Preprint Microtesla Magnetic Therapy for cognitive impairment in post-acute sequelae of SARS CoV-2: A randomized controlled feasibility study Canori Putrino

Jaybee00

Senior Member (Voting Rights)

Abstract​

Background: Cognitive impairment has significant implications for function and quality of life and is common in individuals with post-acute sequelae of SARS CoV-2, also known as long COVID (LC). Emerging evidence suggests that sustained neuroinflammation, cerebrovascular dysfunction, and mitochondrial impairment are contributors to cognitive symptoms. Microtesla Magnetic Therapy (MMT) is a low-amplitude radiofrequency magnetic field intervention that has demonstrated anti-inflammatory and neuroprotective effects in preclinical models, suggesting it may be valuable in the management of cognitive impairment from LC and other neurological disorders. This study is the first randomized controlled trial to evaluate MMT for LC-related cognitive impairment.

Objective: To evaluate the feasibility, safety, and preliminary efficacy of an at-home MMT intervention in individuals with moderate-to-severe cognitive impairment from LC.

Methods: In this prospective feasibility study, 30 participants with LC-related cognitive impairment were randomized (2:1) to receive active or sham MMT. Participants self-administered 15-minute treatments at home with remote monitoring twice weekly for 4 weeks using a head-worn device that delivered a nonthermal radiofrequency magnetic field to the whole brain. Feasibility was defined as completion of at least 80% of prescribed treatments and all study visits. Secondary outcomes included safety, cognitive function, and self-reported mood and quality of life assessed at baseline, post-treatment (Week 4), and follow-up (Week 8).

Results: Feasibility was high, with 100% treatment adherence among participants who completed the study and strong usability ratings for at-home administration. There were no device-related adverse events. Compared with sham, participants receiving active MMT showed significantly greater improvements from baseline to Week 8 in WAIS-IV Digit Span Sequencing (p= 0.026), HVLT-R Recall (p= 0.044), and D-KEFS Color Naming (p= 0.049). Additional measures of attention, processing speed, and executive function demonstrated favorable trends in the active group. Emotional well-being, assessed by the SF-36, improved significantly in the active group at Week 8 compared with sham (p= 0.017), and mood symptoms showed clinically meaningful improvement.

Conclusions: Administration of the MMT intervention at home was feasible, safe, and well tolerated in individuals with cognitive impairment from LC. Preliminary findings suggest sustained clinically meaningful improvements in multiple cognitive domains and mood following treatment.

 
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Putrino X Thread



“Excited to get this out in preprint: triple-blind, placebo-controlled microtesla magnetic therapy (MMT) is safe, feasible and effective in reducing cognitive impairment in people with #LongCOVID. I get excited about interventions for cognitive symptoms…”
 
The small sample size limited statistical power, and multiple outcomes were assessed without correction for multiple comparisons. Findings should be interpreted as exploratory.
In my view, if a study describes itself as exploratory and does not do multiple test correction, then what it is saying is that no efficacy conclusions can be drawn from the data, where instead the results are meant to be used as a reference for seeing if the most significant findings replicate in a followup study.

Thus, I think the conclusion makes it sound too much like they found an intervention that works:
Preliminary findings suggest sustained clinically meaningful improvements in multiple cognitive domains and mood following treatment.
 
I wondered about dropouts, because they talk about treatment adherence in those who completed the study:
Feasibility was high, with 100% treatment adherence among participants who completed the study and strong usability ratings for at-home administration.

They say
A total of 65 participants were screened; 32 participants failed screening, and 33 subjects were enrolled (Figure 2). To preserve the randomization allocation and ensure that 30 participants completed all study procedures, screening exceeded the target sample size to account for anticipated attrition. Three study participants were withdrawn from the study after enrollment for the following reasons: (1) COVID reinfection during the study period, which per protocol required withdrawal; (2) Two consecutive video visits missed, which per protocol required withdrawal; (3) Participant injured their ankle and withdrew to pursue surgical intervention. In total, 30 participants with LC-related cognitive impairment completed all trial activities (active=20; sham= 10).
So, that's potentially okay, not many dropping out from the 33 subjects that were said to have been enrolled.
 
Putrino’s whole stchick is to find companies or treatments already out there and have them fund the studies.

I listened to a podcast with him describing this process a while ago, he claims this provide faster results, but I’m starting to think it allows snake oils to have an easy target. So pretty much every study he puts out will have conflicts of interest
 
Of the 2 significant Mood and Quality of Life Outcomes, the controls had a larger negative change than the improvement in the active group. A treatment being efficacious because the controls got worse doesn't seem like the basis of a quality treatment.
 
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