Longitudinal Neurocognitive Effects of Combined Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) and Pharmacotherapy in Major Depressive Disorder in Older Adults: Phase 2 of the PRIDE Study.

Journal: The American Journal Of Geriatric Psychiatry : Official Journal Of The American Association For Geriatric Psychiatry
Published:
Abstract

Objective: There is limited information regarding neurocognitive outcomes of right unilateral ultrabrief pulse width electroconvulsive therapy (RUL-UB ECT) combined with pharmacotherapy in older adults with major depressive disorder. We report longitudinal neurocognitive outcomes from Phase 2 of the Prolonging Remission in Depressed Elderly (PRIDE) study. Method: After achieving remission with RUL-UB ECT and venlafaxine, older adults (≥60 years old) were randomized to receive symptom-titrated, algorithm-based longitudinal ECT (STABLE) plus pharmacotherapy (venlafaxine and lithium) or pharmacotherapy-only. A comprehensive neuropsychological battery was administered at baseline and throughout the 6-month treatment period. Statistical significance was defined as a p-value of less than 0.05 (two-sided test).

Results: With the exception of processing speed, there was statistically significant improvement across most neurocognitive measures from baseline to 6-month follow-up. There were no significant differences between the two treatment groups at 6 months on measures of psychomotor processing speed, autobiographical memory consistency, short-term and long-term verbal memory, phonemic fluency, inhibition, and complex visual scanning and cognitive flexibility.

Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first report of neurocognitive outcomes over a 6-month period of an acute course of RUL-UB ECT followed by one of 2 strategies to prolong remission in older adults with major depression. Neurocognitive outcome did not differ between STABLE plus pharmacotherapy versus pharmacotherapy alone over the 6-month continuation treatment phase. These findings support the safety of RUL-UB ECT in combination with pharmacotherapy in the prolonging of remission in late-life depression.

Authors
Sarah Lisanby, Shawn Mcclintock, William Mccall, Rebecca Knapp, C Cullum, Martina Mueller, Zhi-de Deng, Abeba Teklehaimanot, Matthew Rudorfer, Elisabeth Bernhardt, George Alexopoulos, Samuel Bailine, Mimi Briggs, Emma Geduldig, Robert Greenberg, Mustafa Husain, Styliani Kaliora, Vassilios Latoussakis, Lauren Liebman, Georgios Petrides, Joan Prudic, Peter Rosenquist, Shirlene Sampson, Kristen Tobias, Richard Weiner, Robert Young, Charles Kellner
Relevant Conditions

Major Depression