Los Angeles Times

Hope against the darkness of depression

- By David Levine

The numbers are staggering: Almost 7% of the U.S. population — about 17.6 million people — is diagnosed with depression, according to the National Institute of Mental Health. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reports that depression costs 200 million lost workdays each year at a cost to employers of $17 billion to $44 billion.

There are effective treatments for depression, including, researcher­s said recently, meditation. But neither talk therapy nor the existing medication­s work for everyone. And it can take up to six agonizing weeks for the most common antidepres­sants — Prozac, Zoloft and Lexapro — to work fully.

Additional­ly, estimates are that only about half of people with depression seek treatment.

The good news is that there is much work in progress, says Dr. Jeffrey Borenstein, head of the New York-based Brain & Behavior Research Foundation.

Here’s some of what’s ahead or under study:

Vortioxeti­ne

The federal government recently approved vortioxeti­ne for the treatment of adults with major depressive disorder. The commercial name of vortioxeti­ne, a variant on serotonin reuptake inhibitors that are the mainstay of depression treatment, is Brintellix.

Research on rats, submitted by the drug developer to U.S. regulators, suggested the drug may improve some dimensions of memory. A trial in human subjects showed that those taking it had better cognitive function than those taking duloxetine, which is marketed as Cymbalta. The government declined to approve those claims until they were replicated and extended by additional research.

Ketamine

Ketamine is an anesthetic used in human and veterinary medicine, and its ability to rapidly reduce depressive symptoms in people who have responded insufficie­ntly to antidepres­sants has generated great interest in the scientific and clinical communitie­s. A study of 72 patients, presented last year at the American Psychiatri­c Assn. annual meeting, found that more than half reported fewer symptoms after one intravenou­s dose of ketamine.

Ketamine, a legal drug but not federally approved to treat depression, not only works quickly but its effects also can last three to five days or more, said Dr. Carlos Zarate, chief of the section on the neurobiolo­gy and treatment of mood disorders at the National Institute of Mental Health.

Those qualities mean it could be useful for patients in danger of committing suicide, Zarate said.

Ketamine’s side effects include hallucinat­ions, and several pharmaceut­ical companies are working on ketamine-like alternativ­es, he said, adding that he expects such drugs on the market by 2017. Transcrani­al magnetic stimulatio­n

TMS administer­s brief, magnetic pulses to the brain by passing high currents through an electromag­netic coil adjacent to a patient’s scalp. The targeted magnetic pulses stimulate the circuits in the brain that are underactiv­e in patients with depression with the goal of restoring normal function and mood. TMS can be administer­ed on both an inpatient and outpatient basis.

TMS was cleared by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion to treat major depressive disorder in adults for whom medication did not work. For most patients, treatment is administer­ed daily for four to six weeks, 40 minutes a session. Cranial electrothe­rapy stimulatio­n

CES involves small, hardly noticeable, electric current pulsed across the patient’s head in a device that can be used at home. One on the market is the Fisher Wallace Stimulator, a portable, batterypow­ered generator cleared by the FDA for symptomati­c relief of insomnia, anxiety and depression, and for treating chronic pain. Deep brain stimulatio­n

This surgically implanted, battery-operated neuro-stimulator, the size of a stopwatch and similar to a heart pacemaker, is used to treat a variety of neurologic­al symptoms, especially those resulting from Parkinson’s disease. Small trials are being conducted, mostly in Europe, to learn its effectiven­ess in depression, said Dawn Tartaglion­e, a neurosurge­on who works for Integris Health, a healthcare company based in Oklahoma City.

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