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Anorexia Nervosa is a psychiatric disorder characterized by high rates of chronicity, significant societal costs, and one of the highest mortality rates among psychiatric illnesses. Despite therapeutic advances, treatment outcomes remain poor, with high relapse rates and full recovery achieved in only 50% of cases.
Recent cognitive, behavioral, and neuroimaging studies suggest that Anorexia Nervosa may involve dysfunction in a posterior parietal network responsible for multisensory integration. This network plays a pivotal role in bodily self-representation and the modulation of environment-body interactions, and may therefore be directly implicated in two core symptoms of the disorder: distorted body image representation and dietary restriction. Given these insights, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) - an established neuromodulation technique with proven efficacy in various psychiatric disorders - emerges as a promising investigational intervention. The aim of this study is to evaluate the feasibility and therapeutic efficacy of a protocol of intermittent Theta Burst Stimulation (iTBS) targeting the right posterior parietal lobe in patients with Anorexia Nervosa. The active iTBS protocol will be compared to a sham (placebo) stimulation as a control condition.
Full description
Patients with anorexia nervosa will be recruited from the Eating Disorder Unit of Padova Hospital. Inclusion criteria will be: (1) current diagnosis of anorexia nervosa according to DSM-5 criteria; (2) 18 years or older; (3) failure of an outpatient treatment cycle lasting at least 3 months. Exclusion criteria will be: (1) Presence of significant neurological comorbidities or severe/unstable systemic diseases, (2) Diastolic blood pressure <60 mmHg or heart rate <60 bpm, (3) diagnosis of psychosis or substance abuse disorders, (4) history of hypomanic/manic episodes (5) Current suicidal ideation, (6) known contraindications to TMS (epilepsy, head trauma with loss of consciousness, severe/frequent headaches, cochlear implants, pacemakers, pregnancy, metallic implants, implanted neurostimulators)
Each patient will be randomly assigned to one of two conditions: active iTBS or sham stimulation
iTBS protocol: Patients in this condition will undergo 20 sessions of iTBS, one per day for 20 consecutive working days (4 weeks). Each visit will last approximately 20 minutes, including preparation, 3 minutes of stimulation, and debriefing. The coil position will be identified using a neuronavigation system based on each participant's MRI. Intermittent theta burst stimulation will involve the delivery of triplets of pulses at 50 Hz, repeated at 5 Hz, at 100% of the individual motor threshold.
Sham Stimulation: Patients in this condition will undergo the same protocol (20 sessions of TMS), with the only difference being the use of a sham coil, which produces the same sound as the real coil without generating a magnetic field
Patients in both conditions will complete a baseline assessment (Day 0), an end-of-treatment assessment (Week 4), and a follow-up assessment (4 months after the end of treatment).
All the assessments will include:
Clinical interview with a psychiatrist who is blind to the stimulation condition. During the interview, the clinician will also record the patients' weight and height to calculate Body Mass Index (BMI).
Depression Anxiety Stress Scales - 21 items (DASS-21): a validated 21-item scale for assessing depression, anxiety, and stress.
Eating Disorders Inventory (EDI-I): a validated 64-item scale for assessing eating disorder psychopathology.
Body Attitude Questionnaire: a validated questionnaire on body dissatisfaction and body perception.
Wisconsin Card Sorting Task (WCST): assessment of set-shifting abilities.
Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure Test: assessment of central coherence.
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34 participants in 2 patient groups
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Enrico Collantoni, MD, PhD; Valentina Meregalli, PhD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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