Original Research September 15, 2005

Two-Year Outcome of Vagus Nerve Stimulation (VNS) for Treatment of Major Depressive Episodes

Ziad Nahas, MD, MSCR; Lauren B. Marangell, MD; Mustafa M. Husain, MD; A. John Rush, MD; Harold A. Sackeim, PhD; Sarah H. Lisanby, MD; James M. Martinez, MD; Mark S. George, MD

J Clin Psychiatry 2005;66(9):1097-1104

Article Abstract

 Background: Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) had antidepressant effects in an initial open, acute phase pilot study of 59 participants in a treatment-resistant major depressive episode (MDE). We examined the effects of adjunctive VNS over 24 months in this cohort.

Method: Adult outpatients (N = 59) with chronic or recurrent major depressive disorder or bipolar (I or II) disorder and experiencing a treatment-resistant, nonpsychotic MDE (DSM-IV criteria) received 2 years of VNS. Changes in psychotropic medications and VNS stimulus parameters were allowed only after the first 3 months. Response was defined as > = 50% reduction from the baseline 28-item Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAM-D-28) total score, and remission was defined as a HAM-D-28 score < = 10.

Results: Based on last observation carried forward analyses, HAM-D-28 response rates were 31% (18/59) after 3 months, 44% (26/59) after 1 year, and 42% (25/59) after 2 years of adjunctive VNS. Remission rates were 15% (9/59) at 3 months, 27% (16/59) at 1 year, and 22% (13/59) at 2 years. By 2 years, 2 deaths (unrelated to VNS) had occurred, 4 participants had withdrawn from the study, and 81% (48/59) were still receiving VNS. Longer-term VNS was generally well tolerated.

Conclusion: These results suggest that patients with chronic or recurrent, treatment-resistant depression may show long-term benefit when treated with VNS.