Concurrent transcranial magnetic stimulation and electroencephalography measures are associated with antidepressant response from rTMS treatment for depression

Date

2023

Authors

Bailey, Neil
Hoy, Kate
Sullivan, Caley M.
Allman, Brienna
Rogasch, Nigel C
Daskalakis, Zafiris J.
Fitzgerald, Paul

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Elsevier

Abstract

Background Response rates to repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) for depression are 25-45%. Participant features obtained prior to treatment that are associated with response to rTMS may be clinically useful. TMS-evoked neural activity recorded via electroencephalography (EEG) prior to treatment may be associated with treatment response. We examined whether these measures could differentiate responders and non-responders to rTMS for depression. Methods Thirty-nine patients with treatment-resistant major depressive disorder (MDD) and 21 healthy controls received TMS during EEG recordings (TMS-EEG). MDD participants then completed 5-8 weeks of rTMS treatment. Repeated measures ANOVAs compared N100 amplitude, N100 slope, and theta power across 3 groups (responders, non-responders and controls), 2 hemispheres (left, F3, and right, F4), and 2 stimulation types (single pulse and paired pulses with a 100ms inter-pulse interval [pp100]). Results Neither N100 amplitude nor theta power differed between responders and non-responders. Responders showed a steeper negative N100 slope for single pulses and steeper positive slope for pp100 pulses at F3 than non-responders. Exploratory analyses suggested this may have been due to the responder group showing larger P60 and N100 amplitudes. Limitations Our study had a small sample size. Conclusion Left hemisphere TEPs, in particular N100 slope, may be related to response rTMS treatment for depression. If our future research with larger sample sizes verifies this result, the finding may provide clinical utility in recommendations for rTMS treatment for depression.

Description

Keywords

TMS-EEG, N100, rTMS, Depression

Citation

Source

Journal of Affective Disorders Reports

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution licence

Restricted until