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Clinical Trials/NCT02916810
NCT02916810
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Alternative Stimulation Mode and Location for Auditory Hallucination Neuromodulation Treatment

The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston1 site in 1 country140 target enrollmentFebruary 1, 2025

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Not specified
Conditions
Schizophrenia and Related Disorders
Sponsor
The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston
Enrollment
140
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Brain connectivity as indicated by resting state functional connectivity value as assessed by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)
Status
Recruiting
Last Updated
9 months ago

Overview

Brief Summary

The purpose of the study is to test the hypothesis that functionally navigated repetitive TMS stimulations to the prefrontal cortex (PFC) modulate aberrant cortical electrical activities at PFC circuitry. The TMS location of the PFC site will be individually localized by the symptom-related functional connectivity between PFC and symptom related areas (such as the auditory and language processing cortex). The investigators predict that such modulation will correct abnormal activities in patients with schizophrenia, reduce symptoms, especially auditory hallucination, and improve working memory/sustained attention performance.

Detailed Description

Neuroimaging studies suggest that aberrant activities at specific brain regions such as sensory areas and language-related areas are related to psychosis symptoms including auditory and visual hallucination, delusion, and thought disorders. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) provides a non-invasive means for altering brain electrical neural activity. TMS has been approved by FDA for treatment of depression. Other applications have not been approved but it has been used in a wide range of clinical research especially in neurology and psychiatry. Among psychotic symptoms, there are preliminary significant improvement in treatments of auditory hallucination using TMS with small samples, but those treatments are not robust in larger samples. The high inter-subject variability limits the efficacy of TMS treatment in schizophrenia patients. The investigators aim to develop a TMS treatment method with a fMRI-defined treatment target area, where the TMS target is individually identified to maximize the TMS effects. The identification method uses both the anatomical character and its functional relationship with auditory hallucination and other psychosis symptoms. If the current target-identification successfully identified effective TMS target individually, the treatment efficacy will be significant improved and more patients will benefit from TMS treatment.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
February 1, 2025
End Date
July 1, 2029
Last Updated
9 months ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Principal Investigator
Principal Investigator

Xiaoming Du

Assistant Professsor

The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Male and female ages between ages 18-50 years
  • Ability to give written informed consent (age 18 or above)
  • Diagnosed with schizophrenia-spectrum disorder and Evaluation to Sign Consent (ESC) above
  • Is currently under the care of a licensed primary care provider or mental healthcare provider (e.g., psychiatrist, psychologist, nurse practitioner, licensed clinical social worker).
  • Have auditory hallucinations despite treated by two or more antipsychotics including one atypical antipsychotic medication.
  • Agrees to: (a) provide written permission, as requested, to allow any and all forms of communication between the investigators and study staff and any health care provider who currently provides and/or has provided service to the subject within two years of study enrollment; and (b) provide the names and verifiable contact information (name, email and mailing address, mobile and land-line phone number, as applicable) of at least two reliable persons ≥ age 22, who reside within a 30-minute drive of the subject's residence, and whom the research staff is at liberty to contact, as deemed necessary, for the duration of study participation.

Exclusion Criteria

  • Persons with a first-degree relative with inherited epilepsy, seizure disorder, or seizures or persons who answer "yes" to any of the parts (A. - G.) of Question 3 of an epilepsy screening questionnaire.
  • Taking \> 400 mg clozapine/day and not on anti-seizure medication(s) with sufficient dose.
  • Failed TMS screening questionnaire.
  • Significant alcohol or other drug use (substance abuse within 1 month or substance dependence history within 6 months and having substance usage within 1 month) other than nicotine or marijuana dependence
  • Any major medical illnesses that may affect normal brain functioning. Examples of these conditions include, but not limited to, stroke, CNS infection or tumor, other significant brain neurological conditions.
  • Cardiac pacemakers, implanted medication pumps, intracardiac lines, or acute, unstable cardiac disease, with intracranial implants (e.g. aneurysm clips, shunts, stimulators, cochlear implants, or electrodes) or any other metal object within or near the head, excluding the mouth, that cannot be safely removed.
  • History of head injury with loss of consciousness over 10 minutes; history of brain surgery
  • Cannot refrain from using alcohol and/or marijuana 24 hours or more prior to experiments.
  • Woman who is pregnant (child-bearing potential but not on contraceptive and missing menstrual period; or by self-report; or by positive pregnancy test) or has had unprotected sexual intercourse without birth control in the last 4 weeks.
  • Moderate-High Risk of suicide according to the Columbia - Suicide Severity Rating Scale (C-SSRS) Screen Version - Recent (i.e. answers YES to Question 3 and NO to Question 6 (Moderate risk); or answers YES to Questions 4, 5, or 6 (High risk) or in the clinical judgement of the investigator or the study psychiatrist.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Brain connectivity as indicated by resting state functional connectivity value as assessed by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI)

Time Frame: baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline)

Functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) is used to evaluate the brain activities that are corresponding to the treatment effect on auditory hallucination.

Secondary Outcomes

  • Electrophysiological responses as indicated by mismatch negativity amplitudes from electroencephalography recording (EEG)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Cognitive insight as assessed by the Beck Cognitive Insight Scale (BCIS)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Depression as assessed by the Beck Depression Inventory measures the severity of depression(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Delusion as assessed by the Peters Delusions Inventory (conviction score)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Delusion as assessed by the Peters Delusions Inventory (yes/no score)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Delusion as assessed by the Peters Delusions Inventory (pre-occupation score)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Delusion as assessed by the Peters Delusions Inventory (distress score)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Electrophysiological responses as indicated by steady-state auditory evoked potentials from electroencephalography recording (EEG)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Auditory hallucinations as assessed by Psychotic Symptom Rating Scale (PSYRATS)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Negative symptoms as assessed by Brief Negative Symptom Scale (BNSS)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Depression as assessed by the Calgary Depression Scale for Schizophrenia (CDSS)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Perception as assessed by the Perception State and Trait Scales (State score)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))
  • Perception as assessed by the Perception State and Trait Scales (Trait score)(baseline, intermittent (before or at the beginning of treatment visit 11, about 2 weeks after baseline), end of acute treatment (after treatment visit 20, about 4 weeks after baseline))

Study Sites (1)

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