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Early change change of prefrontal theta cordance and occipital alpha asymmetry in the prediction of responses to antidepressants

Publication |
2019

Abstract

Background: The study evaluated the effectiveness of EEG alpha 1, alpha 2 and theta power, along with prefrontal theta cordance (PFC), frontal and occipital alpha 1, alpha 2 asymmetry (FAA1/2, OAA1/2) at baseline and their changes at week 1 in predicting response to antidepressants. Method: Resting-state EEG data were recorded from 103 depressive patients that were treated in average for 5.1 +/- 0.9 weeks with SSRIs (n = 57) and SNRIs (n = 46).

Results: Fifty-five percent of patients (n = 56) responded to treatment (i.e.reduction of Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale score >= 50%) and 45% (n = 47) of treated subjects did not reach positive treatment outcome. No differences in EEG baseline alpha and theta power or changes at week 1 for prefrontal, frontal, central, temporal and occipital regions were found between responders and non-responders.

Both groups showed no differences at baseline PFC, FAA1/2 and OAA1/2 as well as change of FAA1/2 at week 1. The only parameters associated with treatment outcome were decrease of PFC in responders and increase of OAA1/2 at week 1 in non-responders.

There was no influence of the used antidepressant classes on the results. The PFC change at week 1 (PFCC) (area under curve-AUC = 0.75) showed only a numerically higher predictive ability than OAA change in alpha 1 (OAA1C, AUC = 0.64)/alpha 2 (OAA2C, AUC = 0.63).

A combined model, where OAA1C was added to PFCC (AUC = 0.79), did not significantly improve response prediction. Conclusion: Besides PFCC, we found that OAA1C/OAA2C might be another candidate for EEG predictors of antidepressant response.