Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Depression is a common, recurrent and disabling disorder. Among patients with a chronic course of the disease, 20 to 30% are resistant to antidepressant medications. Among those patients, 50% would not benefit from electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). For such patients, deep brain stimulation (DBS) of nucleus accumbens is considered.
Full description
Depression is a common (12-Month Prevalence in the general population: 6%), recurrent and disabling disorder.
Among patients with a chronic course of the disease, 20 to 30% are resistant to antidepressant medications. Among those patients not responding favorably to antidepressant medications, 50% would not benefit from ECT. For such patients, surgical interventions have been proposed in the past.
Many results support the hypothesis of a dysfunction of the functional loops between cortical and subcortical structures underlying the expression of depressive disorders.
Thus, therapeutic intervention focusing on these loops, in patients with chronic depression resistant to treatment, should be an issue and could improve prognosis of these patients.
As part of a maximal resistance to antidepressant drug, after failure of a series of bilateral ECT, a surgical functional intervention using DBS of nucleus accumbens is considered.
This open-label trial proposes to assess feasibility, safety and efficacy of DBS of nucleus accumbens in patients with chronic depression.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Patients between 30 and 60 years old
Meeting DSM-IV-TR for a major depressive disorder (MDD), recurrent (296.3x) diagnosed using the MINI scale
Duration of the episode > 2 years
History of recurrent MDD (at least one prior episode index), authenticated by a report of ambulatory care or hospitalization
Meeting Thase and Rush stage V for resistance (Thase and Rush 1997) (Annex 1 : mettre l'annexe)
Presenting simultaneously an HDRS total score (17 items)> 21, a GAF <50, and a score of 4 on CGI despite the use of all the following strategies :
Understanding of the study
Giving their written, free and informed consent
Affiliated to social security
Exclusion criteria
6 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal