Sham‐controlled randomized multicentre trial of transcranial direct current stimulation for prolonged disorders of consciousness

Author:

Thibaut Aurore1ORCID,Fregni Felipe2,Estraneo Anna3,Fiorenza Salvatore3,Noe Enrique4,Llorens Roberto45ORCID,Ferri Joan4,Formisano Rita6ORCID,Morone Giovanni6ORCID,Bender Andreas78,Rosenfelder Martin79,Lamberti Gianfranco10,Kodratyeva Ekaterina11,Kondratyev Sergey11,Legostaeva Liudmila12,Suponeva Natalia12,Krewer Carmen1314,Müller Friedemann13,Dardenne Nadia15,Jedidi Haroun16,Laureys Steven117,Gosseries Olivia1,Lejeune Nicolas118,Martens Géraldine1,

Affiliation:

1. Coma Science Group, GIGA‐Consciousness, Centre du Cerveau2 University and University Hospital of Liège Liège Belgium

2. Neuromodulation Lab, Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Neurorehabilitation Department, Scientific Institute for Research and Health Care Don Carlo Gnocchi Foundation Sant'Angelo dei Lombardi, Florence Italy

4. IRENEA Instituto de Rehabilitación Neurológica Fundación Hospitales Vithas Valéncia Spain

5. Neurorehabilitation and Brain Research Group, Instituto Universitario de Investigación en Tecnología Centrada en el Ser Humano Universitat Politècnica de València Valencia Spain

6. Santa Lucia Foundation Neurorehabilitation and Scientific Institute for Research Rome Italy

7. Therapiezentrum Burgau Burgau Germany

8. Department of Neurology Ludwig‐Maximilians University of Munich Munich Germany

9. Clinical and Biological Psychology, Institute of Psychology and Education Ulm University Ulm Germany

10. Neurorehabilitation Department AUSL Piacenza ‐ University of Parma Piacenza Italy

11. Almazov National Medical Research Center Saint‐Petersburg Russia

12. Research Center of Neurology Moscow Russia

13. Department for Neurology, Research Group Schoen Clinic Bad Aibling Bad Aibling Germany

14. Chair of Human Movement Science, Department of Sports and Health Sciences Technical University of Munich Munich Germany

15. University and Hospital Biostatistics Center (B‐STAT), Faculty of Medicine University of Liège Liège Belgium

16. ISoSL, Hopital Valdor Liège Belgium

17. Joint International Research Unit on Consciousness, CERVO Brain Research Centre CIUSS, University Laval Quebec Canada

18. Centre Hospitalier Neurologique William Lennox Ottignies‐Louvain‐la‐Neuve Belgium

Abstract

AbstractBackground and purposeTranscranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) has been shown to improve signs of consciousness in a subset of patients with disorders of consciousness (DoC). However, no multicentre study confirmed its efficacy when applied during rehabilitation. In this randomized controlled double‐blind study, the effects of tDCS whilst patients were in rehabilitation were tested at the group level and according to their diagnosis and aetiology to better target DoC patients who might repond to tDCS.MethodsPatients received 2 mA tDCS or sham applied over the left prefrontal cortex for 4 weeks. Behavioural assessments were performed weekly and up to 3 months’ follow‐up. Analyses were conducted at the group and subgroup levels based on the diagnosis (minimally conscious state [MCS] and unresponsive wakefulness syndrome) and the aetiology (traumatic or non‐traumatic). Interim analyses were planned to continue or stop the trial.ResultsThe trial was stopped for futility when 62 patients from 10 centres were enrolled (44 ± 14 years, 37 ± 24.5 weeks post‐injury, 18 women, 32 MCS, 39 non‐traumatic). Whilst, at the group level, no treatment effect was found, the subgroup analyses at 3 months’ follow‐up revealed a significant improvement for patients in MCS and with traumatic aetiology.ConclusionsTranscranial direct current stimulation during rehabilitation does not seem to enhance patients' recovery. However, diagnosis and aetiology appear to be important factors leading to a response to the treatment. These findings bring novel insights into possible cortical plasticity changes in DoC patients given these differential results according to the subgroups of patients.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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