Recruitment

Recruitment Status
Recruiting
Estimated Enrollment
64

Summary

Conditions
  • Auditory Hallucinations
  • Schizophrenia
Type
Interventional
Phase
Not Applicable
Design
Allocation: RandomizedIntervention Model: Parallel AssignmentMasking: Quadruple (Participant, Care Provider, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)Primary Purpose: Treatment

Participation Requirements

Age
Between 18 years and 65 years
Gender
Both males and females

Description

Auditory verbal hallucinations (AH), a cardinal feature of schizophrenia, are often severely distressing and increase the risk for violence and suicide. Although antipsychotic medication mostly exerts rapid beneficial effects on this symptom particularly in first-episode patients who continue on tak...

Auditory verbal hallucinations (AH), a cardinal feature of schizophrenia, are often severely distressing and increase the risk for violence and suicide. Although antipsychotic medication mostly exerts rapid beneficial effects on this symptom particularly in first-episode patients who continue on taking their medication (Sommer et al. 2012), in up to 25%-30% of all patients, such hallucinations persist (Shergill et al. 1998). The often progressive course of the disease and insufficient treatment adherence due to unwanted side effects significantly limit the treatment response. In turn, this lack of treatment efficacy also contributes to low treatment adherence which is generally associated with an unfavorable course of schizophrenia and increased relapse and readmission rate. New and effective treatments are therefore essential to reduce the massive individual burden and psychosocial costs associated with schizophrenia. Nevertheless, in the last decades, the hopes for new pharmacological treatment options have been disappointed and the pharmaceutical industry has apparently withdrawn from the development of new compounds for this disorder. Accordingly, the development of non-pharmacological approaches based on an increasing body of patho-physiological knowledge is even more needed to pave new ways for the treatment of this frequently detrimental symptom of schizophrenia. The main objective of the present study is to provide high-level evidence for efficacy and safety of continuous theta burst stimulation (cTBS) in the treatment of auditory hallucination (AH) by this first full-size multicenter (3 centers) controlled clinical trial. This is a double blind (actually triple blind, i.e. patient, clinical investigator, and person who will administer cTBS), randomized, sham-controlled clinical trial to test the efficacy and safety of bilateral (successively applied) daily cTBS to the temporoparietal cortex on the severity of AH. The study will be conducted in a two-armed parallel design in which 50 % of the patients will be treated with the verum stimulation and the other half of patients will receive the placebo / sham stimulation. The cTBS protocol follows the method by Huang et al. (2005) and our pilot study (Plewnia et al. 2014a) to achieve a lasting reduction of cortical excitability. Accordingly, each stimulation train (40 s) of cTBS consists of 600 stimuli applied in bursts of 3 pulses at 50 Hz given every 200 ms (5 Hz). Stimulation intensity is standardized at 80% of the resting motor threshold (RMT) and applied successively to each hemisphere. For the first session, the order of right and left hemisphere will be determined by randomization and will alternate in each following session to preclude order effects.The RMT will be determined using EMG recordings from the left and right abductor pollicis brevis and defined as the minimal stimulation intensity needed to elicit at least 10 out of 20 motor-evoked-potentials of ? 50µV. RMT will be determined once, i.e. before the beginning of treatment period. The cTBS or sham treatment will be targeted both temporoparietal cortices halfway between T3/P3 and T4/P4 (EEG 10/20 system). The treatment (active cTBS or sham cTBS) will be administered over a period of 3 consecutive weeks at each workday (Monday to Friday), resulting in a total of 15 treatment sessions. Ratings will be performed after the last treatment of each week by an independent rater. Follow-up visits are planned 1, 3 and 6 months after end of treatment phase to control for sustainability of cTBS treatment effects.

Tracking Information

NCT #
NCT02670291
Collaborators
  • German Research Foundation
  • Universität Tübingen
Investigators
Principal Investigator: Christian Plewnia, Prof. MD. Dept. Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Universtiy of Tuebingen