocaine, methamphetamines).
  • Inability to meet the safety criteria for MRI scanning for any other reason.
  • Severe or unstable medical illness.
  • Currently pregnant, as assessed with urine pregnancy test in women of childbearing age.

Study details
    Major Depressive Disorder

NCT05523817

Massachusetts General Hospital

25 May 2024

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