Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Not yet recruiting
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT05974202 |
Other study ID # |
UG3DA056138 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Not yet recruiting |
Phase |
Phase 2
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
September 15, 2024 |
Est. completion date |
September 2026 |
Study information
Verified date |
March 2024 |
Source |
New York State Psychiatric Institute |
Contact |
Daniel Brooks, MSW |
Phone |
646-774-8181 |
Email |
daniel.brooks[@]nyspi.columbia.edu |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The goal of this clinical trial is to compare the effects of active repetitive transcranial
magnetic stimulation (rTMS) to sham (placebo) rTMS prior to cognitive-behavioral therapy
(CBT) as a treatment for adults with cocaine use disorder. The main questions it aims to
answer are:
- Is rTMS safe and feasible as an augmentation for CBT for the treatment of cocaine use
disorder?
- What is the brain mechanism of rTMS?
- Will active rTMS (compared to sham rTMS) followed by CBT help adults with cocaine use
disorder achieve abstinence from cocaine?
Participants will:
- Have two brain MRI scans;
- Undergo 3 weeks of daily rTMS (or sham) treatments (15 sessions), and;
- Have 12 weeks of once-weekly cognitive-behavioral therapy for the treatment of cocaine
use disorder.
Researchers will compare active (real) rTMS to sham (placebo) rTMS. All participants will
receive cognitive-behavioral therapy.
Description:
Cocaine use disorder (CUD) remains a significant public health problem given that many
patients fail to respond to existing therapies (Dutra et al., 2008). Treatment refractory CUD
may be explained, in part, by abnormal neurocircuitry. The medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC)
and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex (dACC) have demonstrated altered functioning in CUD
(Hanlon et al., 2016). Compared to controls, participants with CUD show consistent changes to
the mPFC/dACC, including hypoactivation during cognitive and attentional tasks (Bolla et al.,
2003; Kaufman et al., 2003; Kubler et al., 2005), hyperactivation during drug cue exposure
(Garavan et al., 2000; Grant et al., 1996), and lower grey matter volumes (Ersche et al.,
2011; Matochik et al., 2003).
Imaging studies also show that these alterations in the mPFC/dACC are associated with an
impaired response to treatment. Hypoactivation of the mPFC/dACC region of the fronto-cingular
network during the Color-Word Stroop task, a measure of cognitive interference and response
inhibition, is associated with faster relapse rates (Brewer et al., 2008). Greater activation
of the fronto-cingular network during incongruent stimuli on the Stroop task is also
associated with poorer outcomes in CUD participants receiving cognitive behavioral therapy
(CBT) (Worhunsky et al., 2013). When using the Drug Stroop task, better performance was
associated with a longer duration of cocaine abstinence during CBT (DeVito et al., 2018).
Thus, processing deficits across these brain regions likely contribute to the limited success
of behavioral interventions for CUD, resulting in high dropout rates and a lack of treatment
response.
Our goal is to target the mPFC/dACC with repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS)
to investigate its impact on neurocognitive function and response to treatment in CUD. We
will use the H7-coil, which targets the mPFC/dACC and has been FDA-cleared as a treatment for
obsessive-compulsive disorder (Carmi et al., 2019). Previous work by our group showed that
high-frequency (10 Hz) rTMS with the H7-coil led to a significant reduction in choices for
cocaine in the human laboratory setting (Martinez et al., 2018). Additional studies using
rTMS for CUD have targeted the dorsolateral or ventromedial PFC and demonstrated reduction in
craving and drug cue reactivity (Ekhtiari et al., 2019; Antonelli et al., 2021; Kearney-Ramos
et al., 2018; Kearney-Ramos et al., 2019).
Despite these promising findings, sham-controlled clinical trials investigating the effect of
rTMS on abstinence and cocaine consumption are lacking. In this trial, our goal is to
investigate rTMS as a potential treatment for CUD. Treatment-seeking volunteers with
moderate/severe CUD will undergo three weeks (15 daily sessions) of outpatient, randomized,
double-blinded, sham-controlled, high-frequency (10 Hz) rTMS to the mPFC/dACC with the
H7-coil followed by standardized CBT. We will evaluate feasibility, safety, and the effect of
rTMS on the mPFC/dACC using functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) and clinical outcome
measures (cocaine use). This outcome data will inform a larger clinical trial to evaluate
rTMS as an augmentation for CBT outcomes in moderate/severe CUD and further explore the
associated neural mechanisms of rTMS in this clinical population.