Results
A total of 46 papers were selected for the present systematic review, including 9
multicenter randomized controlled trials (RCTs), 19 open label studies, and 18 case
reports ([Fig. 1], [Table 1]). The targets employed were the BNST, the GPI, the ITP, the LHb, the MFB, the NAcc,
the SCg, the slMFB, the vALIC, the ventral caudate nucleus (VCN), and the VC/VS.
Fig. 1 Data collected during this systematic literature review.
A double-blind multisite RCT (20 institutions), known as the Brodmann Area 25 Deep
Brain Neuromodulation (BROADEN) trial, targeting the SCg and involving 90 participants,
has been the largest psychiatric DBS study so far. Response to treatment was defined
as a decrease ≥ 40% in the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) score
from baseline and no worsening in the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) score.
The DBS parameters were adjusted using an algorithm, and the concomitant use of ADs
was allowed as long as the doses remained steady. Patients with chronic, unremitting
depression were implanted and randomly assigned to 6 months of active or sham DBS,
followed by 6 months of open-label SCg DBS. Both groups exhibited overall improvement
on daily function (average of 132.2%), 92% of the patients reached a MADRS decrease
from baseline of at least 50%, and 58% of them had complete remission.[78]
However, during the double-blind sham-controlled phase (12 patients with active versus
5 with sham DBS), the sham response rate was 17%, but no statistically significant
difference was found in the responses of both groups. No psychiatric or neuropsychological
adverse events (AEs) were reported at the 6- or 12-month follow-ups. Major AEs included
suicidality (3/17), with 2 suicides in the control group during the 6-month open-label
phase, anxiety (5/17), infection (5/17), system malfunction (3/17), and worsening
of the depression (2/17).[78]
During the long-term open-label follow-up at 12, 18, and 24 months, the responses
were 29%, 53%, and 49%, respectively. Of the 30 subjects in this phase, 26 decided
to continue with DBS stimulation. A futility analysis was performed when approximately
half of the patients received active DBS, completing the double-blind phase, indicating
that the study had a 17% chance of success if continued. Although at the given timepoint
this number did not meet the definition for futility (≥ 10% chance of success), the
study was halted.[78]
The rationale of targeting the SCg started in a pioneer study that included six patients
aiming to access the feasibility and safety of DBS modulation of the SCg and of the
adjacent white matter. A decrease ≥ 50% in the 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating
Scale (HDRS-17) was considered a response to treatment. Response and remission rates
at the 1- and 6-month follow-ups were 35%, 10%, 60%, and 35%, respectively.[26]
Neuropsychological analyses revealed that DBS was also effective to improve self-negative
bias.[71] Neuroimaging evidenced metabolic changes, and a neurocognitive assessment in six
patients proved the procedure to be safe.[58]
A 12-month follow-up incorporated an additional 14 patients to this cohort, and adjustable
stimulation parameters were based on the presence of acute behavioral effects. The
benefits were maintained and no permanent AEs occurred.[57] The extended follow-up showed average response rates of 62.5%, 46.2%, 75%, and 64.3%
after 1, 2, 3, and 3 to 6 years, respectively. Overall, AEs were transient, and the
most frequent was suicidality (3/20), with a confirmed suicide at 35 months and an
attempted suicide at 75 months. Also, worsening of the depression (3/20), infection
(3/20), and 1 case of perioperative seizure were registered.[63] Despite the initial good response, 1 patient from this series relapsed 4 years later;
nonetheless, the use of tranylcypromine, a monoamine oxidase inhibitor (MAOI), along
with DBS decreased the MADRS score by 60% after 4 months.[67]
Another case study from this series presented transient oscillation of response and
important depressive episodes, one of them related to battery depletion. However,
the patient was responsive to medication adjustments and obtained an overall sustained
response.[62]
Investigators replicated the design of SCg DBS in a multicenter approach involving
21 patients during 12 months, but employing a different stimulation device. Setting
the response criterium at ≥ 50% decrease in the HDRS-17, the results were 57%, 48%,
and 29% at the 1-, 6-, and 12-month follow-ups, respectively. After 12 months of DBS,
establishing the response criterium at ≥ 40%, total responders increased to 62%, which
was attributed to amelioration in disease severity. Major AEs were nausea/vomiting
and suicidality (2/21).[68]
The same system was also investigated in a cohort study with a sham-controlled design
including 10 unipolar TRD individuals and 7 bipolar subtype II treatment-resistant
patients. At the 2-year endpoint, the response was 92%, whereas the remission was
58%. Two suicide attempts were reported, an MDD remitter at 2 years, and a bipolar
patient at 54 months of follow-up.[64]
In a pilot study, baseline frontal theta cordance (FTC) appeared as a biomarker for
predicting 6-month clinical response to SCg DBS for TRD. In addition to that, lower
FTC at baseline and higher FTC after 4 weeks were predictors of lower depression severity
scores at the 24-week follow-up.[65]
A multicenter double-blind randomized crossover of 13 months was carried out with
9 MDD patients resistant to treatment to evaluate the effects of high (130 Hz) vs
low (20 Hz) frequency BA 25 DBS. Response (≥ 40% MADRS) was achieved by 4/9 patients,
with similar improvements in high and low frequency stimulation groups after 6 months.
In the second period of the trial, the high frequency group showed higher improvement
regarding the response criteria.[80]
An uncontrolled double-blind (delayed versus non-delayed stimulation onset) study
included five patients with TRD and one with bipolar affective disorder type I who
underwent SCg DBS. Two attained remission (HDRS-24 ≥ 10) at 24 and 36 months, with
no AEs due to acute high intensity stimulation (> 10 V). The main outcome was depression
severity assessed using the HDRS-24, and the secondary outcome parameters were MADRS
and Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) scores. Acute 24-hour stimulation caused moderate
decreases in all the scales. Between 24 and 36 weeks, 2 patients were remitters and
4 were non-responders.[69]
Another report by the same group included participants in the aforementioned cohort,
encompassing seven patients with TRD and one with bipolar affective disorder type
I. The response rate was 51%, and 2 patients achieved remission (33.3%) at the 28-month
and 4-year follow-ups. No statistical differences were found between different onset
groups.[81]
A diffusion tensor imaging study on this same series found that the only responder
had the contacts located bilaterally in the posterior gyrus rectus (BA 14). This displayed
strong connectivity between the stimulated regions and the mPFC.[76]
A Spanish group initiated a study in 2008 performing SCg DBS in 8 TRD patients following
an open-label design.[66] In a preliminary result, 1 patient from this series relapsed at 4 months and presented
with psychotic symptoms. The DBS system was turned off and, after nine sessions of
frontal ECT, when DBS was turned on again, the patient successfully reached remission.[60]
After 1 year of stimulation, they obtained a response of 62.5% in the HDRS-17 and
remission in 50% of the cases, with improvement in social function and neurocognitive
safety, as well as benefit for the memory.[74] Except for a suicide attempt in the group of nonresponder patients, no other serious
AEs occurred.
Subsequently, stimulation was ceased in the 5 previous responders under a double-blind
randomized design, resulting in sustained remission (2/5), relapse (2/5), and progressive
worsening without relapse (1/5) in their 3-month sham protocol.[73] Simultaneously, remitters underwent double-blind sham stimulation.[72] Fluorine-18-fluorodeoxyglucose (18F-FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) scans evidenced metabolism decreases in
the dACC (BA 24), in the premotor region (BA 6), and in the putamen, not followed
by changes in HDRS-17 scores.
In a pilot cohort, four patients with TRD underwent SCg DBS surgical procedure. After
that, the frequency and pulse widths were randomly changed weekly. Evaluations of
changes in mood and depression were performed using a visual analogue scale (VAS)
and the HDRS-17. Longer pulse widths (270–450 µs) were related to short-term clinical
improvement (HDRS-17) in 3 participants and to positive mood response (according to
results indicated in the VAS) in all of the patients. No associations between DBS
frequency and mood or clinical response were found. After 6 months of the open-label
postoptimization phase, 2 patients (50%) showed clinical response, and 1 showed partial
response.[70]
The same group of researchers carried out a double-blind trial including the same
patients. They found that the stimulation was related to decreases in serum BDNF concentration
compared to pre-DBS baseline.[75]
In an open-label cohort of 11 patients, the fibers activated were proven to be more
related to the response than the site of the implanting (mainly projections to BA
10), using whole brain activation volume tractography. At 6 months, 8 patients had
an increase in current from 6 to 8 mA. Response, considered as ≥ 50% decrease in the
HDRS-17, was reached by 72.7% of the sample at 6 months, and by 81.8% at 12 months.
Remission criterium (HDRS-17 ≥ 7) was attained by 6 patients, and 2 never met it.
One of them had minimal variation in the HDRS-17, whereas the other achieved 40% decrease
in this score at 12 months. A whole brain activation volume tractography and the common
probabilistic tract map generated for all subjects (responders and nonresponders)
at 6 months featured the inclusion of the forceps minor, the uncinate fasciculus,
the frontostriatal fibers, and of the cingulum bundle.[79]
In an Argentinian case report, patient-blind unilateral stimulation produced rapid
mood worsening on the left hemisphere. Most electrodes placed in the SCg and in the
adjacent white matter produced stimulation related to acute onset of orthostatic hypotension,
both at the postoperative testing and at a the 6-month assessment (the contacts were
permanently kept turned off). No alterations were observed in the opposite hemisphere.[61]
In a French case report, a patient with long-term MDD and TRD, who had undergone extensive
unilateral ECT that led to cognitive deficits, presented with late postoperative seizures
as a possible side effect, displayed at standard stimulation parameters (90 µs, 130 Hz,
4.2 V). Most likely, DBS has revealed a previously existing temporal lobe epilepsy,
although the participant had no individual or family history of convulsions. The patient
was responsive to treatment.[77]
A study from England reported a patient with bipolar disorder and treatment resistance,
with an infarct in the right thalamus (dorsomedial nucleus) that produced severe depressive
symptoms within hours and TRD at 9 months (BDI-II: 41; Beck Anxiety Inventory: 26).
DBS of sACC at high frequency (> 150 Hz) did not produce any clinical effects, probably
due to the reduction in structural connectivity from the sACC back to the amygdala
on the right side. Projection to frontal areas was not clearly differentially disrupted.
The patient was followed-up 1 year after the procedure, when the battery of the DBS
was running low, but cessation of stimulation had no effect. This patient died in
his sleep 16 months after the DBS surgery.[59]
In a randomized clinical trial, 25 patients in the Netherlands underwent DBS of the
vALIC for TRD. An open-label optimization trial was conducted for 52 weeks followed
by a sham-controlled double-blind multisite crossover RCT. The response criterium
was ≥ 50% decrease in the MADRS from baseline to the 16th week of the blind phase, while the remission criterium was HDRS-17 ≥ 7 at the 2nd assessment. At the end of the optimization phase, 10 patients were responders and
15, non-responders. In the crossover phase, 16 of these patients – 9 responders and
7 non-responders – participated. During active DBS, the HDRS-17 scores were significantly
lower (13.6). Adverse events included: suicide attempts (5), increased suicidal ideation
(2), suicide (1), euthanasia (1), and surgery-related extreme nausea (1) that interrupted
the operation, which was performed 2 weeks later with success. Battery depletion was
suspected in two patients. Active DBS had significant antidepressant effect in 10
out of 25 TRD patients compared with sham DBS, classified as responders (≥ 50% decrease)
and partial responders (≥ 25 but < 50% decrease).[88] No permanent impact (either positive or negative) on cognition was observed in a
posterior study with the same sample.[89]
A double-blind crossover trial with seven TRD patients investigated the stimulation
in either the anterior limb of the internal capsule/BNST or in the ITP. All of the
patients participated in the follow-ups for at least 3 years, but some were followed-up
up to 8 years after the procedure. A significant average decrease in the HDRS-17 score
(61%) was attained by 5 responders and 2 remitters. Only one participant preferred
ITP stimulation. Most patients reported fluctuant worsening of depressive symptoms
and suicide ideation, and the patient that preferred ITP stimulation presented with
transient extrapyramidal-like AEs (hypomimia, micrographia, hesitant walking, and
less fluent movement). Two patients had a suicide attempt history prior to implanting
and committed suicide at 39 and 80 months after the procedure, respectively.[90]
A 16-week randomized blind sham-controlled trial of DBS, known as RECLAIMTM, targeted
the VC/VS in 30 patients with TRD, with a subsequent open-label phase. The response,
set as a decrease ≥ 50% in the MADRS score, was 20%, 26.7%, and 23.3% at the 12-,
18-, and 24-month follow-ups, respectively. However, no significant differences in
response rates were found between the active and sham treatments, or changes in the
MADRS scores at the end of the 16-week controlled phase. A total of 71 serious AEs
were recorded for 22 patients, and the most frequent were worsening of the depression
(8), suicidal ideation (5 in the active and 3 in the sham group), suicide attempts
(4), and a completed suicide of a nonresponder who ceased stimulation while preparing
for explanting. During the blind phase, the most frequent psychiatric AEs in the active
group were worsening depression and insomnia.[10]
In a multisite open-label investigation, 14 MDD patients and 1 bipolar (subtype not
specified), 13 of which had failed both AD and ECT, and 2 who were also resistant
to vagus nerve stimulation, were treated with DBS of the VC/VS. The response rates
were 40% and 53.3% in the HDRS, and 46.7% and 53.3% in the MADRS, and the remission
rates were 20% and 40% in the HDRS, and 26.6% and 33.3% in the MADRS at the 6-month
and last follow-ups, respectively.[83]
A following study enrolled two additional patients, both AD- and ECT-resistant, who
also underwent DBS of the VC/VS. Response was attained by 53 and 71% of the sample
(n = 17) at the 3-month and last follow-ups, respectively. Interestingly, 35% of the
patients continued in remission (MADRS score ≤ 10) at the last follow-up, and a remarkable
reduction in suicidality occurred at 1 month and persisted in the next 12 months (p ≥ 0.001). Serious AEs related to DBS included: anxiety, autonomic effects, mood changes,
and paresthesia. However, they were transient and, after adjusting the stimulation
parameters, all of them disappeared.[84]
One of the patients of the aforementioned multisite open-label investigation,[83] who had been a remitter for 4 years, experienced increase in smoking (50–200%) and
concurrent worsening depressive symptoms in 3 different occasions, all related to
interruption of DBS caused by battery depletion. Nevertheless, once DBS stimulation
was restarted, the smoking pattern reverted to baseline and the depressive symptoms
decreased.[85]
A patient with TRD, comorbid bulimia, and borderline personality disorder showed improvement
in depression (as per results in the HDRS score) after initial placement of electrodes
in the ITP without electrical stimulation, probably because of a microlesion effect.
After a phase of stimulation (130 Hz, 0.45 µs, 2.5 V), it was discontinued in a double-blind
fashion, and the HDRS score did not return to preoperative levels, remaining between
2 and 8. This patient was later explanted and remained in remission up to 7 years.[93]
A patient with a history of treatment-resistant OCD, recurrent MDD, and unsuccessful
cognitive-behavioral therapy was referred to DBS of the VCN. Nonetheless, several
AD strategies improved the depressive symptoms prior to the procedure. In the first
3 months of stimulation, depressive symptoms progressively worsened, but at the 6-month
follow-up, the patient achieved MDD remission (HDRS = 7; Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale = 10),
which was sustained until the end point, 15 months after the surgery. The patient
also attained OCD remission, but more slowly, markedly between the 12- and 15-month
follow-up, with progressive increase in Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) scores.
No negative neuropsychological effects were noted.[94]
A group of 10 patients presenting with very severe forms of TRD, refractory to ADs,
psychotherapy, and ECT, underwent DBS of the NAcc. Response (50% decrease in the HDRS-28)
was reached by 50% of the patients at the 12-month follow-up, and 3 participants achieved
remission (HDRS-28 ≤ 10) for a period of 1 month.[98]
The long-term effects of DBS of the NAcc were assessed in the same group of participants
described above[98]
[99] and in an additional patient enrolled posteriorly. Follow-ups were carried out 12
months, 24 months, and 4 years after the procedure with 11, 10, and 5 patients, respectively.
Adverse events related to DBS were transient. By the 12-month follow-up, 1 patient
had committed suicide and 1 had attempted suicide, both nonresponders to the surgery.
After 12 months, 45% of the participants were considered responders, and did not show
worsening symptoms at the 4-year follow-up.[100]
In a double-blind placebo-controlled trial, three patients with extreme forms of TRD
(resistant to psychotherapy, ADs, and ECT) received DBS implantation in the NAcc.
The voltage ranged from 0 to 4 V in 1-V steps, in a double-blind manner. At each step,
HDRS-24 and MADRS were reapplied, and a negative correlation was observed for both
scores in all of the patients. No relevant AEs occurred. Single items of both scales,
often used to assess aspects of anhedonia, were verified, but no significant changes
were found, in spite of clear clinical changes in anhedonia. Metabolic imaging displayed
activations in bilateral VS (including NAcc), bilateral DLPFC and DMPFC, bilateral
cingulate cortex, and bilateral amygdala, simultaneously with deactivations in the
vmPFC, the ventrolateral PFC, the dorsal caudate nucleus, and in the thalamus.[43]
In a case report of a patient with a 20-year history of MDD, agoraphobia, and alcohol
dependence for the previous 10 years, DBS of the NAcc produced acute pleasure. In
12 months, the patient became an occasional drinker. However, decreases in depression
or anxiety were minimal.[82]
A depressed woman, with a 46-year history of severe MDD and 9 years of TRD, failed
to respond to ADs and ECT. Her depressive episode at the intervention included delusions
of guilt, mutism, and pronounced anxiety, with HDRS-21 rates around 45. Deep brain
stimulation of the LHb produced full remission of depressive symptoms within a period
of 4 months. The patient relapsed, and the voltage was increased, leading to stable
remission. One accidental switch off caused an additional relapse, but it was transient.[56]
The superolateral branch of the medial forebrain bundle (sIMFB) was targeted based
on a neuroanatomical and functional hypothesis using new fiber tracking techniques:
two opposing systems, the ATR and the slMFB, were anatomically described and assumed
to mediate negative (ATR) and positive (slMFB) emotions.[48]
A decrease ≥ 50% in the HDRS was achieved by 6 patients, and 4 reached remission 12
months after DBS of the slMFB. Moreover, long-stable effects were reported up to 4
years after the procedure. The main AEs were oculomotor effects (blurred and double
vision), responsive to reduction of amplitude of stimulation. Discontinuation of a
nonresponder at 18 months decreased the score, but not exceeding baseline, and explantation
kept remission until 12 months.[92]
The same design used above was replicated by the Houston group using deterministic
tractography. After 52 weeks, 4 out of the 5 remaining patients that ended the trial
had a decrease > 70% in the MADRS scores compared to baseline. The modulated fiber
tracts revealed significant common orbitofrontal connectivity in all of the responders.
Neuropsychological testing verified safety, and 18F-FDG-PET cerebral metabolism evaluations at baseline and at 52 weeks showed minimal
changes. Increased depression was associated with battery depletion in four patients,
and accidental deactivation in three.[101]
Evaluation of the tractographies showed that responders typically have their active
contacts exclusively situated in the center of the triangle, with no contact with
the nuclear environment. Thus, every treatment should be based on individual slMFB
(tractography) geometry.[97]
A case report presented a patient with TRD and nervous anorexia who was treated with
DBS and showed great response. However, after 10 months, she presented blurred vision
and was reoperated with electrodes placed on the BNST. At 12 months, the results were:
MADRS = 13; HDRS = 6; HAM-A = 5.[44]
A pilot open-label series included five female patients resistant to AD and ECT, who
underwent DBS of BNST. Clinical response was observed by means of various assessments
rather than by a stated definition. Stimulation induced: 1 remission at 6 months;
1 response and 1 remission at 12 months; 3 remissions at the last follow-up, 2 of
them stable (MDRS of 1 and 3) up to 6 years; and an eventual reoccurrence and restoring
of remission after battery replacement. One patient had explantation of DBS, which
was reimplanted in the sACC, but, by the end of the second treatment, she committed
suicide. A significant increase in quality of life and depression scores, as well
as neurocognitive stability, were attained. Two suicide attempts, apparently not related
to stimulation, occurred during the trial, and one of these patients reached remission
later. Transient insomnia was the most common AE related to increase in stimulation.[96]
An anecdotal case report targeted the GPI for TRD and severe tardive dyskinesia (TD)
in a patient with a history of failing to over 60 psychotropic drugs, who had been
treated with typical and atypical neuroleptics, and developed severe neuroleptic-induced
TD. The patient attained a ≥ 50% decrease in the HDRS 18 months after DBS implantation.
The HDRS score dropped from 26 at baseline preoperatively to 13 at the 18-month follow-up,
whereas the Burke-Fahn-Marsden Dystonia Rating Scale score decreased from 27 to 17.5
(35%).[95]
A preliminary study of four patients targeted the NAcc and, in the event of failure,
the caudate nucleus, in a limbic vs cognitive fashion. The primary and secondary outcomes
were ≥ 50% HDRS and remission, defined as HDRS = 7 after 4 months, respectively. Stimulation
of the NAcc was performed from the 1st to the 5th month. At month 5, nonresponders underwent stimulation of the caudate target until
month 9, followed by a 6-month extension phase (up to month 15), with adaptable parameters
and concomitant treatments. A significant improvement in mood was achieved by 3 patients,
with lower HDRS scores at the end of the 15 months. Following the start of stimulation,
benefit was obtained at the extension phase, with open parameters. One patient did
not meet response criteria at month 5, but NAcc stimulation was kept due to clinical
perception of improvement. Furthermore, aripiprazole was added at month 11, leading
the patient to a stable improvement until reaching response.[86]
A case report featured amplitude and dynamics of the mood changes, systematically
quantified using the HDRS-17, in a nonresponder after DBS of the Nacc. The patient
rapidly achieved and sustained remission 11 months after increasing the voltage of
the most distal contact of each electrode located in the NAcc to 5V. Some worsening
due to battery depletion was also reported.[87]
Discussion
Deep brain stimulation research for the treatment of patients with TRD has been marked
by amelioration[102] contrasting with inconsistent results of the three largest multicenter RCTs.[10]
[78]
[88] Therefore, it could be inferred that DBS is not effective for TRD, at least in the
way it has been currently performed and assessed. Aiming to understand these controversial
outcomes, we tried and dissected factors that may be impacting trials and leading
to fails.
On the one hand, little can be said about the efficacy of SCg as a DBS target based
exclusively on the interrupted BROADEN trial.[78] On the other hand, open-label studies focused on optimizing targets, as well as
on mapping response patterns, patient subtypes, and connectomics, obtaining exceptional
results.[79]
The largest study followed the standard paradigm focusing on the Food and Drug Administration
(FDA) validation at 6 months, with restricted parameters, that is, the surgical intervention
was adequately isolated by not allowing postsurgical support, psychological or pharmacological
treatment before the trial, and potentially reduced the chance of patient recovery
at the short endpoint of the futility analysis.[78]
A significant increase in response after SCg DBS was observed in the open-label original
series from the 1st to the 3rd year, since the average response rose from 62.5 to 75%.[62]
[63] In sum, BROADEN could have been more thorough in terms of duration, adjustment of
parameters, and optimization phase.
Considering open-label studies and case reports, the SCg remains promising, although
BA 24 is probably the key area underlying the effects.[61] In addition to this, unilateral vs bilateral hemisphere stimulation matters persist.[49]
The blind-treatment phase of the RECLAIM™ trial was probably too short and avoided high stimulation parameters to preserve
blinding and prevent AEs. No significant differences were found during the sham phase,
contrasting with the findings of a previous phase of the trial, in which 36% of the
patients achieved response in 1 year and 92% in 2 years.[64]
The solely good performance of the vALIC large RCT highlights some particular characteristics,
such as: a smaller sample; a 52-week open-label parameter optimization phase; stratification
of response (partial response if 25–50% decrease in symptoms); and the intent-to-treat
analyses to discriminate response from non-response.[88]
The case reports corroborated the severity of TRD in highly resistant patients and
related complications such as TD[95] and cognitive deficit after years of ECT.[77] They also described strategies biased by the small casuistic, which were nevertheless
life-changing in the context they were proposed, that is, contraindication to ECT,[60] MAOI restoring DBS response,[67] and substance dependance.[82] After all, these are common exclusion criteria in studies, but in the case reports
selected, the patients presenting with them were treated using DBS.
Heterogeneity inherent to psychiatric neurosurgery occurs within trials in multiple
domains: selected patients, pretrial treatments, trial designs (open label, crossover,
and parallel), optimization of parameters (if allowed and duration), surgical technique,
individual variability due to structural and functional connectivity,[102] scales to define and monitor response and remission.
Major depressive disorder is a bureaucratic diagnosis, based on clinically-derived,
however, arbitrary criteria. A mathematical analysis showed that 227 different combinations
of depressive symptoms[103] can fulfill the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for MDD.[21] Given that some items are multiple or alternative symptoms (i.e., insomnia or hypersomnia),
if each component symptom is considered separately, 14,528 combinations are possible.[103]
Lack of a global definition of TRD potentially adds a second level of phenotype heterogeneity
labelled together with the population of interest; therefore, the inclusion criteria
consistently diverge between studies. It is possible that by targeting DBS for TRD,
distinct phenotypes/subtypes of this mental condition fall under the same label. This
way, they have probably been addressed using the same circuits and the effects vary
according to the deficits. Stage 5 treatment-resistant depression (irresponsiveness
to three ADs and ECT)[104] seems the most adequate definition of TRD for trial purposes.
The definition of response varies, but it is frequently set as a decrease by 50% in
depressive symptoms assessed using HDRS and MADRS.[105] Even though the former has different versions and numbers of items (i.e. HDRS-17,
-21, -24, and -28), the exact scale is not always mentioned in the studies.[44]
The fallacy of thresholds, a methodological bias explored for AD trials with TRD patients,
showed that scales lose statistical power when used to compare treatment against placebo.[106] By doing so, researchers assume that sensibility and specificity are the same in
both groups, responders in the placebo group might fit “intuitive definitions” of
response less well than patients under treatment, and patients in the adjacencies
of cutoff scores of scales are often clinically indistinguishable.[107]
For Parkinson disease (PD), the Unified Parkinson's Disease Rating Scale[108] was necessary to validate the evident impact DBS had on symptom control. Given that
modeling mood disorders is even more complex, research on TRD should possibly follow
the same path by developing a specific scale.[35]
The MFB study showed exceptionally good immediate and sustained efficacy (∼ 80%).
This makes this target the most promising of the open-label trials selected.[97]
The MFB is the most rapid to produce response, most probably because it lies at the
center of the reward pathway,[14]
[91]
[109] with acute effects also more pronounced on the NAcc.[87] Nonetheless, whenever acute responses are present, the insertional effect (possibly
related to acute inflammatory mediators[11] or glial released neurotransmitters[12]
[32] in early time-points must be considered. Sustained and low progressive improvement
in the blind stimulation cohorts and acute mood changes related to alterations in
parameters months after surgery[87] tend to indicate efficacy of the surgical procedure.[110]
Although sham designs mitigate placebo effect, especially if longer shams are employed,
this effect is still relevant (five times stronger than medications in DBS for PD).
It possibly happens due to expectation per se following the instructions of the doctor,
follow-up visits, and high-frequency stimulation potentially rising subtle AEs and
affecting patient blinding. Yet, placebo effect and spontaneous remissions are not
usual in patients with very severe TRD.[7]
[26] Worsening symptoms because of unintended “shams” such as battery depletion were
frequently highlighted in the present systematic review, corroborating the efficacy
of DBS. Strategies to overcome placebo effect include longer shams and optimization
phases. Nevertheless, the latter may imply selection bias in the randomization phase.
The counterpart effects, nocebo and lessebo,[66]
[110] cannot be rejected whenever patients are aware of the possibility of being in the
sham arm, which the inform consent provides.
The suicides reported appear to be dissociated from system malfunction or from changes
in parameters, and were comparable to mortality rates in naturalistic studies.[111]
[112] Whether suicide after DBS occurs due to lack of efficacy and disease progression
or because stimulation lowers the suicide threshold remains unanswered.
Overall, other stimulation AEs are transient and responsive to parameter adjustment.
Visual disturbances are particularly common in patients undergoing high stimulation
parameters at some targets, especially the slMFB. Therefore, this AE is a relative
limitation to slMFB DBS.[44] Emphasis should be given to investigational studies, as this target reportedly exhibits
the most rapid and a sustained response. Additionally, high oculomotor-stimulating
frequencies are likely associated with DBS efficacy.[64]
Optimal DBS parameter settings are still under debate.[31]
[34]
[53]
[75] Evidence points that short pulse width–low intensity, short pulse width–high intensity,
as well as long pulse width–low intensity stimulation are the possible combinations.
The high- versus low-frequency debate arises,[31] with some strong evidences[34]
[53] indicating that high-frequency stimulation promotes better AD response.[73]
[80]
The fact that the commercial value of being first to market is undoubtedly appealing[25] might have contributed to the prematureness of the three pivotal researches.[10]
[78]
[88] Whereas the trials herein presented have used open-loop systems, alternatively closed-loop
or adaptive DBS systems, in dynamic stimulation settings based on a patient-control
variable, in a feedback-like manner, tend to play a significant role in a near future.[113] This dynamic model seems coherent with the most common symptoms of the disease and
with the idea that different phenotypes fall under the umbrella of TRD.
Since in standard magnetic resonance imaging sequences the slMFB is not visualized,
tractography generates the hypothesis of a target, culminating in response above 80%.
Therefore, tractographies are mandatory for this target.[97]
Outcome predictors of efficacy of DBS for TRD appear to be related to symptoms rather
than to the syndromic diagnosis, as underpinned by evidence of symptom-target relationship
such as the connection of negative mood[26] to the SCg25, the MFB, and the NAcc.[91] This brings psychiatrists to the operating room, where the presence of this professional
enhances patient trust,[28] and the functional neurosurgeon to a clinical interdisciplinary health care team.[114]
Evidently, treatment options for MDD have never been so diverse, and, yet, suicide
and depression rates have been increasing.[115] Deep brain stimulation is promising; however, it is restricted to specialized centers
and highly selected patients, the market is dominated by a few companies,[116] and the procedure is costly.[117] This illustrates the long way ahead before DBS for TRD achieves efficacy and effectiveness.
Based on our exploratory exercise prior to the present systematic review of the literature,
we conveniently conveyed inclusion criteria to allow psychiatric comorbidities, obtaining
highly heterogeneous populations, closer to the reality of resistant populations.
However, the theoretical modeling of DBS for TRD was compromised, posing a limitation
to the present study. Furthermore, statistical analyses were not performed, since
the trials selected are substantially different and, thus, not statistically comparable.
Consequently, the successful and failing outcomes presented must be interpreted with
caution, as these limiting factors potentially impair generalizations.