AI Article Synopsis

  • CBIT is a treatment for people with tic disorders that helps them control their tics better, but it only works for about half of the patients.
  • Researchers are testing a new method called TMS, which uses magnetic stimulation to improve the effects of CBIT in young people ages 12-21.
  • The study has two phases to see if combining CBIT with TMS makes tics easier to control, and it's one of the few trials looking at this for kids.

Article Abstract

Background: Comprehensive Behavioral Intervention for Tics (CBIT) is a first-line treatment for tic disorders that aims to improve controllability over tics that an individual finds distressing or impairing. However, it is only effective for approximately half of patients. Supplementary motor area (SMA)-directed neurocircuitry plays a strong role in motor inhibition, and activity in this region is thought to contribute to tic expression. Targeted modulation of SMA using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) may increase CBIT efficacy by improving patients' ability to implement tic controllability behaviors.

Methods: The CBIT + TMS trial is a two-phase, milestone-driven early-stage randomized controlled trial. The trial will test whether augmenting CBIT with inhibitory, non-invasive stimulation of SMA with TMS modifies activity in SMA-mediated circuits and enhances tic controllability in youth ages 12-21 years with chronic tics. Phase 1 will directly compare two rTMS augmentation strategies (1 Hz rTMS vs. cTBS) vs. sham in N = 60 participants. Quantifiable, a priori "Go/No Go Criteria" guide the decision to proceed to phase 2 and the selection of the optimal TMS regimen. Phase 2 will compare the optimal regimen vs. sham and test the link between neural target engagement and clinical outcomes in a new sample of N = 60 participants.

Discussion: This clinical trial is one of few to date testing TMS augmentation of therapy in a pediatric sample. The results will provide insight into whether TMS is a potentially viable strategy for enhancing CBIT efficacy and reveal potential neural and behavioral mechanisms of change.

Trial Registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT04578912 . Registered on October 8, 2020.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10316640PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13063-023-07455-1DOI Listing

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