Webster Lucy, Boutry Clement, Thomson Louise, Abdelghani Mohamed, Barber Shaun, Briley Paul M, Kurkar Micheal, Lankappa Sudheer, McAllister-Williams R Hamish, Di Paola Ana Suazo, Morriss Richard
Nottingham National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre, Nottingham, United Kingdom; Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
NIHR Applied Research Collaboration East Midlands, University of Nottingham, Nottingham, United Kingdom.
Compr Psychiatry. 2025 Jan;136:152544. doi: 10.1016/j.comppsych.2024.152544. Epub 2024 Nov 4.
The BRIGhTMIND study was a double-blind RCT comparing repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation at a standard simulation site (the "F3" location given by the International 10-20 system, F3-rTMS) versus connectivity-guided intermittent theta burst stimulation (cgiTBS) for treatment-resistant depression. This present study reports the acceptability, safety, and tolerability of F3-rTMS versus cgiTBS.
The present study used quantitative and qualitative methods. Two hundred fifty-four participants were included in the quantitative BRIGhTMIND acceptability and safety analysis (n = 126 F3-rTMS, n = 128 cgiTBS). Qualitative analysis included interviews for 15 participants (n = 7 F3-rTMS, n = 8 cgiTBS) and 582 written comments made by any participant randomised to the BRIGhTMIND trial regarding their experience of TMS and the study. Statistical analyses were used to explore differences between F3-rTMS and cgiTBS, as well as associations between acceptability, impression of change and safety. Qualitative data was analysed using an inductive thematic framework approach.
Acceptability, TMS benefits/negative effects and impression of improvement ratings did not differ across the two treatment protocols, with ratings maintained long-term (71.4 % rated TMS acceptable, 48.8 % indicated benefits of TMS outweighed negative effects and 52.2 % feeling somewhat or much better at 26 week follow-up n = 203). Impression of improvement was positively associated with acceptability and TMS benefits. Qualitative themes included participants' TMS experience, TMS response variability, and lay theories of effectiveness. Safety profiles were comparable between F3-rTMS and cgiTBS, with 74.5 % of participants (n = 190/254) experiencing at least one adverse event possibly, probably, or definitely related to TMS. The majority of adverse events were transient and mild, with a sizeable number requiring simple treatments or small adjustments to TMS intensity and coil positioning. The F3-rTMS group had a significantly greater proportion of participants that required small adjustments to TMS to tolerate treatment compared to the cgiTBS group. Serious adverse events were rare, with one serious event in each treatment arm possibly related to TMS (F3-rTMS- psychotic episode, cgiTBS-manic episode).
F3-rTMS and cgiTBS are comparably safe, tolerable and highly acceptable interventions for treatment-resistant depression. BRIGhTMIND systematically collected data from a large sample, providing evidence to meet the information needs of patients, clinicians and policy makers.
BRIGhTMIND研究是一项双盲随机对照试验,比较了在标准模拟部位(国际10-20系统中的“F3”位置,即F3重复经颅磁刺激,F3-rTMS)与连接性引导的间歇性theta爆发刺激(cgiTBS)治疗难治性抑郁症的效果。本研究报告了F3-rTMS与cgiTBS的可接受性、安全性和耐受性。
本研究采用定量和定性方法。254名参与者纳入了BRIGhTMIND可接受性和安全性的定量分析(n = 126接受F3-rTMS,n = 128接受cgiTBS)。定性分析包括对15名参与者的访谈(n = 7接受F3-rTMS,n = 8接受cgiTBS)以及随机分配到BRIGhTMIND试验的任何参与者就其经颅磁刺激体验和该研究发表的582条书面评论。采用统计分析来探索F3-rTMS与cgiTBS之间的差异,以及可接受性、改善印象和安全性之间的关联。定性数据采用归纳主题框架方法进行分析。
两种治疗方案在可接受性、经颅磁刺激的益处/负面影响以及改善评分方面没有差异,评分在长期内保持稳定(71.4%的人认为经颅磁刺激可接受,48.8%的人表示经颅磁刺激的益处大于负面影响,在26周随访时有52.2%的人感觉有所好转或好多了,n = 203)。改善印象与可接受性和经颅磁刺激的益处呈正相关。定性主题包括参与者的经颅磁刺激体验、经颅磁刺激反应的变异性以及疗效的外行理论。F3-rTMS和cgiTBS的安全性概况相当,74.5%的参与者(n = 190/254)经历了至少一次可能、很可能或肯定与经颅磁刺激相关的不良事件。大多数不良事件是短暂且轻微的,相当一部分需要简单治疗或对经颅磁刺激强度和线圈位置进行小调整。与cgiTBS组相比,F3-rTMS组中需要对经颅磁刺激进行小调整以耐受治疗的参与者比例显著更高。严重不良事件很少见,每个治疗组各有一例严重事件可能与经颅磁刺激有关(F3-rTMS - 精神病发作,cgiTBS - 躁狂发作)。
F3-rTMS和cgiTBS是治疗难治性抑郁症同样安全、可耐受且高度可接受的干预措施。BRIGhTMIND从大量样本中系统地收集了数据,为满足患者、临床医生和政策制定者的信息需求提供了证据。