Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif. (all authors), and Department of Psychology (Stimpson, Cherian, Choi, Aaron, Guerra, Phillips), Palo Alto University, Palo Alto, Calif.
Am J Psychiatry. 2020 Aug 1;177(8):716-726. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2019.19070720. Epub 2020 Apr 7.
New antidepressant treatments are needed that are effective, rapid acting, safe, and tolerable. Intermittent theta-burst stimulation (iTBS) is a noninvasive brain stimulation treatment that has been approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration for treatment-resistant depression. Recent methodological advances suggest that the current iTBS protocol might be improved through 1) treating patients with multiple sessions per day at optimally spaced intervals, 2) applying a higher overall pulse dose of stimulation, and 3) precision targeting of the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) to subgenual anterior cingulate cortex (sgACC) circuit. The authors examined the feasibility, tolerability, and preliminary efficacy of Stanford Accelerated Intelligent Neuromodulation Therapy (SAINT), an accelerated, high-dose resting-state functional connectivity MRI (fcMRI)-guided iTBS protocol for treatment-resistant depression.
Twenty-two participants with treatment-resistant depression received open-label SAINT. fcMRI was used to individually target the region of the left DLPFC most anticorrelated with sgACC in each participant. Fifty iTBS sessions (1,800 pulses per session, 50-minute intersession interval) were delivered as 10 daily sessions over 5 consecutive days at 90% resting motor threshold (adjusted for cortical depth). Neuropsychological testing was conducted before and after SAINT.
One participant withdrew, leaving a sample size of 21. Nineteen of 21 participants (90.5%) met remission criteria (defined as a score <11 on the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale). In the intent-to-treat analysis, 19 of 22 participants (86.4%) met remission criteria. Neuropsychological testing demonstrated no negative cognitive side effects.
SAINT, an accelerated, high-dose, iTBS protocol with fcMRI-guided targeting, was well tolerated and safe. Double-blinded sham-controlled trials are needed to confirm the remission rate observed in this initial study.
需要新的有效、快速起效、安全且耐受良好的抗抑郁治疗方法。间歇性经颅磁刺激(iTBS)是一种非侵入性脑刺激治疗方法,已被美国食品和药物管理局批准用于治疗难治性抑郁症。最近的方法学进展表明,当前的 iTBS 方案可以通过以下方式得到改进:1)每天治疗多次,间隔最佳;2)应用更高的总刺激脉冲剂量;3)将左背外侧前额叶皮层(DLPFC)精确定位到扣带回前部 subgenual(sgACC)回路。作者研究了斯坦福加速智能神经调节治疗(SAINT)的可行性、耐受性和初步疗效,SAINT 是一种加速、高剂量静息态功能连接磁共振成像(fcMRI)引导的 iTBS 方案,用于治疗难治性抑郁症。
22 名难治性抑郁症患者接受了开放标签的 SAINT。使用 fcMRI 对每位参与者的左侧 DLPFC 与 sgACC 最反相关的区域进行个体靶向。50 次 iTBS 治疗(每次 1800 个脉冲,50 分钟间隔)以 10 次每日疗程在 5 天内连续进行,强度为 90%静息运动阈值(根据皮层深度调整)。SAINT 前后进行神经心理学测试。
1 名参与者退出,剩余 21 名参与者。21 名参与者中有 19 名(90.5%)达到缓解标准(定义为蒙哥马利-Åsberg 抑郁评定量表得分<11)。在意向治疗分析中,22 名参与者中有 19 名(86.4%)达到缓解标准。神经心理学测试未显示出认知方面的负面副作用。
SAINT 是一种加速、高剂量、fcMRI 引导靶向的 iTBS 方案,具有良好的耐受性和安全性。需要进行双盲假对照试验来确认本初步研究中观察到的缓解率。