BMJ Open (Jul 2020)

Connectivity guided theta burst transcranial magnetic stimulation versus repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation for treatment-resistant moderate to severe depression: study protocol for a randomised double-blind controlled trial (BRIGhTMIND)

  • Cassandra Brookes,
  • Shaun Barber,
  • Mark Liddle,
  • Neil Nixon,
  • Peter Bates,
  • Richard Morriss,
  • Marilyn James,
  • Ana Suazo Di Paola,
  • Paul M Briley,
  • Louise Thomson,
  • Lucy Webster,
  • Mohamed Abdelghani,
  • Dorothee P Auer,
  • Andrew Blamire,
  • Sarina Iwabuchi,
  • Catherine Kaylor-Hughes,
  • Sudheer Lankappa,
  • Peter Liddle,
  • Hamish McAllister-Williams,
  • Alex O'Neill-Kerr,
  • Stefan Pszczolkowski Parraguez,
  • Yvette Walters,
  • Lorraine Bastick,
  • Rosie Carr,
  • Alison Cartlidge,
  • Harry Clark,
  • William Cottam,
  • Robert De Vai,
  • Linda Davison,
  • John Gledhill,
  • Adele Gregory,
  • Christopher Griffiths,
  • Andrew Hamilton,
  • Delilah Harding,
  • Kelly Heath,
  • Rachel Hobson,
  • Gbeminiyi Ireoluwa,
  • Najat Khalifa,
  • Kate Johnstone,
  • Charlotte Kirkland,
  • Jessica Lynch,
  • Jehill Parikh,
  • Isabel Reid,
  • Noemi Reiner,
  • Sandra Simpson,
  • Beverley Smith,
  • Tina Sore,
  • Joseph Stone,
  • Carly Taylorson,
  • Rebecca Toney,
  • Claire Turner,
  • Sarah Wilkinson,
  • Andy Willis,
  • Tom Willis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-038430
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 7

Abstract

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Introduction The BRIGhTMIND study aims to determine the clinical effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and mechanism of action of connectivity guided intermittent theta burst stimulation (cgiTBS) versus standard repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) in adults with moderate to severe treatment resistant depression.Methods and analysis The study is a randomised double-blind controlled trial with 1:1 allocation to either 20 sessions of (1) cgiTBS or (2) neuronavigated rTMS not using connectivity guidance. A total of 368 eligible participants with a diagnosis of current unipolar major depressive disorder that is both treatment resistant (defined as scoring 2 or more on the Massachusetts General Hospital Staging Score) and moderate to severe (scoring >16 on the 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS-17)), will be recruited from primary and secondary care settings at four treatment centres in the UK. The primary outcome is depression response at 16 weeks (50% or greater reduction in HDRS-17 score from baseline). Secondary outcomes include assessments of self-rated depression, anxiety, psychosocial functioning, cognition and quality of life at 8, 16 and 26 weeks postrandomisation. Cost-effectiveness, patient acceptability, safety, mechanism of action and predictors of response will also be examined.Ethics and dissemination Ethical approval was granted by East Midlands Leicester Central Research Ethics Committee (ref: 18/EM/0232) on 30 August 2018. The results of the study will be published in relevant peer-reviewed journals, and then through professional and public conferences and media. Further publications will explore patient experience, moderators and mediators of outcome and mechanism of action.Trial registration number ISRCTN19674644