Post-stroke Depression Clinical Trial
Official title:
Investigation of the Efficacy of Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) as an add-on Therapy in Patients With Post-stroke Depression (PSD)
About 50% of all stroke patients develop post-stroke depression (PSD). A meta-analysis has shown that rTMS treatment can reduce depressive symptoms in PSD patients. In addition to rTMS alone for the improvement of depression, the question arises as to whether a combination therapy of rTMS plus antidepressant medication can achieve a stronger or longer-term effect in PSD patients. Unfortunately, there are currently no trials of combination therapy with rTMS and drug therapy in PSD patients. Therefore, this study will investigate whether combination therapy of antidepressant and rTMS can provide additional relief of depressive symptoms compared to antidepressant and sham rTMS therapy. It is assumed that the additional active rTMS achieves a faster normalization of affect and drive than with a sham rTMS, so that the patients benefit from neurorehabilitation measures earlier and more sustainably.
Depression is one of the most common forms of mental illness. According to studies by the
World Health Organization (WHO), the World Bank and the European Brain Council [1],
depression is the leading disease in Europe and Germany since the early 1990s.
Besides drug or psychotherapeutic treatment, repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation
(rTMS) is currently being used as a new non-invasive therapy for depression. The rTMS applies
an electromagnetic coil to the patient's head, creating a magnetic field. Impulses emanating
from the coil trigger a multitude of reactions at the point of stimulation which, for
example, can alter the metabolism, lead to a release of neurotransmitters and a change in
gene expression [2-3]. Pulses with a frequency ≤1Hz lead to a reduction of the excitability
of the neurons and to an inhibition of cortical activity. In contrast, frequencies ≥5 Hz
increase the excitability of neurons and increase cortical activity [4-5].
A large number of studies has already shown that rTMS in depressive patients leads to an
improvement in depressive symptoms and has been shown to have an antidepressant effect [6].
In the United States, rTMS has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) since
2008 as a treatment for patients with depression who do not respond to antidepressant drug
therapy. The FDA recommends a high-frequency (10Hz) rTMS on the left dorsolateral prefrontal
cortex (DLPFC) five days a week for four to six weeks [7]. The stimulation of the DLPFC is
based on the valence hypothesis that the right hemisphere specializes in the processing of
negative emotions and the left hemisphere is specialized in the processing of positive
emotions [8] and the DLPFC controls emotional processing [9-10]. Activation of the left DLPFC
is therefore associated with the processing of positive emotions [11].
About 50% of all stroke patients develop post-stroke depression (PSD) [12]. A meta-analysis
has shown that rTMS treatment can reduce depressive symptoms in PSD patients [13]. In
addition to rTMS alone, it is unkown if a combination therapy of rTMS plus antidepressant
medication can achieve a stronger or longer-term antidepressive effect in PSD patients.
Unfortunately, there are currently no trials of combination therapy with rTMS and drug
therapy in PSD patients. Previous studies with depressive patients provide both results that
suggest an additional effect of combination therapy [14-19] and results that found no
difference between drug-only therapy and combination with rTMS [20-24]. The comparability of
the studies is difficult due to the heterogeneity of the study designs. However, it is
noticeable that a younger age (<50 years), an intervention duration of rTMS of four weeks, a
higher dose of the antidepressant, an inter-train interval (interval between the trains) of
<30 seconds and a total number of pulses of <1250 per day, associated with positive effects.
However, further studies are needed that address the issue of an additional effect of
combination therapy. In addition, a neurological disease was considered to be an exclusion
criterion in some of the studies performed [14-15; 20; 23]. It is therefore questionable
whether the study results can be transferred to PSD patients.
Therefore, this study will investigate whether combination therapy of antidepressant and rTMS
can provide additional relief of depressive symptoms compared to antidepressant and sham rTMS
therapy. It is assumed that the additional active rTMS achieves a faster normalization of
affect and drive than with a sham rTMS, so that the patients benefit from neurorehabilitation
measures earlier and more sustainably.
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