‘A Huge Success Story’
ECT was first introduced by Hungarian neuropsychiatrist László Meduna in 1935, and today clinicians “know where the current goes in the brain, at what dosage, and with what path you can get 70%, 80% fully remitted,” said Dr. Sackeim.
He noted that in a randomized study published in JAMA Psychiatry, investigators compared the outcomes of MST vs ECT for major depressive episodes in 73 patients. They reported that although depression symptom scores decreased for both treatments, there was “no significant difference” between the two in response or remission rates.
However, in an opinion letter the journal published in April, Dr. Sackeim and colleagues Mark S. George, MD, Medical University of South Carolina, and William V. McCall, MD, Augusta University, Augusta, Georgia, strongly questioned the findings.
At less than 30%, “the ECT remission rate after acute treatment was exceptionally low, limiting confidence in the validity and/or generalizability of the findings,” they wrote.
“It’s undoubtedly the case that either if you recruited a sample from whom the treatment may not be as efficacious or if there are issues in delivering them, then you may be finding equivalence” between ECT and MST, Dr. Sackeim said.
In addition, he noted that although there have been concerns about cognitive side effects with ECT, they have improved over the years. Sackeim reported that when he entered the field, the average time for a patient to remember their name or the day of the week was 6 hours after receiving unilateral ECT and 8 hours after bilateral ECT. “With modern methods, that’s now down to 10 minutes,” he said.
“The fundamental knowledge is that this treatment can be administered far softer than it ever was in the past. Impressions from the 50s and 60s and portrayed in movies have very little to do with modern practice and with the real effects of the treatment,” Dr. Sackeim said.
As for the new studies about aperiodic activity, the investigators are “essentially saying, ‘We have a better marker’ of the process. That way of thinking had in many ways been left behind in the run to study connectivity,” Dr. Sackeim said.
He noted that years ago, while he was with Columbia University, his team found that patients who had frontal inhibition were more likely to get well after ECT.
“And that’s essentially the same thing you’re hearing from the UCSD group. They’re saying that the aperiodic measure is hopefully of clearer physiological significance than simply delta [waves] in the EEG,” Dr. Sackeim said.
“The idea that inhibition was the key to its efficacy has been around. This is saying it’s a better measure of that, and that may be true. It’s certainly an interesting contribution,” he added.
Dr. Sackeim said the takeaway message for clinicians regarding ECT today is that it can be lifesaving but is still often only used as a last resort and reserved for those who have run out of options.
However, he said, ECT is “a huge success story: Maintaining its efficacy, reducing its side effects, getting an understanding as to what the physics of it are. We have some compelling stories about ECT, but even more so, we know what’s not true. And what’s not true are most of the assumptions people have about the treatment,” he concluded.
Ms. Smith and Dr. Voytek reported no relevant conflicts of interest. Dr. Sackeim reported holding patents in ECT technology and consulting with the MECTA Corporation and SigmaStim LLC and other neuromodulation companies.
A version of this article appeared on Medscape.com.