4.6 Article

A neuroimaging-based precision medicine framework for depression

Journal

ASIAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY
Volume 91, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.ajp.2023.103803

Keywords

Depression; Transcranial magnetic stimulation; Resting-state functional MRI; Machine learning; Youth; Precision medicine

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The study developed a precision medicine framework for depression based on neuroimaging and achieved promising results in clinical practice. By utilizing subtype classification and precise rTMS treatment, the research provides new insights into individualized diagnosis and treatment of depression.
Background: Symptom-based diagnostic criteria of depression leads to notorious heterogeneity and subjectivity.Methods: The study was conducted in two stages at two sites: development of a neuroimaging-based subtyping and precise repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) strategy for depression at Center 1 and its clinical application at Center 2. Center 1 identified depression subtypes and subtype-specific rTMS targets based on amplitude of low frequency fluctuation (ALFF) in a cohort of 238 major depressive disorder patients and 66 healthy controls (HC). Subtypes were identified using a Gaussian Mixture Model, and subtype-specific rTMS targets were selected based on dominant brain regions prominently differentiating depression subtypes from HC. Subsequently, one classifier was employed and 72 hospitalized, depressed youths at Center 2 received two-week precise rTMS. MRI and clinical assessments were obtained at baseline, midpoint, and treatment completion for evaluation.Results: Two neuroimaging subtypes of depression, archetypal and atypical depression, were identified based on distinct frontal-posterior functional imbalance patterns as measured by ALFF. The dorsomedial prefrontal cortex was identified as the rTMS target for archetypal depression, and the occipital cortex for atypical depression. Following precise rTMS, ALFF alterations were normalized in both archetypal and atypical depressed youths, corresponding with symptom response of 90.00% in archetypal depression and 70.73% in atypical depression.Conclusions: A precision medicine framework for depression was developed based on objective neurobiomarkers and implemented with promising results, actualizing a subtyping-treatment-evaluation closed loop in depression. Future randomized controlled trials are warranted.

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