Tourette Syndrome Clinical Trial
Official title:
Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Individuals With Tourette's Syndrome
This study will evaluate the clinical efficacy of 1 Hz repetitive transcranial magnetic
stimulation (rTMS) applied to the supplementary motor area (SMA) in Tourette's Syndrome (TS)
patients who have not fully responded to conventional therapies. The investigators will
collect TMS measures of motor cortex excitability to test whether rTMS restores normal levels
of intracortical inhibition found to be deficient in TS. The investigators will administer
neuropsychological tests to demonstrate that SMA targeted rTMS can be administered safely
without significant impairments of cognitive or motor functioning. The investigators
hypothesize that:
1. Compared to sham (placebo), active rTMS will improve symptoms of TS as assessed with the
Yale Global Tic Severity Scale (Y-GTSS) and Clinical Global Impression (CGI).
2. Active (but not sham) rTMS will normalize levels of motor cortex excitability, as
reflected by increased intracortical inhibition, motor threshold, and cortical silent
period, and by decreased intracortical facilitation, relative to pre-treatment baseline.
This study tests the efficacy of repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) in the
treatment of Tourette's Syndrome (TS). It also examines measures of brain function to study
the brain basis underlying TS.
Despite major advances in the study and treatment of TS, patients often do not experience
full remission from pharmacotherapy or behavioral therapy (Leckman 2002). rTMS is a
non-invasive procedure that stimulates the brain using magnetic fields. This pilot study
reported that rTMS may reduce TS symptoms (Mantovani et al., 2006). While promising, prior
research has several limitations (e.g., relatively small sample sizes, and lack of sham
[placebo] comparison).
This study addresses the drawbacks of prior work, and will provide data that will help to
determine whether rTMS can be useful for TS patients resistant to conventional therapies. 25
outpatients with TS who have been only partially responsive to conventional therapies will be
randomly assigned to either active low frequency (1 Hz) rTMS or sham (placebo) stimulation.
The active or sham stimulation will be applied to the supplementary motor area (SMA) daily
for three weeks. If rTMS will be added onto ongoing pharmacotherapy, the doses must have been
stable for four weeks prior to study entry. The SMA was selected because of its connections
with brain areas implicated in TS. Pilot work indicates that stimulation of SMA with low
frequency rTMS is beneficial in TS patients. Low frequency rTMS has the added benefit of a
better safety profile (i.e. no risk of seizure) than high frequency rTMS.
Rating scales for symptom change will be obtained at baseline, during the rTMS course, and at
the end of three weeks of treatment. Patients will then be offered an open-label cross-over
phase for an additional three weeks of daily active rTMS treatment. Patients who meet
remission criteria in either phase or response criteria following the cross-over phase will
continue routine clinical care under the supervision of their treating psychiatrist and will
be invited back for assessment at 1, 3, and 6 months to determine the persistence of benefit.
Excitability of the motor cortex has been reported to be abnormal in TS, and may relate to
dysfunction in motor pathways. We will collect measures of motor cortex excitability (with
single and paired-pulse TMS) at baseline and after each phase to study whether changes in
these measures may be correlated with clinical improvement.
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