Schizophrenia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Improving Visual Hallucinations by Targeting the Visual Cortex With Electrical Stimulation: A Feasibility Study
Verified date | April 2023 |
Source | Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The visual system has increasingly been recognized as an important site of injury in patients with schizophrenia and other psychoses. Visual system alterations manifest as visual perceptual aberrations, deficits in visual processing, and visual hallucinations. These visual symptoms are associated with worse symptoms, poorer outcome and resistance to treatment. A recent study using brain lesion mapping of visual hallucinations and identified a causal location in the part of the brain that processes visual information (visual cortex). The association between visual cortex activation and visual hallucinations suggests that this region could be targeted using noninvasive brain stimulation. Two case studies have found that brain stimulation to the visual cortex improved visual hallucinations in treatment resistant patients with psychosis. While promising it is unclear whether these symptom reductions resulted from activity changes in the visual cortex or not. Here we aim to answer the question whether noninvasive brain stimulation when optimally targeted to the visual cortex can improve brain activity, visual processing and visual hallucinations. The knowledge gained from this study will contribute to the field of vision by providing a marker for clinical response and by personalizing treatment for patients with psychosis suffering from visual symptoms. This grant will allow us to set the foundation for a larger more targeted study utilizing noninvasive brain stimulation to improve visual symptoms in patients with psychosis.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 6 |
Est. completion date | January 2, 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | January 1, 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 18 Years to 50 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - meet diagnostic criteria for schizophrenia, schizoaffective disorder, or psychotic bipolar disorder as verified by the Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th Edition, Text Revision (DSM-IV TR) and consensus clinical diagnosis; - had no changes to relevant anti-psychotic medications for a period of 1 month prior to participation; - had a sufficient level of English to allow participation. Exclusion Criteria: - pregnant or breastfeeding women; - Intelligence quotient <60 - any major medical or neurologic - diagnosis of substance abuse positive urine drug screen - history of moderate-to-severe visual impairment secondary to glaucoma, cataract or macular degeneration - serious medical illness or instability requiring hospitalization within the next year - relevant skin allergies; metallic or electronic implants (e.g. pacemakers, brain stimulators). |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center | Boston | Massachusetts |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center | National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS) |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Steady State Visual Evoked Potential (ssVEP) | Measuring the average evoked response potential amplitude change for P100 at Baseline, 5 day and 1 month visits. ssVEP was utilized to measure changes in electrical biomarkers of the early visual response. Stimuli consisted of 50 trials of a black and white square oscillating at 18.75 Hz in the subject's central, bilateral, left, or right visual field for 2000 ms (200 total trials pseudorandomly interleaved) with inter-trial intervals of 2.5 seconds. | Measured at day 5 compared to day 0 | |
Primary | Steady State Visual Evoked Potential (ssVEP) | Measuring the average evoked response potential amplitude change for P100 at Baseline, 5 day and 1 month visits. ssVEP was utilized to measure changes in electrical biomarkers of the early visual response. Stimuli consisted of 50 trials of a black and white square oscillating at 18.75 Hz in the subject's central, bilateral, left, or right visual field for 2000 ms (200 total trials pseudorandomly interleaved) with inter-trial intervals of 2.5 seconds. | Measured at day 30 compared to day 0 and day 5 | |
Primary | Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) | Measuring total psychosis symptoms score. PANSS is a clinician administered instrument which has 30 items measuring a range of symptoms which are rated on a 7-point scale (1=absent, 2=minimal, 3=mild, 4=moderate, 5=moderate severe, 6=severe, and 7=extreme). A total score ranges from 30-210 with higher scores indicate worsen symptoms. Subscales include, general, negative and positive symptom categories with higher scores indicate worsen symptoms. The range for the positive and negative Scales is 7-49, and the range for the general Psychopathology Scale is 16-112. | Measured at day 5 compared to day 0 | |
Primary | Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) | Measuring total psychosis symptoms score. PANSS is a clinician administered instrument which has 30 items measuring a range of symptoms which are rated on a 7-point scale (1=absent, 2=minimal, 3=mild, 4=moderate, 5=moderate severe, 6=severe, and 7=extreme). A total score ranges from 30-210 with higher scores indicate worsen symptoms. Subscales include, general, negative and positive symptom categories with higher scores indicate worsen symptoms. The range for the positive and negative Scales is 7-49, and the range for the general Psychopathology Scale is 16-112. | Measured at day 30 compared to day 0 and day 5 | |
Primary | Biological Motion | Measuring the percent correct of detected motion. Biological motion perception was assessed using point-light animations (12 dots on the head and major joints of the body) walking either rightward or leftward. The target animation was embedded in a number of random-moving noise dots (24, 48, or 72) to manipulate the difficulty level of the task. Participants were asked to indicate the direction that the animation was walking towards. The task lasted for about 4 minutes. | Measured at day 5 compared to day 0 | |
Primary | Biological Motion | Measuring the percent correct of detected motion. Biological motion perception was assessed using point-light animations (12 dots on the head and major joints of the body) walking either rightward or leftward. The target animation was embedded in a number of random-moving noise dots (24, 48, or 72) to manipulate the difficulty level of the task. Participants were asked to indicate the direction that the animation was walking towards. The task lasted for about 4 minutes. | Measured at day 30 compared to day 0 and day 5 | |
Secondary | International Affective Picture System (IAPS) Task | Emotional evoked related potential (ERP) measures were obtained using the IAPS, which consists of unpleasant, pleasant, and neutral scene stimuli. Scenes consisted of human threat, animal threat, erotica, romantic couples, people, families, and landscapes. During each experimental session, participants viewed each scene three times. Images were presented for 1000 ms and then followed by 3.5 s of a black screen with a small red dot as a fixation point. | Measured at day 5 compared to day 0 | |
Secondary | International Affective Picture System (IAPS) Task | Emotional evoked related potential (ERP) measures were obtained using the IAPS, which consists of unpleasant, pleasant, and neutral scene stimuli. Scenes consisted of human threat, animal threat, erotica, romantic couples, people, families, and landscapes. During each experimental session, participants viewed each scene three times. Images were presented for 1000 ms and then followed by 3.5 s of a black screen with a small red dot as a fixation point. | Measured at day 30 compared to day 0 and day 5 | |
Secondary | Velocity Discrimination | Velocity discrimination performance was determined using constant stimuli method. Participants asked to indicate the faster of the two gradients (drifting Gabor patches) presented sequentially for 300 ms with an inter-stimulus interval of 500ms 51.There were 9 velocity difference levels to modulate the difficulty of the task. 15 trials were presented at each difficulty level. Velocity discrimination thresholds, which corresponds to an accuracy level equivalent to 75% correct for each subject, calculated as an indicator of performance. This task session lasted for about 5 minutes. | Measured at day 5 compared to day 0 | |
Secondary | Velocity Discrimination | Velocity discrimination performance was determined using constant stimuli method. Participants asked to indicate the faster of the two gradients (drifting Gabor patches) presented sequentially for 300 ms with an inter-stimulus interval of 500ms 51.There were 9 velocity difference levels to modulate the difficulty of the task. 15 trials were presented at each difficulty level. Velocity discrimination thresholds, which corresponds to an accuracy level equivalent to 75% correct for each subject, calculated as an indicator of performance. This task session lasted for about 5 minutes. | Measured at day 30 compared to day 0 and day 5 | |
Secondary | Visual Spatial Working Memory | To assess visuospatial working memory participants were asked to identify and remember the location of the odd shape out of three shapes. The procedure was repeated with three new shapes following an interval. Participants were asked to respond by indicating where the odd shapes appeared, in the correct order of appearance. Two correct trials on each level led to progression to the next level where the item load was increased by one. The session was terminated when two trials on the same level were incorrect. The final score was calculated based on the performance on the highest level achieved (10 max) where at least one trial was passed. A higher score means better visual spatial memory capability (0-10) and the highest difficulty level achieved. This task lasted for 3-5 minutes. | Measured at day 5 compared to day 0 | |
Secondary | Visual Spatial Working Memory | To assess visuospatial working memory participants were asked to identify and remember the location of the odd shape out of three shapes. The procedure was repeated with three new shapes following an interval. Participants were asked to respond by indicating where the odd shapes appeared, in the correct order of appearance. Two correct trials on each level led to progression to the next level where the item load was increased by one. The session was terminated when two trials on the same level were incorrect. The final score was calculated based on the performance on the highest level achieved (10 max) where at least one trial was passed. A higher score means better visual spatial memory capability (0-10) and the highest difficulty level achieved. This task lasted for 3-5 minutes. | Measured at day 30 compared to day 0 and day 5 | |
Secondary | Global Assessment of Function (GAF) | Measuring global functioning derived from patients symptoms, relationships and functioning in life. The higher the score, the better individual handles daily activities and lower symptoms experienced.
91-100 No symptoms. Superior functioning in a wide range of activities. 81-90 Absent or minimal symptoms, good functioning in all areas. 71-80 Symptoms are transient and expectable reactions to psychosocial stressors. 61-70 Some mild symptoms or some difficulty in functioning. 51-60 Moderate symptoms or moderate difficulty in functioning. 41-50 Serious symptoms or any serious impairment in functioning 31-40 Some impairment or major impairment in several areas, such as work or school, family relations, judgment, thinking, or mood. 21-30 Behavior is considerably influenced by delusions or hallucinations or serious impairment 11-20 Some danger of hurting self or others. 1-10 Persistent danger of severely hurting self or others. 0 Inadequate information |
Measured at day 5 compared to day 0 | |
Secondary | Global Assessment of Function (GAF) | Measuring global functioning derived from patients symptoms, relationships and functioning in life. The higher the score, the better individual handles daily activities and lower symptoms experienced.
91-100 No symptoms. Superior functioning in a wide range of activities. 81-90 Absent or minimal symptoms, good functioning in all areas. 71-80 Symptoms are transient and expectable reactions to psychosocial stressors. 61-70 Some mild symptoms or some difficulty in functioning. 51-60 Moderate symptoms or moderate difficulty in functioning. 41-50 Serious symptoms or any serious impairment in functioning 31-40 Some impairment or major impairment in several areas, such as work or school, family relations, judgment, thinking, or mood. 21-30 Behavior is considerably influenced by delusions or hallucinations or serious impairment 11-20 Some danger of hurting self or others. 1-10 Persistent danger of severely hurting self or others. 0 Inadequate information |
Measured at day 30 compared to day 0 and day 5 | |
Secondary | Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) | Measuring total depression scores, The Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) is a ten-item diagnostic questionnaire which psychiatrists or trained mental health providers use to measure the severity of depressive episodes and or symptoms in patients with mood disorders. A higher score indicates worsen depression.
The questionnaire includes questions on ten symptoms:Apparent sadness, Reported sadness, Inner tension, Reduced sleep, Reduced appetite, Concentration difficulties, Lassitude, Inability to feel, Pessimistic thoughts, Suicidal thoughts. Total used from scale indicates: 0 to 6: normal/symptom absent 7 to 19: mild depression 20 to 34: moderate depression 35 to 60: severe depression |
Measured at day 5 compared to day 0 | |
Secondary | Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) | Measuring total depression scores, The Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) is a ten-item diagnostic questionnaire which psychiatrists or trained mental health providers use to measure the severity of depressive episodes and or symptoms in patients with mood disorders. A higher score indicates worsen depression.
The questionnaire includes questions on ten symptoms:Apparent sadness, Reported sadness, Inner tension, Reduced sleep, Reduced appetite, Concentration difficulties, Lassitude, Inability to feel, Pessimistic thoughts, Suicidal thoughts. Total used from scale indicates: 0 to 6: normal/symptom absent 7 to 19: mild depression 20 to 34: moderate depression 35 to 60: severe depression |
Measured at day 30 compared to day 0 and day 5 |
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