Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT03993509

Effect of rTMS on Anxiety

Examining the Mechanisms of Anxiety Regulation Using a Novel, Sham-controlled, fMRI-guided rTMS Protocol and a Translational Laboratory Model of Anxiety

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
68 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Pennsylvania · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 50 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Given the overall lack of treatment adherence/efficacy, side effects of drugs, and the substantial burden of anxiety disorders on the individual and on the national healthcare system, there is a critical need for mechanistic research into the CNS mechanisms that underlie these disorders. Accordingly, the objective of this grant is to use noninvasive neuromodulation to causally identify the key neural mechanisms that mediate the cognitive symptoms of anxiety. This project is relevant to public health because it has the potential to lead to novel repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation treatments for pathological anxiety.

Detailed description

Although extensive research has explored the involvement of subcortical structures in arousal, arousal symptoms are only one facet of the symptom profile shared across anxiety disorders. Much less is known about the cognitive symptoms (i.e. difficulty concentrating) experienced by anxiety patients. Accordingly, there is a critical need for mechanistic research into the CNS mechanisms that mediate the cognitive symptoms experienced by anxiety patients. Without such research, treatment development for these disorders will continue to make slow progress. The objective of this application is to determine the key neural mechanisms that mediate the cognitive symptoms of anxiety. The central hypothesis is that the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) regulates emotion through top-down inhibition of emotion-related regions. The approach will be to use repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) to study the effect of right dlPFC activity on objective and subjective measures of induced anxiety, anxiety-related working memory deficits (WM), and TMS-evoked blood oxygenation-level dependent (BOLD) responses during simultaneous TMS/fMRI (i.e. target engagement). The rationale for this approach is that by experimentally manipulating right dlPFC activity using rTMS, this research will be able to causally demonstrate involvement of this region in anxiety regulation, which could translate to future targeted rTMS treatments for anxiety. The first aim will be to determine the effect of a 1-week course of rTMS treatment (1 Hz vs. 10 Hz; right dlPFC target) on anxiety using the threat of unpredictable shock paradigm. The second aim will be to determine the effect of a 1-week course of rTMS treatment (1 Hz vs. 10 Hz; right dlPFC target) on anxiety-related WM-deficits using the Sternberg WM paradigm during threat of shock. The third aim will be to demonstrate target engagement by measuring BOLD responses evoked by TMS pulses to the right dlPFC during threat of shock. The work is innovative because it will combine advanced neuromodulatory techniques (fMRI guidance, electric-field modelling, neuronavigation, active-sham control) with a translational threat of shock paradigm. PUBLIC HEALTH RELEVANCE: Once completed, this research should yield direct evidence for a causal role of the right dlPFC in anxiety regulation, complete with evidence of target engagement, and a novel application to anxiety.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DEVICErTMS to the right dlPFCA Magventure MagPro 100X stimulator with a B65 active/placebo figure-8 coil will be used. The TMS coil will be placed on the head over the target. rTMS intensity will be 100% of the motor threshold (MT), adjusted for field strength difference at motor cortex and target cortex using the individual E-field model. Subjects will receive 3000 pulses/session.

Timeline

Start date
2019-10-30
Primary completion
2022-11-23
Completion
2022-11-23
First posted
2019-06-20
Last updated
2025-01-23
Results posted
2025-01-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Regulatory

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT03993509. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.