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The goal of this clinical trial is to determine whether high-intensity, low-frequency periodic repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) applied to the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) can modulate cardiac autonomic regulation in women with recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL) and comorbid anxiety. The main questions it aims to answer are:
Does 120% resting motor threshold (RMT) rhythmic low-frequency rTMS reduce heart rate during stimulation time windows compared with sham stimulation?
Does 120% RMT rTMS alter heart-rate-variability (HRV) spectral power at the target frequency (0.0167 Hz) compared with sham stimulation?
Researchers will compare active rTMS with sham rTMS to determine whether the active intervention produces measurable changes in cardiac autonomic activity.
Participants will:
Undergo a single session of rTMS or sham stimulation consisting of 20 consecutive stimulation time windows (each 60 seconds: 40 seconds of 1-Hz stimulation plus 20 seconds of rest) targeting the right DLPFC;
Have continuous electrocardiography (ECG) recordings collected during the entire stimulation session;
Complete clinical and psychiatric assessments before participation.
Full description
Recurrent pregnancy loss (RPL), defined as the loss of two or more pregnancies before viability (i.e., 24 weeks by European standards or 28 weeks by Chinese criteria), affects approximately 2-5% of women of reproductive age and represents a significant physical and psychological burden. Beyond its implications for reproductive health, RPL is increasingly recognized as a condition associated with systemic consequences, including heightened anxiety, altered autonomic nervous system function, and increased long-term cardiovascular risk.
Emerging evidence suggests that in women with RPL and comorbid anxiety, chronic psychological stress may lead to dysregulation of the autonomic nervous system, characterized by increased sympathetic tone, reduced vagal activity, elevated resting heart rate, and decreased heart rate variability (HRV). These alterations may create a maladaptive feedback loop that reinforces emotional distress, autonomic imbalance, and reproductive vulnerability.
To address this issue, this randomized, sham-controlled, proof-of-concept clinical trial will investigate whether low-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) targeting the right dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC)-a region critically involved in emotion regulation and autonomic control-can modulate cardiac autonomic function in women with RPL and anxiety.
The intervention protocol is based on findings from a prior dose-finding study (NEURO-CARD-rTMS-1), which indicated that stimulation at 120% of resting motor threshold (RMT) produced significant reductions in heart rate without compromising tolerability. Building on this, the current trial (NEURO-CARD-rTMS-2) will apply 1-Hz rhythmic rTMS at 120% RMT over the right DLPFC, delivered in 20 consecutive stimulation windows (each 60 seconds long: 40 seconds of stimulation followed by 20 seconds of rest). This stimulation paradigm aligns with the very-low-frequency (VLF) band of HRV (~0.0167 Hz), enabling frequency-specific entrainment analysis.
The primary endpoint will be the difference in baseline-corrected mean heart rate during the stimulation time windows between the active and sham groups. Secondary endpoints include changes in HRV spectral power at 0.0167 Hz and brain-heart coupling (BHC), defined as the correlation between heart rate and spectral power at this frequency. Safety outcomes will be monitored throughout the procedure.
All electrocardiographic (ECG) data will be recorded continuously at 1000 Hz using a wireless Bluetooth system. Participants will undergo standardized psychiatric assessments based on DSM-5 criteria, and key demographic and clinical variables (e.g., BMI, blood pressure, medication use, number and cause of miscarriages) will be collected for covariate analysis.
This trial aims to provide initial mechanistic evidence for the feasibility and physiological efficacy of right DLPFC-targeted neuromodulation in improving autonomic regulation in a high-risk, psychologically sensitive population. If successful, the findings will support the development of non-invasive, brain-based interventions to improve both reproductive and cardiovascular outcomes in women with RPL and anxiety.
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46 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Lin Tao, MM; Fei Meng, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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