| Literature DB >> 34884297 |
Alezandra Torres-Castaño1,2,3, Amado Rivero-Santana1,2, Lilisbeth Perestelo-Pérez2, Andrea Duarte-Díaz1,2, Ana Toledo-Chávarri1,2, Vanesa Ramos-García1,2, Yolanda Álvarez-Pérez1,2, Javier Cudeiro-Mazaira4,5, Iván Padrón-González6, Pedro Serrano-Pérez7.
Abstract
Long-term cocaine use is associated with cognitive deficits and neuro-psychiatric pathologies. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) is an emerging therapeutic strategy relating to changes in brain activity. It stimulates the prefrontal cortex and is involved in inhibitory cognitive control, decision making and care. This systematic review aims to evaluate and synthesize the evidence on the safety, effectiveness, and cost-effectiveness of rTMS for the treatment of cocaine addiction. A systematic review of the literature was carried out. The following electronic databases were consulted from inception to October 2020: MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, PsycINFO, Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials and Web of Science. Randomised controlled trials, non-randomised controlled trials and case-series and full economic evaluations were included. Twelve studies were included. No identified study reported data on cost-effectiveness. Significant results of the efficacy of TMS have been observed in terms of the reduction of craving to consume and the number of doses consumed. No serious adverse effects have been observed. Despite the low quality of the studies, the first results were observed in terms of reduction of cocaine use and craving. In any case, this effect is considered moderate. Studies with larger sample sizes and longer follow-ups are required.Entities:
Keywords: cocaine use disorder; craving; non-invasive brain stimulation; systematic review; transcranial magnetic stimulation
Year: 2021 PMID: 34884297 PMCID: PMC8658408 DOI: 10.3390/jcm10235595
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Medline search strategy.
| 1 | Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation | 11,631 |
| 2 | (Transcranial adj1 magnetic stimulation$).tw. | 14,512 |
| 3 | ((transcranial magnetic stimulation or tms) adj5 repetitive).tw. | 4917 |
| 4 | ((transcranial magnetic stimulation or tms) adj5 rhythmic).tw. | 41 |
| 5 | (rtms or tms).tw. | 15,423 |
| 6 | ((Repetitive or “single pulse” or “paired pulse”) adj1 “transcranial magnetic stimulation”).tw. | 5260 |
| 7 | 1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 or 6 | 21,895 |
| 8 | Cocaine-Related Disorders | 8278 |
| 9 | (cocaine * adj2 (abuse* or addict * or dependent * or disorder *)). ti,ab. | 7622 |
| 10 | 8 or 9 | 12,519 |
| 11 | 7 and 10 | 46 |
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart of the study selection process.
Characteristics of the included studies.
| Author (Year), Country | Study Design | Population | No. of Participants | Intervention | Stimulation Area | Stimulation Protocol | Frequency (Hz) and Intensity (% RMT) | Comparator | Outcomes | Measures |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bolloni (2016) [ | RCT | CUD (DSM-5) | Deep rTMS | Bilateral PFC | 12 rTMS sessions were administered three times a week for 4 weeks | 10 Hz | Sham | Cocaine intake (hair analysis) | Baseline, after 1 month and 3 and 6 months | |
| Gómez (2020) [ | CS | CUD (DSM-5) | rTMS | Left-DLPFC | 2 sessions per day for the first 5 consecutive days of treatment (10 sessions), and 2 sessions per week for the following 12 weeks. | 15 Hz | NA | Cocaine use (self-report and urine screens) | Baseline, and after 5, 30, 60, and 90 days of rTMS treatment. | |
| Hanlon (2015) [ | RCT | Cocaine users | cTBS | MPFC | 2 stimulation visits (occurring within 7–14 days of each other). | 5 Hz | Sham | Craving (VAS) | Before and after the cTBS session | |
| Hanlon (2017) [ | RCT | Cocaine users | cTBS | MPFC | 2 stimulation visits (occurring within 7–14 days of each other) with exposure to 6 trains of cBTS. | 5 Hz | Sham | Craving (VAS) | Before and after the cTBS session | |
| Madeo (2020) [ | CS | CUD (DSM-5) | rTMS | Left-DLPFC | 2 rTMS sessions per day for the first 5 days, then weekly, twice per day on each session day for 11 consecutive weeks. | 15 Hz | NA | Cocaine use (urine screening, self-report and reports by collateral informants) | Baseline, after 3 months of rTMS and up to 2 years. | |
| Martínez (2018) [ | RCT | CUD (DSM-5) | rTMS | MPFC | The rTMS was delivered on weekdays, over the course of 3 weeks. | HF: 10 Hz | Sham | Number of doses chosen during self-administration | Baseline, after 4 days and after 13 days of rTMS. | |
| Pettorruso (2019) [ | CS | CUD (DSM-5) | rTMS | Left-DLPFC | 20 stimulation sessions (2 daily, 5 d/week) for 2 weeks and 2 consecutive maintenance rTMS sessions once a week for 2 weeks. | 15 Hz | NA | Cocaine use (urine test) | Baseline, after 2 and after 4 weeks of rTMS treatment. | |
| Politi (2008) [ | CS | CUD (DSM-IV) | rTMS | Left-DLPFC | 10 daily sessions of rTMS. | 15 Hz | NA | Craving (VAS) | During sessions of rTMS. | |
| Rapinesi (2016) [ | CS | CUD (DSM-IV) | Deep TMS | Bilateral PFC | 3 weekly sessions on alternate days for 4 consecutive weeks, for a total of 12 sessions. | 20 Hz | NA | Craving (VAS) | Baseline and after 2, 4 and 8 weeks of treatment. | |
| Sanna (2019) [ | nRCT | CUD (DSM-5) | iTBS | PFC | 20 stimulations | HF rTMS: | HF rTMS | Cocaine use (urine test) | Baseline, weekly during treatment and at the end of treatment. | |
| Steele (2019) [ | CS | CUD (DSM-5) | iTBS | Left-DLPFC | 3 iTBS sessions per day, with an interval of approximately 60-min between sessions, for 10 days over a 2-week period (30 total iTBS sessions). | 5 Hz | NA | Amount of money spent on cocaine consumption | Baseline, during, and after the intervention and at 1-and 4-week follow-up visits. | |
| Terraneo (2016) [ | RCT | CUD | rTMS | Left-DLPFC | 1 rTMS session per day during the first 5 days of treatment, and then once a week for the following 3 weeks, for a total of 8 rTMS sessions. | 15 Hz | Pharmacological agents | Cocaine use (urine test) | Baseline, after 29-day treatment and after 63-day follow-up. |
ASSIST: Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test; BDI-II: Beck Depression Inventory-II; cBTS: continuous theta burst stimulation; CCQ: Cocaine Craving Questionnaire; CCQ: Cocaine Craving Questionnaire; CCSA: Cocaine Selective Severity Assessment; CIP: Cocaine-Induced Psychosis Screener; CS: case-series; CUD: cocaine use disorder; DLPFC: dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; DSM: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders; HF: high frequency; ISI: Insomnia Severity Index; cTBS: continuous theta burst stimulation; iTBS: intermittent theta burst stimulation; LF: low frequency; MADRS: Montgomery–Asberg Depression Rating Scale; MPFC: medial prefrontal cortex; NA: Not applicable; NA: not applicable; RCT: randomized controlled trial; NI: No Information; nRCT: non-randomized controlled trial; PFC: prefrontal cortex; PSQI: Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index; RMT: resting motor threshold. rTMS: repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; SAS: Self-rating Anxiety Scale; SAS: Zung Self-Rating Anxiety Scale; SCL-90: Symptom checklist 90-revised; UK: United Kingdom; USA: United States of America; VAS: visual analogue scale.
Figure 2Risk of bias summary.
Figure 3Authors’ judgements about each item.
Effectiveness results among the included studies.
| Cocaine Use | Craving | Anxiety | Depression | Psychopathology | Insomnia | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rTMS over the left-DLPFC | ||||||
| Terraneo et al., 2016 [ | Negative urine test during treatment: | VAS 0–10: | - | - | - | - |
| Madeo et al., 2020 [ | Days until relapse (median): | - | - | - | - | - |
| Gómez et al., 2020 [ | Days of cocaine use (mean): reduction at 30 days: | CCQ | SAS | BDI-II | SCL-90-R | PSQI |
| Pettorruso et al., 2019 [ | Negative urine test at the end of treatment: | CSSA (craving) | SAS | BDI-II | SCL-90-R | ISI |
| Politi et al., 2008 [ | - | Greater reduction with TMS ANOVA RM (time effect) | - | - | - | - |
| Steele et al., 2019 [ | Mean use (days/week): | Reduction at 7 weeks: | BAI | MADRS | - | - |
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| ||||||
| Bolloni et al., 2016 [ | Amount of cocaine in hair analysis | - | - | - | - | - |
| Rapinesi et al., 2016 [ | - | VAS 0–10 | - | - | - | - |
|
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| Martínez et al., 2018 [ | Choice of cocaine vs. receiving money: lower with rTMS | Negative binominal distribution with random effects | - | - | - | - |
| Hanlon et al., 2015 [ | - | VAS 0–10 | - | - | - | - |
| Hanlon et al., 2017 [ | - | VAS 0–10 | - | - | - | - |
|
| ||||||
| Sanna et al., 2019 [ | Urine test and consumption statement | brief modified CCQ | - | - | - | - |
BAI: Beck Anxiety Inventory; BDI-II: Beck Depression Inventory-II; CCQ: Cocaine Craving Questionnaire; CS: case series; CSSA: Cocaine Selective Severity Assessment; DLPFC: dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; ISI: Insomnia Severity Index; MADRS: Montgomery–Asberg Depression rating scale; nRCT: non-randomized controlled trial; OR: odds ratio; PSQI: Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index; PT: pharmacological treatment; RCT: randomized controlled trial; RM: repeated measures; rTMS: repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; SAS: Self-rating Anxiety Scale; SCL-90-R: Symptoms Checklist 90 revised; TAU: treatment as usual; VAS: visual analogue scale.
Dropouts and adverse events.
| Author (Year) | Drop-Outs | Adverse Events |
|---|---|---|
| Boloni (2016) [ | 4/18 (22.2%) | Discomfort was not observed except for a patient who suffered from a mild headache after receiving active stimulation. |
| Gómez (2020) [ | NR | Serious AEs were not reported. There were no seizures, syncopes, neurological complications or subjective complaints about memory or concentration impairment limiting the treatment. |
| Hanlon (2015) [ | NA | NR |
| Hanlon (2017) [ | NA | NR |
| Madeo (2020) [ | 58/284 (20.4%) | AEs were reported by 41 of the 284 patients. AEs reported were headache ( |
| Martínez (2018) [ | NR | Participants had difficulty tolerating stimulation that increased from 100 to 120% of MT, and thus the protocol was amended by lowering the maximal stimulation. |
| Pettorruso (2019) [ | 4/20 (20%) | The treated subjects reported no significant side effect. |
| Politi (2008) [ | NR | NR |
| Rapinesi (2016) [ | 0/7 (0%) | All patients tolerated the stimulation without complications or AEs. |
| Sanna (2019) [ | 4/47 (8.5%) | A few participants in both the 15 Hz rTMS and the iTBS groups reported mild discomfort at the start of stimulation, especially during the first session. Both treatments were safe and there were no serious or unexpected AEs related to the treatments. There were no seizures or any other transient neurological event. |
| Steele (2019) [ | 7/16 (43.7%) | There were no unexpected, serious AEs. Nine of the 14 participants experienced at least one headache. One participant experienced sudden pain around her eyes and one experienced muscle soreness in the right forearm. No negative side-effects in cognitive and affective assessments were reported. No participant experienced any signs of mania or suicidality. After completing 26 iTBS sessions, a participant reported right-hand supination/pronation and thus treatment was terminated. |
| Terraneo (2016) [ | 3/32 (9.4%) | A few participants reported mild discomfort at the start of stimulation, especially during the first session, but overall, there were no significant differences in AEs across groups. There were no serious or unexpected AEs. |
| AEs: adverse events; NR: not reported; NA: not applicable. | ||