Despite affecting 2-4% of the population worldwide, fibromyalgia often remains refractory to treatment. Here we report the first international randomised double-blind, sham-controlled trial developed to assess the efficacy of repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) as an add-on therapy for fibromyalgia. Women aged ≥18 yr with fibromyalgia refractory to best available treatment were enrolled in Brazil, France, and Japan, and randomised to 10 Hz motor cortex (M1) rTMS, 3000 pulses day-1, or sham stimulation. This included 10 induction sessions over 2 weeks, followed by weekly maintenance (6 weeks), and fortnightly extended maintenance (8 weeks). Primary outcome was ≥50% pain reduction at week 8 compared with baseline. Secondary outcomes included pain interference, mood, global impression of change, and Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) scores at weeks 8 and 16. We randomised 101 women (mean age 48 [range 25-83] yr) into active (n=52) or sham (n=49) arms. Bayesian analysis revealed a 99.4% probability of ≥50% pain reduction at week 8 in the active group vs sham (odds ratio [OR] 3.04; 95% credible interval [95% CrI] 1.26-8.06), with a number needed to treat of 4.54. Frequentist analysis confirmed that relative pain reduction was higher in the active than in the sham group (40.4% vs 18.4%, P=0.028). At week 16, this probability reduced to 34.2% (OR 0.815; 95% CrI 0.313-2.1), but the likelihood of FIQ score reduction was 79.1%. The intervention appeared safe. Add-on M1-repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation reduced pain intensity up to 8 weeks in women with fibromyalgia. Although analgesic effects waned, functional improvements remained during extended maintenance at week 16.
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