Investigating the Effect of Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) as a Treatment for Alzheimer's Disease
NCT ID: NCT02908815
Last Updated: 2024-06-28
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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COMPLETED
NA
200 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2016-11-30
2022-08-31
Brief Summary
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Detailed Description
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After enrollment, patients at each site will be assigned using stratified block randomization into either active or sham treatment arms with different duration of treatment (either 2 weeks or 4 weeks).
rTMS at frequency of 20 Hz will be used to stimulate the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) of each patient in the real groups. Prior to the first treatment, and once per week during treatment, the patient's motor threshold will be measured using single pulses of TMS, noting the intensity necessary to cause a small twitch in the thumb finger. Then, the 70 mm cooled coil will be placed on the head at a location for optimal stimulation of the DLPFC at an intensity of 90-100% of the motor threshold. The 20 Hz rTMS treatment will incorporate 30 pulses per train, with 25 trains per side of the brain per session (total of 750 pulses per side per session). The trains will have a duration of 1.5 seconds, with an intertrain interval of 10 seconds. Each TMS treatment session will take approximately 10 to 25 minutes.
The DLPFC will be located on each patient using our Brainsight neuronavigation system from a reference MRI scan. If we cannot retrieve a valid previous clinical MRI scan or a valid ordered research MRI scan, a reference head model will approximate the patient's anatomy.
The treatments will be administered daily (5 days/week) either for 4 weeks or 2 weeks. The same protocol will also be used while doing sham stimulation.
To prevent un-blinding, the Magstim sham coil will be used; it provides the same sound and tactile sensory experience as those of the real coil, but it attenuates the strength of the induced electrical field in the brain well below the threshold required to stimulate neurons. In addition, during the treatment, only the designated research assistant and the patient will be present. It should also be noted that the only people who know the grouping are: the rTMS administrator (who also groups the patients) at each site and the sites' coordinator. The patients' grouping info will be in a secure folder in a locked cabinet to which only the rTMS administrator and the three sites coordinator will have the key.
Participants will be assessed six times during the study. This will occur at weeks 0, 3, 5, 13, 21, and 29 for the 4 week treatment groups, and weeks 0, 3, 5, 11, 19, and 27 for the 2 week treatment group. Each assessment will involve a set of nine assessment tools, including ADAS-Cog as the primary outcome measure and various other tasks and questionnaires to measure cognition, memory, caregiver burden, symptoms, and treatment tolerability.
For Winnipeg and Montreal sites only: The immediate effects (i.e. within 3 minutes) after participants receive the rTMS treatment will be assessed with a 1-minute semantic fluency test at four time points. This will occur at before and immediately after rTMS intervention in Week 1 and at weeks 5 and 13 for the 4 week treatment groups, and before and immediately after rTMS intervention in Week 1 and at weeks 5 and 11 for the 2 week treatment group.
Patients who are randomized to the sham treatment will be unblinded at the 6 month follow up and offered either 2-weeks or 4-weeks treatment; the patients and/or their family can choose the duration of treatment. As such, the 12 month assessment will be an unblinded follow up only of those initially randomised to one of the real groups (2-weeks or 4-weeks of treatment).
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
TRIPLE
Study Groups
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4 weeks active treatment
4 weeks of rTMS active treatment applied using an active rTMS coil.
rTMS active treatment
Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation uses magnetic pulses to active neurons.
2 weeks active treatment
2 weeks of rTMS active treatment applied using an active rTMS coil.
rTMS active treatment
Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation uses magnetic pulses to active neurons.
4 weeks sham treatment
4 weeks of rTMS sham treatment applied using a modified rTMS coil which does not stimulate the brain.
rTMS sham treatment
A fake treatment designed to mimic the sensations of rTMS
2 weeks sham treatment
2 weeks of rTMS sham treatment applied using a modified rTMS coil which does not stimulate the brain.
rTMS sham treatment
A fake treatment designed to mimic the sensations of rTMS
Interventions
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rTMS active treatment
Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation uses magnetic pulses to active neurons.
rTMS sham treatment
A fake treatment designed to mimic the sensations of rTMS
Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
* Participants must have probable early or moderate Alzheimer's disease as confirmed by their treating neurologist, geriatrician, or psychiatrist, and/or by the study doctors.
* Participants must be +55 years old.
* Participants must be taking a stable dose of an acetylcholinesterase inhibitor for at least 3 months prior to study entry with no plans to change medication for the duration of the study. Or if participants decide to stop taking their Alzheimer's disease related medication, they must wait a minimum of 6 weeks prior to the start of the intervention.
Exclusion Criteria
* Mental retardation
* Impaired visual and auditory acuity that confounds performance in cognitive tests
* Being diagnosed explicitly by other forms of dementia
* Confounding psychiatric disorders (e.g., schizophrenia, bipolar affective disorder) or current neurological, systemic, or medical disorders (e.g., liver disease, congestive heart failure, severe COPD) that may impair cognition and/or could affect attention span.
* Use of benzodiazepines or other hypnotics during the study and preceding two weeks
* Use of drugs with anticholinergic properties
* Pharmacological immunosuppression
* Participation in a clinical trial with any investigational agent within two weeks prior to study enrollment
* Current alcohol abuse
* History of epileptic seizures or epilepsy
* Contraindication for receiving TMS treatment according to a TMS questionnaire.
* Clinically significant abnormal laboratory findings which have not been approved by the Principal Investigator.
* Inability to adequately communicate in English in Manitoba and Australia sites and either English or French in Montreal site.
* Previous treatment with rTMS within the past 3 months
* A change in medication for AD, mood disorders, or pain during the study.
55 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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University of Manitoba
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Principal Investigators
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Zahra Moussavi, PhD
Role: PRINCIPAL_INVESTIGATOR
Department of Biomedical Engineering, University of Manitoba
Locations
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Monash University
Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Riverview Health Center
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
McGill University
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Countries
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References
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Moussavi Z, Uehara M, Rutherford G, Lithgow B, Millikin C, Wang X, Saha C, Mansouri B, Omelan C, Fellows L, Fitzgerald PB, Koski L. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation as a treatment for Alzheimer's disease: A randomized placebo-controlled double-blind clinical trial. Neurotherapeutics. 2024 Apr;21(3):e00331. doi: 10.1016/j.neurot.2024.e00331. Epub 2024 Feb 14.
Moussavi Z, Koski L, Fitzgerald PB, Millikin C, Lithgow B, Jafari-Jozani M, Wang X. Repeated Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Improving Cognition in Alzheimer Disease: Protocol for an Interim Analysis of a Randomized Controlled Trial. JMIR Res Protoc. 2021 Aug 9;10(8):e31183. doi: 10.2196/31183.
Moussavi Z, Rutherford G, Lithgow B, Millikin C, Modirrousta M, Mansouri B, Wang X, Omelan C, Fellows L, Fitzgerald P, Koski L. Repeated Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation for Improving Cognition in Patients With Alzheimer Disease: Protocol for a Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Trial. JMIR Res Protoc. 2021 Jan 8;10(1):e25144. doi: 10.2196/25144.
Other Identifiers
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B2016:077
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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