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Research Article

BDNF blood levels after electroconvulsive therapy in patients with mood disorders: A systematic review and meta-analysis

, , , &
Pages 411-418 | Received 18 Nov 2013, Accepted 03 Feb 2014, Published online: 16 Mar 2014
 

Abstract

Objectives. To evaluate whether electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), a very effective non-pharmacological treatment for mood disorders, induces neurotrophic effects, indexed by the measurement of peripheral brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels. Methods. Systematic review and meta-analysis of clinical trials published in PubMed/Medline from the first date available to October 2013. We included studies measuring pre- and post-BDNF blood levels under ECT in patients with mood disorders in the acute depressive episode. Results. Eleven studies (n = 221 subjects) were eligible. These studies enrolled subjects with unipolar, bipolar and psychotic depression and varied regarding electrode placement (unipolar vs. bipolar) and previous use of pharmacotherapy. Nonetheless, BDNF significantly increased after ECT (Hedges’ g pooled, random-effects model of 0.354; 95% CI = 0.162–0.546). The results were robust according to sensitivity analysis and Begg's funnel plot did not suggest publication bias. Meta-regression results did not show association of the outcome with any clinical and demographic variable, including depression improvement. Conclusions. Our meta-analysis indicates that, similar to pharmacological interventions, peripheral BDNF increases after ECT treatment. The lack of correlation between BDNF increasing and depression improvement suggests that ECT induces neurotrophic effects regardless of clinical response in depression.

Acknowledgements

MAV (FWO08/PDO/168) is a postdoctoral research fellow of the Research Foundation Flanders (FWO). ARB receives Young Investigator grants from the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation (NARSAD, YI 2013), São Paulo Research State Foundation (FAPESP 2012/20911-5) and the National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq, 455157/2013-8). “The Laboratory of Neurosciences receives financial support from the Associação Beneficente Alzira Denise Hertzog da Silva (ABADHS)”. This work was also supported by the Ghent University Multidisciplinary Research Partnership “The integrative neuroscience of behavioral control”.

Statement of Interest

None to declare.

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