Brazilian Journal of Psychiatry (Aug 2021)

A narrative review on invasive brain stimulation for treatment-resistant depression

  • Manoj P. Dandekar,
  • Alexandre P. Diaz,
  • Ziaur Rahman,
  • Ritele H. Silva,
  • Ziad Nahas,
  • Scott Aaronson,
  • Sudhakar Selvaraj,
  • Albert J. Fenoy,
  • Marsal Sanches,
  • Jair C. Soares,
  • Patricio Riva-Posse,
  • Joao Quevedo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1590/1516-4446-2021-1874

Abstract

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While most patients with depression respond to pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy, about one-third will present treatment resistance to these interventions. For patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD), invasive neurostimulation therapies such as vagus nerve stimulation, deep brain stimulation, and epidural cortical stimulation may be considered. We performed a narrative review of the published literature to identify papers discussing clinical studies with invasive neurostimulation therapies for TRD. After a database search and title and abstract screening, relevant English-language articles were analyzed. Vagus nerve stimulation, approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration as a TRD treatment, may take several months to show therapeutic benefits, and the average response rate varies from 15.2-83%. Deep brain stimulation studies have shown encouraging results, including rapid response rates (> 30%), despite conflicting findings from randomized controlled trials. Several brain regions, such as the subcallosal-cingulate gyrus, nucleus accumbens, ventral capsule/ventral striatum, anterior limb of the internal capsule, medial-forebrain bundle, lateral habenula, inferior-thalamic peduncle, and the bed-nucleus of the stria terminalis have been identified as key targets for TRD management. Epidural cortical stimulation, an invasive intervention with few reported cases, showed positive results (40-60% response), although more extensive trials are needed to confirm its potential in patients with TRD.

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