Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation Combined With Multimodality Aphasia Therapy for Chronic Poststroke Aphasia
Trevor A. Low, Kevin Lindland, Adam Kirton, Helen L. Carlson, Ashley D. Harris, Bradley G. Goodyear, Oury Monchi, Michael D. Hill, Miranda L. Rose, Sean P. Dukelow
Abstract
BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Intensive speech therapy may improve recovery from poststroke aphasia. Further evidence suggests that pairing repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) with intensive speech therapy might augment outcomes. This sham-controlled randomized clinical trial evaluated the efficacy of 1-Hz rTMS over the right pars triangularis combined with multimodality aphasia therapy (M-MAT) in chronic poststroke aphasia. METHODS: A parallel-group, double-blind, sham-controlled randomized clinical trial was conducted between April 2021 and May 2023 at an outpatient neurorehabilitation clinic. Individuals with chronic nonfluent aphasia after left middle cerebral artery stroke (>6 months from stroke) were enrolled and randomly assigned to receive either rTMS or sham stimulation combined with 35 hours of M-MAT over 10 days. The primary outcome was the Western Aphasia Battery aphasia quotient (WAB-AQ) measured at 3 weeks and 15 weeks. Intention-to-treat analysis examined treatment effects over time using linear mixed models. RESULTS: = 0.024). DISCUSSION: Intensive administration of M-MAT alone improves speech production in patients with chronic poststroke aphasia. Combining 1-Hz rTMS with M-MAT is associated with supplemental improvements in aphasia severity at follow-up. rTMS is a promising candidate as an adjuvant therapy to M-MAT. TRIAL REGISTRATION INFORMATION: ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04102228. CLASSIFICATION OF EVIDENCE: This study provides Class III evidence that in patients with aphasia 6 or more months after a stroke, 1-Hz rTMS combined with intensive M-MAT improves WAB-AQ more than sham stimulation plus M-MAT.