Patients who had a combination of depression and anxiety symptoms responded better to the standard transcranial magnetic stimulation treatment.
A new target identified for depression treatment with transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) revealed that each target eases a different set of depressive symptoms. That’s certainly needed when it //comes to using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to treat depression, said Medical University of South Carolina Distinguished University Professor Mark George, M.D.
‘Leveraging transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) to accelerate activity in medial prefrontal cortex brain region could also treat depression.’
TMS uses a magnet to increase brain activity in a region of the brain known as the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex to treat clinical depression. George is a pioneer in the field, whose work helped TMS to gain approval in 2008 from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. TMS can offer a lifeline for those whose depression does not respond to antidepressants.
“In the U.S., at any moment,1 in 20 people is depressed in some capacity,” said George. (1✔ ✔Trusted Source
Depressive disorder (depression)
Go to source) “About 60% respond well to therapy and medication, and another 20% respond when switched to an alternative medication. But for the remaining 20%, finding an effective drug treatment becomes vanishingly slim.”
By the second week of TMS treatment, most of these patients who have not responded to medications are experiencing fewer depressive symptoms. By the end of the six-week cycle, depression is resolved in about one-third of patients and is decreased in another third. Unfortunately, one third do not respond.
George is looking to better those numbers by personalizing TMS.
Personalized Treatments for Depression
“In treating depression with TMS, it’s been standard to target one specific region, but this still leaves some patients who don’t improve,” he said. “We now know there are different kinds of depression. The almost Holy Grail in psychiatry would be, based on a patient’s symptoms, to say ‘You should get TMS, and we should target this part of the brain for best results.’”Advertisement
Pursuing personalized medicine for depression by targeting the lateral or medial prefrontal cortex with Deep TMS
Go to source)
Symptoms of depression can and do vary widely from person to person, so researchers collected a variety of depression and anxiety measures for each patient before treatment. The researchers used the decreases in these types of symptoms to gauge how effective the new TMS target was at treating depression compared to the approved target. However, they also examined these decreases to learn which depressive symptoms responded best to which target. To get even more data for making these predictions, EEG brain activity in the prefrontal cortex was also collected during the first treatment session.
Advertisement
“The treatment options were what we would call near equivalent,” said George. “Having more locations and options is always better in medicine.”
What George found most exciting were the links between the pre-treatment symptoms and brain activity and the type of treatment given.
“The current study helped us to understand which symptom profiles might respond best to the targeting of each brain region,” said George. “In the next study, we will tailor treatment to participants’ symptom profiles to see if outcomes improve.”
This study is a first but important step in the direction of individualized medicine and refinement of the TMS technique. Improving treatment options for depression that does not respond to antidepressants could improve the lives of millions, allowing them to return to work, enjoy time with their loved ones and live their best life.
“For the 20% of people who don’t recover, who lead lives of despair, there are treatments like this that can work and do work,” said George. “People should not settle for less than getting their lives back.”
And George won’t settle until he personalizes and refines TMS to reach more of them.
References:
- Depressive disorder (depression) - (https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/depression)
- Pursuing personalized medicine for depression by targeting the lateral or medial prefrontal cortex with Deep TMS - (https://insight.jci.org/articles/view/165271)
Source-Eurekalert