Clinical Research Directory
Browse clinical research sites, groups, and studies.
Temporal Interference Methods for Addiction Treatment
Sponsor: Indiana University
Summary
This clinical study is testing whether a new non-invasive brain stimulation method, called temporal interference (TI), can reduce nicotine cravings and usage in people who vape. TI delivers mild electrical currents to the scalp in a way that targets deep brain areas involved in addiction, without the need for surgery. In this randomized controlled trial, participants will be assigned to one of three groups: TI stimulation to the nucleus accumbens, TI stimulation to the anterior insula, or a placebo (sham) condition. Each participant will attend a single stimulation session after 8 hours of nicotine abstinence and will use a custom vape device that measures real-time nicotine inhalation. Craving levels will be reported during and after the session. The study aims to determine whether TI to the insula or nucleus accumbens is more effective at decreasing cravings and nicotine inhalation, and whether either is more effective than sham stimulation. For one week after the session, participants will use a smartphone app to track nicotine use and cravings. The primary hypothesis is that TI stimulation to deep brain regions will reduce both nicotine craving and actual use, immediately after stimulation and over the following week, compared to the sham condition.
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
21 Years - 50 Years
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Enrollment
120
Start Date
2026-01-22
Completion Date
2027-02-27
Last Updated
2026-02-10
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Interventions
TI-NDBS
In the active TI-NDBS condition, participants receive transcranial stimulation for 60 minutes through scalp electrodes using temporal interference (TI). Two electrode sets deliver high-frequency alternating currents (e.g., 2000 Hz and 2020 Hz), generating a 20 Hz beat frequency at depth to stimulate targeted brain regions. Stimulation is delivered in six 10-minute blocks with 30-second ramp-up and ramp-down periods to minimize discomfort. Electrode configurations differ by group to target either the nucleus accumbens or anterior insula, based on finite element modeling. The maximum current is up to 2 mA per electrode, and no single region receives more than 2 mA.
Sham TI-NDBS
This is the control condition in which participants will receive sham stimulation for 60 minutes.
Locations (1)
Indiana University
Bloomington, Indiana, United States