General Psychiatry (Jun 2024)

Presurgical structural imaging and clinical outcome in combined bed nucleus of the stria terminalis–nucleus accumbens deep brain stimulation for treatment-resistant depression

  • Tao Wang,
  • Valerie Voon,
  • Yingying Zhang,
  • Dianyou Li,
  • Bomin Sun,
  • Shikun Zhan,
  • Yijie Zhao,
  • Yuhan Wang,
  • Yijie Lai,
  • Lulin Dai,
  • Fengting Wang,
  • Yixin Pan,
  • Liuguan Bian

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/gpsych-2023-101210
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 37, no. 3

Abstract

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Background Structural imaging holds great potential for precise targeting and stimulation for deep brain stimulation (DBS). The anatomical information it provides may serve as potential biomarkers for predicting the efficacy of DBS in treatment-resistant depression (TRD).Aims The primary aim is to identify preoperative imaging biomarkers that correlate with the efficacy of DBS in patients with TRD.Methods Preoperative imaging parameters were estimated and correlated with the 6-month clinical outcome of patients with TRD receiving combined bed nucleus of the stria terminalis (BNST)–nucleus accumbens (NAc) DBS. White matter (WM) properties were extracted and compared between the response/non-response and remission/non-remission groups. Structural connectome was constructed and analysed using graph theory. Distances of the volume of activated tissue (VAT) to the main modulating tracts were also estimated to evaluate the correlations.Results Differences in fibre bundle properties of tracts, including superior thalamic radiation and reticulospinal tract, were observed between the remission and non-remission groups. Distance of the centre of the VAT to tracts connecting the ventral tegmental area and the anterior limb of internal capsule on the left side varied between the remission and non-remission groups (p=0.010, t=3.07). The normalised clustering coefficient (γ) and the small-world property (σ) in graph analysis correlated with the symptom improvement after the correction of age.Conclusions Presurgical structural alterations in WM tracts connecting the frontal area with subcortical regions, as well as the distance of the VAT to the modulating tracts, may influence the clinical outcome of BNST–NAc DBS. These findings provide potential imaging biomarkers for the DBS treatment for patients with TRD.