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Youth depression is a debilitating disorder that exacts enormous social, economic and personal cost. Unfortunately, treatments which are conventionally used to treat adult depression have often modest to no efficacy in youth and have side effects. Thus, there is a tremendous imperative to develop new treatments for youth depression. Investigators propose to examine the efficacy of a short form of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) for youth depression and examine its biological targets. This will be the first study examining the efficacy of a short rTMS protocol in youth diagnosed with depression who fail responding to or are intolerable to antidepressants. If the results are positive, investigators will have identified a novel treatment that may be both more efficacious, better tolerated and more acceptable treatment for youth depression. Finally, identifying the biological mechanisms leading to treatment efficacy will lead to more personalized treatments for youth depression and will be groundbreaking vis à vis understanding the mechanisms involved in this illness.
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The highest rates of depression are reported in youth 16-24 years of age and youth depression is a significant source of burden to the individual, their families, and to society. Unfortunately, current treatments (e.g., selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors), which are conventionally used to treat depression often have modest and sometimes no efficacy in youth. Also, accumulating evidence suggests that these medications may increase suicidal thoughts in adolescents and young adults below the age of 24. In addition to pharmacological treatments, cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) has been used alone or in combination with medications for treating depression in this age group. Although randomized controlled trials and practice guidelines support the use of CBT alone and CBT with an antidepressant medication for adolescent depression, a large minority of adolescents do not respond to either treatment approaches.Thus, there is a tremendous imperative to develop new treatments for youth depression.
Investigators propose to examine the efficacy of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) for youth depression. There are several reasons for pursuing this treatment: 1) rTMS applied to the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC), a cortical region implicated in pathophysiology of depression, is a safe and FDA approved treatment for adults with medication-resistant depression; 2) Young age is suggested to be a good predictor of response to rTMS treatment; 3) rTMS trials in adolescence and youth with medication resistant depression provide evidence that rTMS is a safe efficacious and well tolerated treatment for adolescents that does not increase suicidal thoughts. Additionally, recently rTMS parameter developments such as theta burst stimulation (i.e., TBS) provide compelling evidence for efficacy in less of the time it takes to administer conventional rTMS, thus lowering the overall costs and increasing the number of patients that can be treated.
It is imperative that research investigate treatment related biological mechanisms, such that increases in understanding can lead to enhanced efficacy. Investigators will utilize a novel and powerful in vivo brain mapping technique of TMS combined with electroencephalography (TMS-EEG) that permits non-invasive assessment of inhibitory, connectivity and plasticity mechanisms from the DLPFC. The pathophysiology of depression has been linked to impairment in neural plasticity and connectivity and neural and behavioral inhibition - mechanisms that can be measured through TMS-EEG and maybe changed by TBS treatment. Therefore, investigating the association between TBS-related changes in plasticity, connectivity and inhibition may be key to understanding both the treatment mechanisms involved in youth depression and predictors of treatment response in this disorder.
Therefore the specific aims in this study are twofold:
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