Objective: To investigate the role of frontal EEG as predictor of clinical response to SSRIs or venlafaxine in major depressive disorder (MDD).
Method: 82 subjects (age 35.9+/-13.0; 47.6% female) meeting DSM-IV criteria for MDD entered an 8-week prospective treatment with SSRIs or venlafaxine. At baseline and week 1 we recorded serial, 4-channel EEGs (F7-Fpz, F8-Fpz, A1-Fpz, A2-Fpz). We evaluated prospectively the relative theta power as predictor of treatment outcome. We also developed an Antidepressant Treatment Response (ATR) index using EEG parameters assessed at baseline and week 1.
Results: 45 subjects (54.9%) responded to treatment (HAM-D-17 reduction>or=50%). At baseline, frontal relative theta power (i.e., 4-8 Hz power/2-20 Hz power) was significantly (p=0.017) lower (21%) in treatment responders than in non-responders (24%). Baseline relative theta power predicted treatment response with 63% accuracy [64% sensitivity, 62% specificity, 66% area under the receiver operator curve (AUROC) (p=0.014)]. Relative theta power at week 1 predicted treatment response with 60% accuracy [62% sensitivity, 57% specificity, 61% AUROC (p=0.089)]. ATR predicted response with 70% accuracy [82% sensitivity, 54% specificity, 72% AUROC (p=0.001)].
Conclusion: Using automated analysis of frontal EEG collected during the first week of antidepressant treatment it may be possible to facilitate prediction of SSRI or venlafaxine efficacy in MDD.
Trial registration: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT00157547.