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BrainAge of patients with severe late-life depression referred for electroconvulsive therapy

Authors :
Margot J. Wagenmakers
Mardien L. Oudega
Federica Klaus
David Wing
Gwendolyn Orav
Laura K.M. Han
Julia Binnewies
Aartjan T.F. Beekman
Dick J. Veltman
Didi Rhebergen
Eric van Exel
Lisa T. Eyler
Annemieke Dols
Psychiatry
APH - Aging & Later Life
Amsterdam Neuroscience - Mood, Anxiety, Psychosis, Stress & Sleep
APH - Mental Health
Anatomy and neurosciences
Amsterdam Neuroscience - Brain Imaging
Amsterdam Neuroscience - Neurodegeneration
Central Academic Services
Faculty of Physical Education and Physical Therapy
Source :
Journal of Affective Disorders, 330, 1-6. Elsevier, Wagenmakers, M J, Oudega, M L, Klaus, F, Wing, D, Orav, G, Han, L K M, Binnewies, J, Beekman, A T F, Veltman, D J, Rhebergen, D, van Exel, E, Eyler, L T & Dols, A 2023, ' BrainAge of patients with severe late-life depression referred for electroconvulsive therapy ', Journal of Affective Disorders, vol. 330, pp. 1-6 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2023.02.047
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2023.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Severe depression is associated with accelerated brain aging. BrainAge gap, the difference between predicted and observed BrainAge was investigated in patients with late-life depression (LLD). We aimed to examine BrainAge gap in LLD and its associations with clinical characteristics indexing LLD chronicity, current severity, prior to electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) and ECT outcome. METHODS: Data was analyzed from the Mood Disorders in Elderly treated with Electroconvulsive Therapy (MODECT) study. A previously established BrainAge algorithm (BrainAge R by James Cole, (https://github.com/james-cole/brainageR)) was applied to pre-ECT T1-weighted structural MRI-scans of 42 patients who underwent ECT. RESULTS: A BrainAge gap of 1.8 years (SD = 5.5) was observed, Cohen's d = 0.3. No significant associations between BrainAge gap, number of previous episodes, current episode duration, age of onset, depression severity, psychotic symptoms or ECT outcome were observed. LIMITATIONS: Limited sample size. CONCLUSIONS: Our initial findings suggest an older BrainAge than chronological age in patients with severe LLD referred for ECT, however with high degree of variability and direction of the gap. No associations were found with clinical measures. Larger samples including are needed to better understand brain aging and to evaluate the usability of BrainAge gap as potential biomarker of prognosis an treatment-response in LLD. TRIAL REGISTRATION: ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02667353.

Details

ISSN :
01650327
Volume :
330
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....41fe6bad15abd1956486b9e7edfeb369