After 40 years of fighting debilitating depression,
Emma was on the brink. “I was suicidal,” said Emma, a 59-year-old Bay Area
resident. KQED is not using her full name because of the stigma of mental
illness. “I was going to die.” Over the years, Emma sat through hours of talk therapy and tried
countless anti-depression medications ‘to have a semblance of normalcy.’ And
yet she was consumed by relentless fatigue, insomnia and chronic nausea.
Depression is the world’s leading cause of disability,
partly because treatment options often result in numerous side effects or
patients do not respond at all. And there are many people who never seek
treatment because mental illness can carry heavy stigma and discrimination. Studies show
untreated depression can lead to suicidal ideation.
Three years ago, Emma’s psychiatrist urged her to
enroll in a study at
Stanford University School of Medicine designed for people who had run out of
options. When she arrived, scientists took an MRI scan to determine the best
possible location to deliver electrical pulses to her brain. Then for 10 hours
a day for five consecutive days, Emma sat in
a chair while a magnetic field stimulated her brain.
At the end of the first day, an unfamiliar calm
settled over Emma. Even when her partner picked her up to drive home, she stayed
relaxed. “I’m usually hysterical,” she said. “All the time I’m grabbing things.
I’m yelling, you know, ‘Did you see those lights?’ And while I rode home that
first night, I just looked out the window and I enjoyed the ride.”
The remedy was a new type of repetitive transcranial
magnetic stimulation (rTMS) called Stanford neuromodulation therapy. By adding
imaging technology to the treatment and upping the dose of rTMS scientists have
developed an approach that’s more effective and more than eight times as the
current approved treatment.
A coil on top of Emma’s head created a magnetic
field that sent electric pulses through her skull to tickle the surface of her
brain. She says it was like a woodpecker tapped on her skull every 15 seconds.
The electrical current is directed at the prefrontal cortex, which is the part
of the brain that plans, dreams and controls our emotions. “It’s an area
thought to be underactive in depression,” said Nolan Williams, a psychiatrist
and rTMS researcher at Stanford. “We send a signal for the system to not only
turn on, but to stay on and remember to stay on.” Nolan says pumping up the
prefrontal cortex helps turn down other areas of the brain that stimulate fear
and anxiety. That’s the basic premise of rTMS – electrical impulses are used to
balance out erratic brain activity. As a result, people feel less depressed and
more in control. All of this holds true in the new treatment, it just works
faster.
A recent randomized control trial,
published in the American Journal of Psychiatry, shows astounding results are
possible in five days or less. Almost 80% of patients crossed into remission —
meaning they experienced a normal mood within days. This is compared to about
13% of people who received the sham placebo. Patients did not report any
serious side effects. The most common complaint was a light headache.
Stanford’s new delivery system may even outperform
electroconvulsive therapy, which is the most popular form of brain stimulation
for depression, but it requires both general anesthesia and a full medical
team. “This study not only showed some of the best remission rates we’ve ever
seen in depression,” said Shan Siddiqi, a Harvard psychiatrist not connected to
the study. “But also managed to do that in people who had already failed
multiple other treatments.”
Siddiqi also says the study’s small sample size, which is only
29 patients, is not cause for concern. “Often, a clinical trial will be
terminated early (according to pre-specified criteria) because the treatment is
so effective that it would be unethical to continue giving people placebo,”
said Siddiqi. “That’s what happened here – they’d originally planned to recruit
a much larger sample, but the interim analysis was definitive.”
Mark George, a psychiatrist and neurologist at the Medical
University of South Carolina, agrees. He points to other similarly sized trials
for depression treatments like ketamine, a version of which is now FDA-approved.
He says the new rTMS approach could be a game changer because it’s both more
precise and faster. George pioneered a rTMS treatment that was approved by the
federal Food and Drug Administration for depression in 2008. Studies show
it produces a near total loss of symptoms in about a third of patients, another
third feel somewhat better, and a third do not respond at all. But the main
problem with the original treatment is that it takes six weeks, which is a long
time for a patient in the midst of an urgent crisis. “This study shows that you
can speed it all up and that you can add treatments in a given day and it
works,” said George.
The shorter treatment will increase access for a lot of people who
cannot get six weeks off work or cover childcare for that long. “The more
exciting applications, however, are due to the rapidity,” said George. “These
people [the patients] got un-suicidal and undepressed within a week. Those
patients are just clogging up our emergency rooms, our psych hospitals. And we
really don’t have good treatments for acute suicidality.”
After 45 years of depression and numerous failed attempts to
medicate his illness Tommy Van Brocklin, a civil engineer, says he didn’t see a
way out. “The past couple of years I just started crying a lot,” he said. “I
was just a real emotional wreck.”
So last September, Van Brocklin flew across the country from his
home in Tennessee to Stanford where he underwent the new rTMS treatment for a
single five-day treatment. Almost immediately he started feeling more
optimistic and sleeping longer and deeper. “I wake up now and I want to come to
work, whereas before I’d rather stick a sharp stick in my eye,” said Van
Brocklin. “I have not had any depressed days since my treatment.” He is hopeful
the changes stick. More larger studies are needed to verify how long the new
rTMS treatment will last.
At least for Emma, the woman who received Stanford’s treatment
three years ago in a similar study, the results are holding. She says she still
has ups and downs but ‘it’s an entirely different me dealing with it.’ She says
the regimen rewired her from the inside out. “It saved my life and I’ll be
forever grateful,” said Emma, her voice cracking with emotion. “It saved my
life.”
Stanford’s neuromodulation therapy could be widely available by
the end of next year, that’s when scientists are hoping FDA clearance comes
through. Nolan, the lead researcher at Stanford, says he’s optimistic insurance
companies will eventually cover the new delivery model because it works faster,
so it’s likely more cost effective than a conventional rTMS regimen. Major
insurance companies and Medicare currently cover rTMS, though some plans require
patients to demonstrate that they’ve exhausted other treatment options.
The next step is studying how rTMS may improve other
mental health disorders like addiction and traumatic brain injury. “This study
is hopefully just the tip of the iceberg,” said Siddiqi. “I think we’re finally
on the verge of a paradigm shift in how we think about psychiatric treatment,
where we’ll supplement the conventional chemical imbalance and psychological
conflict models with a new brain circuit model.” In other words, psychiatrists
will use electricity instead of talk therapy and drugs to treat mental health
disorders. KQED.org
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