Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in Amphetamine Addiction
Study Details
Study Description
Brief Summary
The study aims to test whether transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) improves the craving, depression, anxiety and cognitive function during the abstinent period of methamphetamine users.
Condition or Disease | Intervention/Treatment | Phase |
---|---|---|
|
N/A |
Detailed Description
Background:
The disease burden of methamphetamine (MA) use is a critical issue in public health, while the abusers increased rapidly in recent years. The effect of medical intervention for MA addiction is still limited, and the cost of psychotherapy is high. In Taiwan, the MA defendant would be sent to the district inspection after the police confirmed the MA abuse. The prosecutor could assess the case to replace the penalty of imprisonment with a suspended sentence, which included one year of addiction treatment in the designated hospital. However, the insufficient treatment of MA addiction resulted in a subsequent high rescinded rate of suspended sentence cases and led people to doubt these medical intervention programs. Hence, the primary mission is to improve the treatment efficacy within the treatment program. Growing evidence has suggested the effectiveness of transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in improving craving, affective symptoms, and cognitive impairment. However, the majority of the studies were conducted in China. Under China's legal system, researchers designed intense TMS treatment programs for MA users, which was not entirely applicable within Taiwan's system. Therefore, the current proposal aims to design a new TMS treatment and evaluate the tolerability, efficacy, and sustained effect of Taiwanese MA users within the suspended sentence.
Methods:
The investigators applied a case-only follow-up study and divided the study into two phases. Fifteen MA users within the suspended sentence who are under the outpatient-based MA abuse treatment program will be recruited. In Phase 1, 15 subjects will be randomly assigned to two TMS intensity groups (80% and 100%). After one TMS treatment session, subjects will be interviewed with the visual analog scale and the tolerability questionnaire to detect their side-effect and the primary effect of craving reduction. After evaluating the side-effect rate and the craving reduction effect, the investigators will select the subsequent TMS treatment program's intensity. In Phase 2, all subjects undergo a four-week TMS treatment program. In Week 1, subjects will attend continuously five daily TMS sessions. In Week 2 to Week 4, subjects are treated once a week. After 8 TMS sessions, the investigators will follow up one month and three months later. The investigators apply the Visual analog scale, Beck depression inventory, Beck anxiety inventory, and Continuous performance test in each intervention and follow-up time point to measure the efficacy and sustain effect of improving craving, depression, anxiety, and cognitive impairment.
Study Design
Arms and Interventions
Arm | Intervention/Treatment |
---|---|
Experimental: transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) This arm constitute of methamphetamine users who undergone abstinent period |
Device: transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS)
The methamphetamine user will undergo a one-month TMS intervention. In Week 1, subjects will attend continuously 5 daily TMS sessions. From Week 2 to Week 4, subjects are treated once a week. Each session will have 40 repeats of 4-second train and 15-sec train interval.
|
Outcome Measures
Primary Outcome Measures
- Visual analogue scale (Taiwanese version) [20 weeks]
Respondents will specify their level of craving from none to extreme on a 100 mm line (score: 0-10) in each questionnaires, and there are nine questionnaires related to craving.
Secondary Outcome Measures
- The Beck depression inventory (Taiwanese version BDI) [20 weeks]
The Beck depression inventory (Taiwanese version BDI) will be applied to evaluate the depression during the period of methamphetamine abstinence. (Total score: 0-63)
- The Beck anxiety inventory (Taiwanese version BAI) [20 weeks]
The Beck anxiety inventory (Taiwanese version BAI) will be applied to evaluate the anxiety during the period of methamphetamine abstinence. (Total score: 0-63)
- Cognitive function [20 weeks]
Continuous performance test was developed by Rosvold and designed as a computerized test of cognitive function.
- Tolerance [20 weeks]
The respondents will specify five physical symptoms which might related to rTMS intervention (Yes/No: headache, local pain/discomfort, head/face pain/discomfort, seizure, hearing loss/ear ache)
Eligibility Criteria
Criteria
Inclusion criteria:
-
Age ranged 20-65.
-
Under judicially supervised outpatient-based methamphetamine abuse treatment program
Exclusion criteria:
-
Major disorders other than substance use disorders in Diagnostic and Statistics Manual-5 (e.g. Schizophrenia, organic brain syndrome, and bipolar disorders).
-
Epilepsy, head trauma, migraine, cardiovascular comorbidity, atypical parkinsonian disorder
-
patients with heart pacemakers, implanted drug delivery aids, artificial electronic ears, implantable defibrillators, and/or implanted nerve stimulators, and near the implants mentioned above.
-
patients who have metal implants in their bodies, as well as those with metal implants.
-
people who have damaged skin in areas of the patient's body that receive stimulation.
-
patients with multiple sclerosis.
-
patients who have extensive ischemic scarring.
-
pregnant women.
-
patients with a family history of spasms/epilepsy
-
patients taking medications that may lower the seizure threshold.
-
patients with severe sleep disorders related to previous rTMS treatment.
-
patients with severe heart disease
-
patients with intracranial stress caused by uncontrollable migraines.
-
people who have been evaluated by a physician as unfit to participate in clinical trials.
Contacts and Locations
Locations
Site | City | State | Country | Postal Code | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | National Taiwan University Hospital | Taipei | Taiwan | 100 |
Sponsors and Collaborators
- National Taiwan University Hospital
- National Health Research Institutes, Taiwan
Investigators
- Principal Investigator: Chen Cheng-Che, MD,MSc, Physician, Department if Psychiatry, National Taiwan University Hospital - Biomedical Park Hospital
Study Documents (Full-Text)
None provided.More Information
Publications
None provided.- 202010115DINA