ObjectivesCerebral Small Vessel Disease (CSVD) is a chronic, progressive vascular disorder that confers increased vulnerability to psychiatric syndromes, including late-life mood disorders. In this study, we investigated the impact of CSVD on electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) outcomes in patients with late-onset bipolar disorder (BD).MethodsA sample of 54 non-demented elderly patients (>= 60 years) with late-onset BD and treatment-resistant major depression, mixed state, or catatonia who underwent bilateral ECT were included in this naturalistic observational study. A diagnosis of CSVD was established based on brain neuroimaging performed before ECT. All patients were evaluated before and after ECT using the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS), the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAM-D), and the Clinical Global Impression scale (CGI).ResultsOf the total sample, 19 patients were diagnosed with CSVD (35.2%). No significant differences were observed at baseline between patients with and without CSVD. Overall, a response was obtained in 66%-68.5% of patients, with remission in 56.2%. No significant differences in ECT outcomes were found between those with and without CSVD, and both groups exhibited substantial improvements in symptom severity following ECT.ConclusionsThe outcome of ECT in late-onset BD was not influenced by the presence of CSVD. This finding aligns with previous research on unipolar depression. Accordingly, ECT should be considered for elderly patients with late-onset BD, regardless of the presence of CSVD.CSVD was found in 19 out of 54 (35.2%) elderly with late-onset BD referred to ECT. Response to ECT was achieved in about two-thirds of patients with late-onset BD. ECT was equally effective in patients with and without CSVD.

Response to electroconvulsive therapy in elderly patients with late‐onset bipolar disorder: The impact of cerebral small vessel disease

Brancati, Giulio Emilio;Torrigiani, Samuele;Acierno, Donatella;Fustini, Chiara;Elefante, Camilla;Perugi, Giulio
2024-01-01

Abstract

ObjectivesCerebral Small Vessel Disease (CSVD) is a chronic, progressive vascular disorder that confers increased vulnerability to psychiatric syndromes, including late-life mood disorders. In this study, we investigated the impact of CSVD on electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) outcomes in patients with late-onset bipolar disorder (BD).MethodsA sample of 54 non-demented elderly patients (>= 60 years) with late-onset BD and treatment-resistant major depression, mixed state, or catatonia who underwent bilateral ECT were included in this naturalistic observational study. A diagnosis of CSVD was established based on brain neuroimaging performed before ECT. All patients were evaluated before and after ECT using the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS), the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAM-D), and the Clinical Global Impression scale (CGI).ResultsOf the total sample, 19 patients were diagnosed with CSVD (35.2%). No significant differences were observed at baseline between patients with and without CSVD. Overall, a response was obtained in 66%-68.5% of patients, with remission in 56.2%. No significant differences in ECT outcomes were found between those with and without CSVD, and both groups exhibited substantial improvements in symptom severity following ECT.ConclusionsThe outcome of ECT in late-onset BD was not influenced by the presence of CSVD. This finding aligns with previous research on unipolar depression. Accordingly, ECT should be considered for elderly patients with late-onset BD, regardless of the presence of CSVD.CSVD was found in 19 out of 54 (35.2%) elderly with late-onset BD referred to ECT. Response to ECT was achieved in about two-thirds of patients with late-onset BD. ECT was equally effective in patients with and without CSVD.
2024
Brancati, Giulio Emilio; Torrigiani, Samuele; Acierno, Donatella; Fustini, Chiara; Puglisi, Flavia; Elefante, Camilla; Lattanzi, Lorenzo; Medda, Pierp...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11568/1242154
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