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Motor cortex repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation in major depressive disorder - A preliminary randomized controlled clinical trial.

Authors :
Hu, Yu-Ting
Hu, Xi-Wen
Han, Jin-Fang
Zhang, Jian-Feng
Wang, Ying-Ying
Wolff, Annemarie
Tremblay, Sara
Hirjak, Dusan
Tan, Zhong-Lin
Northoff, Georg
Source :
Journal of Affective Disorders. Jan2024, Vol. 344, p169-175. 7p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) at left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (lDLPFC) is commonly used in major depressive disorder (MDD), even though its therapeutic efficacy is limited. Given that many MDD patients show psychomotor retardation, we aim to examine whether the left motor cortex (lMC) as a novel rTMS target would provide effective and well-tolerated treatment as being comparable to lDLPFC-rTMS. In this prospective double-blind randomized single-center study, 131 MDD patients were randomly assigned to the lDLPFC or lMC group and were treated with 10 Hz rTMS (90 % motor threshold) applied twice daily for 4000 pulses continuously over five days. The primary endpoint was the Hamilton Depression Scale (HAMD) total score change after treatment. After the five-day rTMS treatment, there was no significant difference in both HAMD reduction rate (lDLPFC 59.3 % ± 20.4 %, lMC 51.3 % ± 26.3 %, P = 0.10) and adverse effects (P = 0.79) between 48 (73.8 %) lMC subjects and 51 (77.3 %) lDLPFC subjects. Furthermore, the lMC study group showed stable HAMD scores at follow-up compared to their endpoint scores (P = 0.08). Sham-control group was not included and the sample size was small. Therefore, our results should be seen as exploratory and preliminary. The preliminary good therapeutic response, comparability, and tolerability of lMC-rTMS suggest lMC a potential and more easily accessible rTMS target. Together, our findings raise the possibility of symptom-specific rTMS in motor cortex (psychomotor retardation) or lDLPFC (cognitive deficits). This warrants larger clinical trials of rTMS in MDD with symptom-specific stimulation targets. • lMC-rTMS yields a good therapeutic response in MDD patients. • lMC-rTMS shows non-inferior therapeutic effects compared to lDLPFC-rTMS. • lMC-rTMS is well tolerated showing no major side effects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01650327
Volume :
344
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
173341772
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2023.10.058