Abstract

There are no effective treatments for cocaine use disorder (CUD), a chronic, relapsing brain disease characterized by dysregulated circuits related to cue reactivity, reward processing, response inhibition, and executive control. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) has the potential to modulate circuits and networks implicated in neuropsychiatric disorders, including addiction. Although acute applications of TMS have reduced craving in urine-negative cocaine users, the tolerability and safety of administering accelerated TMS to cocaine-positive individuals is unknown. As such, we performed a proof-of-concept study employing an intermittent theta-burst stimulation (iTBS) protocol in an actively cocaine-using sample. Although our main goal was to assess the tolerability and safety of administering three iTBS sessions daily, we also hypothesized that iTBS would reduce cocaine use in this non-treatment seeking cohort. We recruited 19 individuals with CUD to receive three open-label iTBS sessions per day, with approximately a 60-min interval between sessions, for 10 days over a 2-week period (30 total iTBS sessions). iTBS was delivered to left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) with neuronavigation guidance. Compliance and safety were assessed throughout the trial. Cocaine use behavior was assessed before, during, and after the intervention and at 1- and 4-week follow-up visits. Of the 335 iTBS sessions applied, 73% were performed on participants with cocaine-positive urine tests. Nine of the 14 participants who initiated treatment received at least 26 of 30 iTBS sessions and returned for the 4-week follow-up visit. These individuals reduced their weekly cocaine consumption by 78% in amount of dollars spent and 70% in days of use relative to pre-iTBS cocaine use patterns. Similarly, individuals reduced their weekly consumption of nicotine, alcohol, and THC, suggesting iTBS modulated a common circuit across drugs of abuse. iTBS was well-tolerated, despite the expected occasional headaches. A single participant developed a transient neurological event of uncertain etiology on iTBS day 9 and cocaine-induced psychosis 2 weeks after discontinuation. It thus appears that accelerated iTBS to left dlPFC administered in active, chronic cocaine users is both feasible and tolerable in actively using cocaine participants with preliminary indications of efficacy in reducing both the amount and frequency of cocaine (and other off target drug) use. The neural underpinnings of these behavioral changes could help in the future development of effective treatment of CUD.

Highlights

  • Addiction is a complex neurobiological disease manifested as compulsive substance use in the face of known negative consequences (Volkow et al, 2016)

  • There were no qualitative differences in cocaine use at baseline between Completers and Non-Completers based on the Timeline Follow Back (TLFB)

  • At the 4-week post-intermittent theta-burst stimulation (iTBS) follow-up, the nine Completers reduced the amount of money spent on weekly cocaine consumption from $197 (SD = $115) at baseline to $30 (SD = $40) at the second follow-up, a 78% reduction, F(2,14) = 17.54, p < 0.001 (Figure 3A) and reduced the number of days of use from 4 (SD = 2) days per week at baseline to 1 (SD = 1) days per week at the second follow-up, a 70% reduction, F(2,14) = 12.91, p < 0.001, relative to pre-iTBS (Figure 3B)

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Summary

Introduction

Addiction is a complex neurobiological disease manifested as compulsive substance use in the face of known negative consequences (Volkow et al, 2016). 25% of Americans reporting a lifetime drug dependence report cocaine dependence (Grant et al, 2016). This chronic, relapsing brain disease is characterized by dysregulated circuits related to cue reactivity, reward processing, executive control, and intrinsic network connectivity (Garavan et al, 1999, 2000; Gu et al, 2010; Steele et al, 2014, 2017, 2018a, 2019; Hu et al, 2015; Fedota et al, 2016; Fink et al, 2016; McHugh et al, 2016). As there are no FDA-approved pharmacotherapies for cocaine dependence, it is imperative to identify promising new treatment interventions

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