Abstract

Background: In order to improve the current treatment of addictive disorders non-invasive neuromodulation over the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) has gained attention. The DLPFC is crucially involved in executive functioning, functions which are related to the course of addictive disorders. Non-invasive stimulation of the DLPFC may lead to changes in executive functioning. Currently an overview of effects of neuromodulation on these functions is lacking. Therefore, this systematic review addresses the effects of non-invasive neuromodulation on executive functioning in addictive disorders.Methods: The current review is conducted and reported in accordance with the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses for Protocols 2015 (PRISMA-P 2015) guidelines and has been registered in PROSPERO International Prospective Register of Systematic Reviews (https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/, registration number: CRD42018084157). Original articles were searched using the Ovid MEDLINE, Embase and PsycINFO database.Results: The systematic search resulted in 1,228 unique studies, of which sixteen were included in the current review. Some of these studies do not address the classic definition of executive functions, but another cognitive function. However, they were included in this review since the field is small and still under development and we aim to give an inclusive overview in its broadest sense. The following executive and other cognitive functioning domains were assessed: attention, cognitive flexibility, response inhibition, memory and learning, problem solving, social cognition, risk taking, cognitive bias modification and overall executive functioning. The executive function domain most positively affected was social cognition followed by memory & learning, response inhibition, cognitive flexibility and attention.Conclusions: The studies addressed in the current review used a large variability of stimulation protocols and study designs which complicates comparability of the results. Nevertheless, the results of these studies are promising in light of improvement of current treatment. Therefore, we recommend future studies that compare the effect of different types of stimulation, stimulation sides and number of stimulation sessions in larger clinical trials. This will significantly increase the comparability of the studies and thereby accelerate and clarify the conclusion on whether non-invasive neuromodulation is an effective add-on treatment for substance dependence.

Highlights

  • RationaleWorldwide over 15 million people are suffering from an addictive disorder (WHO, 2010)

  • The studies addressed in the current review used a large variability of stimulation protocols and study designs which complicates comparability of the results

  • If the search resulted in studies that did not fit the classic definition of executive functioning, but another cognitive function, the study was included since the field is small and we wanted to provide a comprehensive overview of the literature

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Summary

Introduction

RationaleWorldwide over 15 million people are suffering from an addictive disorder (WHO, 2010). In an attempt to improve the current treatment of addictive disorders non-invasive neuromodulation has gained attention as a novel add-on treatment (Jansen et al, 2013; Bellamoli et al, 2014). Addictive disorders are characterized by increased activity of the subcortical reward system in response to drug related cues, and decreased activity and functioning of the prefrontal cognitive control network (Koob and Volkow, 2013). The imbalance between increased bottom-up (subcortical) urges combined with weakened top-down (prefrontal) neural processes often lead to relapse (Everitt and Robbins, 2005; Baler and Volkow, 2006; Wilcox et al, 2014). In order to improve the current treatment of addictive disorders non-invasive neuromodulation over the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) has gained attention. This systematic review addresses the effects of non-invasive neuromodulation on executive functioning in addictive disorders

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