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Prefrontal Oscillations in Social Anxiety Disorder (POSAD) (POSAD)

Primary Purpose

Anxiety Disorders, Anxiety, Anxiety and Fear

Status
Unknown status
Phase
Not Applicable
Locations
France
Study Type
Interventional
Intervention
In vivo social exposure
Social exposure in a virtual reality setting
EEG recording
Psychometric evaluation
Visual Analogue Scale of anxiety
Sponsored by
Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France
About
Eligibility
Locations
Arms
Outcomes
Full info

About this trial

This is an interventional basic science trial for Anxiety Disorders

Eligibility Criteria

20 Years - 50 Years (Adult)All SexesDoes not accept healthy volunteers

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Social anxiety disorder as defined in DSM-5
  • Full understanding of the protocol
  • Obtaining informed consent from study subjects before or at inclusion at the latest
  • Being registered in the french national health insurance service (Sécurité Sociale) (or equivalent)

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Active medical co-morbidity including severe hypertension, cardiac insufficiency, Raynaud syndrome, diabetes mellitus, renal insufficiency, adrenal insufficiency, Cushing syndrome and epilepsy
  • Severe neurological co-morbidity, including but not limited to Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis
  • Long-term corticotherapy
  • History of significant head injury, defined by loss of consciousness
  • Being diagnosed with another major psychiatric condition (DSM5) including bipolar disorder and schizophrenia or substance/alcohol use disorder; with the exception of major depressive disorder and nicotine use disorder
  • Suicidal risk evaluated as moderate to high in the MINI questionnaire
  • initiation of a psychotropic treatment or change in the dose of ongoing psychotropic treatment within 3 days prior to each visit and including:

    1. antidepressant treatments with selective serotonin recapture inhibitors, serotonin and norepinephrine inhibitors, alpha2-presynaptic adrenoreceptors (mirtazapine, mianserin), tricyclic
    2. anxiolytic drugs including benzodiazepines and anti-histamine
    3. antipsychotic drugs
  • Acute alcohol intake 2 days prior to each visit (inclusion, experimental sessions)
  • Pregnancy or breastfeeding.
  • Ongoing hospitalization without consent (decision of a third-party: medical, justice)

Sites / Locations

  • GENPHASS, SANPSY, CHU de BordeauxRecruiting

Arms of the Study

Arm 1

Arm 2

Arm 3

Arm Type

Experimental

Experimental

Experimental

Arm Label

Group 1: Go-no-go phase

Group 2.1

Group 2.2

Arm Description

The presence of significant prefrontal oscillations in the EEG recording 2-6Hz band during in vivo social exposure (oral presentation to examiners) will be assessed in 10 subjects with social anxiety disorder. EEG will be recorded immediately before, during and after oral presentations to examiners. Psychometric evaluation will be performed prior to experimental sessions. Rating of anxiety levels will be performed by subjects using a Visual Analogue Scale of anxiety during each of the 3 experimental periods (wainting, presentation, recovery). Results of EEG recordings in the first 10 subjects will lead to continuation (presence of significant slow prefrontal oscillations during anxiety) or interruption (absence of signification oscillation) of the study.

In group 2.1, 10 subjects will undergo 2 sessions in a cross-over design with EEG recording immediately before, during and after: "real exposure": oral presentation to a panel of examiners "virtual reality" : oral presentation to virtual examiners Rating of anxiety levels will be performed by subjects using a Visual Analogue Scale of anxiety during each of the 3 experimental periods for each session. Psychometric evaluation will be performed prior to experimental sessions.

In group 2.2, 10 subjects will undergo 2 sessions in a cross-over design with EEG recording immediately before, during and after: "virtual reality" : oral presentation to virtual examiners "real exposure": oral presentation to a panel of examiners Rating of anxiety levels will be performed by subjects using a Visual Analogue Scale of anxiety during each of the 3 experimental periods for each session. Psychometric evaluation will be performed prior to experimental sessions.

Outcomes

Primary Outcome Measures

Change in power of slow oscillations in prefrontal EEG recordings during anticipation relative to baseline
The change in power of PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations between the 5-minutes waiting period before oral presentation and the recovery period will be computed as a ratio. Detection of exaggerated 2-6Hz oscillations in prefrontal cortex during anxious anticipation is the primary aim of this study.

Secondary Outcome Measures

Duration of prefrontal slow oscillations epochs during anticipation
Time-frequency analysis will be performed to determine the duration of 2-6Hz prefrontal oscillations epochs and total duration of these oscillations within experimental period. Significant oscillatory epochs will be defined using power ratios. These metrics will be used in order to assess the neurobiological and clinical relevance of this biomarker.

Full Information

First Posted
November 29, 2018
Last Updated
November 22, 2019
Sponsor
Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France
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1. Study Identification

Unique Protocol Identification Number
NCT03821779
Brief Title
Prefrontal Oscillations in Social Anxiety Disorder (POSAD)
Acronym
POSAD
Official Title
Study of Slow Prefrontal Cortex Oscillations During Social Exposure in Social Anxiety Disorder
Study Type
Interventional

2. Study Status

Record Verification Date
November 2019
Overall Recruitment Status
Unknown status
Study Start Date
November 12, 2019 (Actual)
Primary Completion Date
November 10, 2021 (Anticipated)
Study Completion Date
December 10, 2021 (Anticipated)

3. Sponsor/Collaborators

Responsible Party, by Official Title
Sponsor
Name of the Sponsor
Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France

4. Oversight

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product
No
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product
No
Data Monitoring Committee
Yes

5. Study Description

Brief Summary
Experimental fear in rodents is correlated with slow oscillations in electrical recordings of prefrontal cortex activities. The present study aims to test whether slow prefrontal oscillations is a biomarker of pathological anxiety in human subjects.
Detailed Description
Fear and anxiety are adaptive responses that may become excessive or inappropriate in pathological conditions, as defined as anxiety disorders in DSM-5. These disorders, including phobic disorders such as social anxiety disorder, are frequent and impairing in the general population, with an estimated lifetime prevalence of 28% and significant consequences on quality of life. Direct and indirect medical costs related to these conditions amount to 74.4 billion €/year in Europe. Despite their prevalence, debilitating nature and chronicity, the pathophysiology of anxiety disorders is poorly understood and neurobiological treatments, including pharmacotherapy, are lacking efficacy. A better understanding of the neuronal mechanisms implicated in anxiety is necessary for the conception of new approaches to treat pathological anxiety. Anxiety is commonly modeled in animals using fear conditioning, which consists in associating a neutral stimulus (eg: a sound) with a mild electrical foot-shock. As a result of the association between sound and shock, sound presentation in isolation induces a set of conditioned behavioral responses, such as an immobilization ("freezing"). Previous studies have shown that the expression of fear responses, measured on the basis of freezing, is associated with the emergence of slow oscillations (2-6Hz) in medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC) of mice. Moreover, emergence of these oscillations in mPFC is predictive of the occurrence of freezing, and the artificial induction of 4 Hz oscillations in mPFC with optogenetics induces freezing. Finally, inhibiting neurons in mPFC during the ascending phase of this slow mPFC oscillation at the time of conditioned sound presentation is sufficient to significantly reduce fear. Interestingly, these results obtained in mice seem to find their prolongation in humans. Recent studies using fear conditioning in human subjects have also reported the emergence of prefrontal slow oscillations between 2-6 Hz during expression of conditioned fear responses. These results suggests that common mechanisms underlie the expression of fear in humans and rodents. However, whether similar neuronal circuits and mechanisms are implicated in human anxiety disorders remains unknown. This study aims at assessing the presence of slow mPFC oscillations during expression of anxiety in patients suffering from anxiety disorders. Beyond understanding of the neuronal mechanisms underlying anxiety expression, this study could provide a biomarker of anxiety with diagnostic and therapeutic implications.

6. Conditions and Keywords

Primary Disease or Condition Being Studied in the Trial, or the Focus of the Study
Anxiety Disorders, Anxiety, Anxiety and Fear

7. Study Design

Primary Purpose
Basic Science
Study Phase
Not Applicable
Interventional Study Model
Sequential Assignment
Model Description
First phase (go-no-go) with 10 subjects in 1 arm Second phase with 20 subjets (2 arms) in a cross-over design.
Masking
None (Open Label)
Allocation
Non-Randomized
Enrollment
30 (Anticipated)

8. Arms, Groups, and Interventions

Arm Title
Group 1: Go-no-go phase
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
The presence of significant prefrontal oscillations in the EEG recording 2-6Hz band during in vivo social exposure (oral presentation to examiners) will be assessed in 10 subjects with social anxiety disorder. EEG will be recorded immediately before, during and after oral presentations to examiners. Psychometric evaluation will be performed prior to experimental sessions. Rating of anxiety levels will be performed by subjects using a Visual Analogue Scale of anxiety during each of the 3 experimental periods (wainting, presentation, recovery). Results of EEG recordings in the first 10 subjects will lead to continuation (presence of significant slow prefrontal oscillations during anxiety) or interruption (absence of signification oscillation) of the study.
Arm Title
Group 2.1
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
In group 2.1, 10 subjects will undergo 2 sessions in a cross-over design with EEG recording immediately before, during and after: "real exposure": oral presentation to a panel of examiners "virtual reality" : oral presentation to virtual examiners Rating of anxiety levels will be performed by subjects using a Visual Analogue Scale of anxiety during each of the 3 experimental periods for each session. Psychometric evaluation will be performed prior to experimental sessions.
Arm Title
Group 2.2
Arm Type
Experimental
Arm Description
In group 2.2, 10 subjects will undergo 2 sessions in a cross-over design with EEG recording immediately before, during and after: "virtual reality" : oral presentation to virtual examiners "real exposure": oral presentation to a panel of examiners Rating of anxiety levels will be performed by subjects using a Visual Analogue Scale of anxiety during each of the 3 experimental periods for each session. Psychometric evaluation will be performed prior to experimental sessions.
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
In vivo social exposure
Intervention Description
Subjects will be invited to give a 5 minutes oral presentation on the topic of their choice to five examiners displaying no facial emotional reaction, after a 5 minutes period of silent waiting in front of the examiners. This waiting period is prompt to elicit anticipation-type of social anxiety.
Intervention Type
Behavioral
Intervention Name(s)
Social exposure in a virtual reality setting
Intervention Description
Subjects will give a 5 minutes oral presentation on the subject of their choice to a virtual reality panel composed of 5 examiners displaying no facial emotional reaction, after a 5 minutes period of silent waiting in front of the examiners. This waiting period is expected to elicit anticipation-type of social anxiety.
Intervention Type
Other
Intervention Name(s)
EEG recording
Intervention Description
EEG will be recorded with a standard 16-electrodes cap. Recordings will start before the 5 minutes waiting period and continue throughout oral presentation and recovery. The recovery period will be used as a baseline control
Intervention Type
Diagnostic Test
Intervention Name(s)
Psychometric evaluation
Intervention Description
Subjects will be evaluated prior to inclusion using the following assessment tools Anamnestic Association for Methodology and Documentation in Psychiatry (AMDP) questionnaire Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI 6.0, for psychiatric diagnoses) Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale (LSAS) Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) Brief Anxiety Scale of Tyrer (BAS) State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI A-B) Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF)
Intervention Type
Diagnostic Test
Intervention Name(s)
Visual Analogue Scale of anxiety
Intervention Description
Subjects will be asked to rate their anxiety levels immediately before (5 minutes of silent waiting), during and after the 5-minute oral presentation (recovery)
Primary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Change in power of slow oscillations in prefrontal EEG recordings during anticipation relative to baseline
Description
The change in power of PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations between the 5-minutes waiting period before oral presentation and the recovery period will be computed as a ratio. Detection of exaggerated 2-6Hz oscillations in prefrontal cortex during anxious anticipation is the primary aim of this study.
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation and during the 1 hour rest period
Secondary Outcome Measure Information:
Title
Duration of prefrontal slow oscillations epochs during anticipation
Description
Time-frequency analysis will be performed to determine the duration of 2-6Hz prefrontal oscillations epochs and total duration of these oscillations within experimental period. Significant oscillatory epochs will be defined using power ratios. These metrics will be used in order to assess the neurobiological and clinical relevance of this biomarker.
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation
Other Pre-specified Outcome Measures:
Title
Change in power of slow oscillations in prefrontal EEG recordings during presentation relative to baseline
Description
The change in power of PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations between the 5-minutes oral presentation and the recovery period will be computed as a ratio.
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation and during the 1 hour rest period.
Title
Duration of prefrontal slow oscillations epochs during presentation
Description
Time-frequency analysis will be performed to determine the duration of 2-6Hz prefrontal oscillations epochs and total duration of these oscillations within experimental period. Significant oscillatory epochs will be defined using power ratios.
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during anticipation and anxiety score
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power and the visual Analogue anxiety score during the 5 minutes period before presentation.
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during presentation and anxiety score
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power and the visual Analogue anxiety score during presentation.
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during anticipation and anxiety score
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration and the visual Analogue anxiety score during the 5 minutes period before presentation.
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during presentation and anxiety score
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration and the visual Analogue anxiety score during presentation.
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during anticipation and trait anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power during the 5 minutes before presentation and STAI-B scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentations (PFC oscillations power) and prior to inclusion (STAI-B rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during presentation and trait anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power during presentation and STAI-B scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation (PFC oscillations power) and prior to inclusion (STAI-B rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during anticipation and trait anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration during the 5 minutes before presentation and STAI-B scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation (PFC oscillations duration) and prior to inclusion (STAI-B rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during presentation and trait anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration during presentation and STAI-B scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation (PFC oscillations duration) and prior to inclusion (STAI-B rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during anticipation and state anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power during the 5 minutes before presentation and STAI-A scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation (PFC oscillations power) and prior to inclusion (STAI-A rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during presentation and state anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power during presentation and STAI-A scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation (PFC oscillations power) and prior to inclusion (STAI-A rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during anticipation and state anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration during the 5 minutes before presentation and STAI-A scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation (PFC oscillations duration) and prior to inclusion (STAI-A rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during presentation and state anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration during presentation and STAI-A scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation (PFC oscillations duration) and prior to inclusion (STAI-A rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during anticipation and levels of social anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power during the 5 minutes before presentation and LSAS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation (PFC oscillations power) and prior to inclusion (LSAS rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during presentation and levels of social anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power during presentation and LSAS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation (PFC oscillations power) and prior to inclusion (LSAS rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during anticipation and levels of social anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration during the 5 minutes before presentation and LSAS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation (PFC oscillations duration) and prior to inclusion (LSAS rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during presentation and levels of social anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration during presentation and LSAS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation (PFC oscillations duration) and prior to inclusion (LSAS rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during anticipation and levels of general anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power during the 5 minutes before presentation and BAS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation (PFC oscillations power) and prior to inclusion (BAS rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during presentation and levels of general anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power during presentation and BAS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation (PFC oscillations power) and prior to inclusion (BAS rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during anticipation and levels of general anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration during the 5 minutes before presentation and BAS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation (PFC oscillations duration) and prior to inclusion (BAS rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during presentation and levels of general anxiety
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration during presentation and BAS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation (PFC oscillations duration) and prior to inclusion (BAS rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during anticipation and depression levels
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power during the 5 minutes before presentation and MADRS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation (PFC oscillations power) and prior to inclusion (MARDS rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations power during presentation and depression levels
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations power during presentations and MADRS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentation (PFC oscillations power) and prior to inclusion (MARDS rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during anticipation and depression levels
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration during the 5 minutes before presentation and MADRS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes before oral presentation (PFC oscillations duration) and prior to inclusion (MARDS rating)
Title
Correlation between prefrontal slow oscillations duration during presentation and depression levels
Description
Correlation will be calculated between PFC 2-6 Hz oscillations duration during presentation and MADRS scores
Time Frame
During the 5 minutes oral presentations (PFC oscillations duration) and prior to inclusion (MARDS rating)

10. Eligibility

Sex
All
Minimum Age & Unit of Time
20 Years
Maximum Age & Unit of Time
50 Years
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
No
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria: Social anxiety disorder as defined in DSM-5 Full understanding of the protocol Obtaining informed consent from study subjects before or at inclusion at the latest Being registered in the french national health insurance service (Sécurité Sociale) (or equivalent) Exclusion Criteria: Active medical co-morbidity including severe hypertension, cardiac insufficiency, Raynaud syndrome, diabetes mellitus, renal insufficiency, adrenal insufficiency, Cushing syndrome and epilepsy Severe neurological co-morbidity, including but not limited to Parkinson's disease and multiple sclerosis Long-term corticotherapy History of significant head injury, defined by loss of consciousness Being diagnosed with another major psychiatric condition (DSM5) including bipolar disorder and schizophrenia or substance/alcohol use disorder; with the exception of major depressive disorder and nicotine use disorder Suicidal risk evaluated as moderate to high in the MINI questionnaire initiation of a psychotropic treatment or change in the dose of ongoing psychotropic treatment within 3 days prior to each visit and including: antidepressant treatments with selective serotonin recapture inhibitors, serotonin and norepinephrine inhibitors, alpha2-presynaptic adrenoreceptors (mirtazapine, mianserin), tricyclic anxiolytic drugs including benzodiazepines and anti-histamine antipsychotic drugs Acute alcohol intake 2 days prior to each visit (inclusion, experimental sessions) Pregnancy or breastfeeding. Ongoing hospitalization without consent (decision of a third-party: medical, justice)
Central Contact Person:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
Bruno Aouizerate, MD-PhD
Phone
+33(0) 5 56 56 17 98
Email
bruno.aouizerate@u-bordeaux.fr
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name or Official Title & Degree
Cyril Herry, PhD
Phone
33(0)5 57 57 37 26
Email
cyril.herry@inserm.fr
Overall Study Officials:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Olivier Doumy, MD
Organizational Affiliation
Centre Hospitalier Charles Perrens, Bordeaux; INRA NutriNeuro, Bordeaux; Université de Bordeaux, France
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Alexandra Bouvard, MD
Organizational Affiliation
Centre Hospitalier Charles Perrens, Bordeaux; Université de Bordeaux, France
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Cyril Herry, PhD
Organizational Affiliation
Neurocentre Magendie, Inserm U1215, Bordeaux, France
Official's Role
Study Director
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Cyril Dejean, PhD
Organizational Affiliation
Neurocentre Magendie, Inserm U1215, Bordeaux, France
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Thomas Bienvenu, PhD
Organizational Affiliation
Centre Hospitalier Charles Perrens, Bordeaux; Neurocentre Magendie, Inserm U1215, Bordeaux, France
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Jacques Taillard, MS
Organizational Affiliation
GENPHASS, CHU de Bordeaux
Official's Role
Principal Investigator
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Bruno Aouizerate, MD-PhD
Organizational Affiliation
Centre Hospitalier Charles Perrens, Bordeaux; INRA NutriNeuro, Bordeaux; Université de Bordeaux, France
Official's Role
Study Chair
Facility Information:
Facility Name
GENPHASS, SANPSY, CHU de Bordeaux
City
Bordeaux
ZIP/Postal Code
33076
Country
France
Individual Site Status
Recruiting
Facility Contact:
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Pierre Philip, MD-PhD
Phone
+33 5 57 82 01 73
Email
pierre.philip@chu-bordeaux.fr
First Name & Middle Initial & Last Name & Degree
Jacques Taillard, MS
Email
jacques.taillard@chu-bordeaux.fr

12. IPD Sharing Statement

Plan to Share IPD
No

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Prefrontal Oscillations in Social Anxiety Disorder (POSAD)

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