Theta-burst rTMS in schizophrenia to ameliorate negative and cognitive symptoms: study protocol for a double-blind, sham-controlled, randomized clinical trial

Author:

Gábor Csukly1ORCID,Orbán-Szigeti Boglárka1,Suri Karolin2,Zsigmond Réka3,Hermán Levente3,Simon Viktória3,Kabaji Anita3,Bata Barnabás3,Hársfalvi Péter4,Vass Edit3,Csibri Éva3,Farkas Kinga3,Réthelyi János3

Affiliation:

1. Semmelweis University: Semmelweis Egyetem

2. Budapest University of Technology and Economics: Budapesti Muszaki es Gazdasagtudomanyi Egyetem

3. Semmelweis University of Medicine: Semmelweis Egyetem

4. University of Veterinary Medicine Budapest

Abstract

AbstractBackground Treatment effects of conventional approaches with antipsychotics or psychosocial interventions are limited when it comes to reducing negative and cognitive symptoms in schizophrenia. While there is emerging clinical evidence that new, augmented protocols based on theta-burst stimulation can increase rTMS efficacy dramatically in depression, data on similar augmented therapies are limited in schizophrenia. The different patterns of network impairments in subjects may underlie that some but not all patients responded to given stimulation locations. Methods Therefore, we propose an augmented theta-burst stimulation protocol in schizophrenia by stimulating both locations connected to negative symptoms: (1) the left Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex (DLPFC), and (2) the vermis of the cerebellum. Ninety subjects with schizophrenia presenting negative symptoms and aging between 18–55 years will be randomized to active and sham stimulation in a 1:1 ratio. The TBS parameters we adopted follow the standard TBS protocols, with 3-pulse 50-Hz bursts given every 200 ms (at 5 Hz) and an intensity of 100% active motor threshold. We plan to deliver 1800 stimuli to the left DLPFC and 1800 stimuli to the vermis daily in two 9.5-minute blocks for four weeks. The primary endpoint is the change in negative symptom severity measured by the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS). Secondary efficacy endpoints are changes in cognitive flexibility, executive functioning, short-term memory, social cognition, and facial emotion recognition. The safety outcome is the number of serious adverse events. Discussion This is a double-blind, sham-controlled, randomized medical device study to assess the efficacy and safety of an augmented theta-burst rTMS treatment in schizophrenia. We hypothesize that social cognition and negative symptoms of patients on active therapy will improve significantly compared to patients on sham treatment. Trial registration The study protocol is registered at 'clinicaltrials.gov 'with the following ID: NCT05100888. All items from the World Health Organization Trial Registration Data Set are registered. Initial release: 10/19/2021.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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