AI Article Synopsis

  • Current antidepressants show limited effectiveness, prompting research to identify biological targets for new treatments and understand their mechanisms.
  • The study utilized EEG data from two Canadian trials to examine how changes in brain wave patterns (neural oscillations) correlate with symptom improvement in patients undergoing pharmacological and CBT treatments.
  • Findings indicate that early increases in theta waves and late changes in delta and alpha waves are linked to better treatment outcomes, with common patterns observed in both treatment methods, enhancing our understanding of how depression treatments work.

Article Abstract

Current pharmacological agents for depression have limited efficacy in achieving remission. Developing and validating new medications is challenging due to limited biological targets. This study aimed to link electrophysiological data and symptom improvement to better understand mechanisms underlying treatment response. Longitudinal changes in neural oscillations were assessed using resting-state electroencephalography (EEG) data from two Canadian Biomarker Integration Network in Depression studies, involving pharmacological and cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) trials. Patients in the pharmacological trial received eight weeks of escitalopram, with treatment response defined as ≥ 50% decrease in Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS). Early (baseline to week 2) and late (baseline to week 8) changes in neural oscillation were investigated using relative power spectral measures. An association was found between an initial increase in theta and symptom improvement after 2 weeks. Additionally, late increases in delta and theta, along with a decrease in alpha, were linked to a reduction in MADRS after 8 weeks. These late changes were specifically observed in responders. To assess specificity, we extended our analysis to the independent CBT cohort. Responders exhibited an increase in delta and a decrease in alpha after 2 weeks. Furthermore, a late (baseline to week 16) decrease in alpha was associated with symptom improvement following CBT. Results suggest a common late decrease in alpha across both treatments, while modulatory effects in theta may be specific to escitalopram treatment. This study offers insights into electrophysiological markers indicating a favorable response to antidepressants, enhancing our comprehension of treatment response mechanisms in depression.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11470922PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41398-024-03110-8DOI Listing

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