Reconsideration of the Benefits of Pharmacological Interventions for the Attenuation of the Cognitive Adverse Effects of Electroconvulsive Therapy.

Chittaranjan Andrade
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Abstract

The cognitive adverse effects (AEs) of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) limit the wider use of the treatment. These AEs can be attenuated by changing the way ECT is administered; however, such changes may reduce the response rate, the speed of response, or both. A recent systematic review and meta-analysis identified more than a dozen pharmacologic interventions in 26 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that sought to reduce ECT-induced cognitive AEs. Because of large differences across RCTs, only a few outcomes for a few interventions could be pooled in meta-analysis, and most pooled analyses included only 2-3 RCTs. Important findings were that acetylcholinesterase inhibitors, ketamine, memantine, and liothyronine were associated with improved global cognitive functioning at 1-14 days post-ECT. Anti-inflammatory treatments and opioid receptor antagonists were not associated with improvement in general cognitive outcome at 1-14 days post-ECT. Meta-analysis was not possible for the remaining interventions, including piracetam, melatonin, pemoline, nortriptyline, herbal agents, drugs acting on the cortisol pathway, opioid receptor antagonists, l-tryptophan, vasopressin analogs, calcium channel blockers, and others; in individual RCTs, some of these interventions attenuated some cognitive measures as some time points after ECT. Regrettably, none of the RCTs examined clinically meaningful outcomes such as subjective cognitive impairment, impairments in daily life, and persistent autobiographical memory deficits. Future research should study such clinically meaningful outcomes (rather than laboratory tests), using pharmacologic interventions, perhaps in combination, for ECT procedures that are associated with higher cognitive AE burden. A risk is that whatever attenuates ECT-induced cognitive AEs may also attenuate ECT-related therapeutic benefits.

重新考虑药物干预减轻电休克治疗的认知不良反应的益处。
电休克治疗(ECT)的认知不良反应(ae)限制了该治疗的广泛应用。这些不良反应可以通过改变电痉挛疗法的实施方式来减弱;然而,这样的变化可能会降低响应速率或响应速度,或者两者兼而有之。最近的一项系统综述和荟萃分析确定了26项随机对照试验(rct)中超过12种药物干预措施,旨在减少ect诱导的认知ae。由于rct之间的差异很大,只有少数干预措施的少数结果可以合并在荟萃分析中,大多数合并分析仅包括2-3个rct。重要的发现是乙酰胆碱酯酶抑制剂、氯胺酮、美金刚和碘甲状腺原氨酸与ect后1-14天整体认知功能的改善有关。抗炎治疗和阿片受体拮抗剂与ect后1-14天的一般认知结果改善无关。无法对其余干预措施进行meta分析,包括吡拉西坦、褪黑素、培莫林、去甲替林、草药、作用于皮质醇途径的药物、阿片受体拮抗剂、l-色氨酸、抗利尿激素类似物、钙通道阻滞剂等;在个别随机对照试验中,一些干预措施在ECT后的某些时间点减弱了一些认知测量。遗憾的是,没有一项随机对照试验检查了有临床意义的结果,如主观认知障碍、日常生活障碍和持续的自传式记忆缺陷。未来的研究应该研究这些有临床意义的结果(而不是实验室测试),使用药物干预,也许是联合使用,用于与较高认知AE负担相关的ECT手术。风险在于,任何减弱ect诱发的认知ae的因素也可能减弱ect相关的治疗益处。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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