Articles

EEG measures of brain arousal in relation to symptom improvement in patients with major depressive disorder: Results from a randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial

Ulke, Christine; Kayser, Jürgen; Tenke, Craig E; Mergl, Roland; Sander, Christian; Panier, Lidia Yx; Alvarenga, Jorge E; Fava, Maurizio; McGrath, Patrick J; Deldin, Patricia J; McInnis, Melvin G; Trivedi, Madhukar H; Weissman, Myrna M.; Pizzagalli, Diego A; Hegerl, Ulrich

Hyperstable arousal regulation during a 15-min resting electroencephalogram (EEG) has been linked to a favorable response to antidepressants. The EMBARC study, a multicenter randomized placebo-controlled clinical trial, provides an opportunity to examine arousal stability as putative antidepressant response predictor in short EEG recordings. We tested the hypothesis that high arousal stability during a 2-min resting EEG at baseline is related to better outcome in the sertraline arm and explored the specificity of this effect. Outpatients with chronic/recurrent MDD were recruited from four university hospitals and randomized to treatment with sertraline (n = 100) or placebo (n = 104). The change in the Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD-17) was the main outcome. Patients were stratified into high and low arousal stability groups. In mixed-model repeated measures (MMRM) analysis HRSD-17 change differed significantly between arousal groups, with high arousal stability being associated with a better outcome in the sertraline arm, and worse outcome in the placebo arm at week 4, with moderate effect sizes. When considering both treatment arms, a significant arousal group x time x treatment interaction emerged, highlighting specificity to the sertraline arm. Although findings indicate that arousal stability is likely to be a treatment-specific marker of response, further out-of-sample validation is warranted.

Files

  • thumbnail for Ulke et al. - 2024 - EEG measures of brain arousal in relation to sympt.pdf Ulke et al. - 2024 - EEG measures of brain arousal in relation to sympt.pdf application/pdf 303 KB Download File

Also Published In

Title
Psychiatry Research
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2024.116165

More About This Work

Academic Units
Epidemiology
Psychiatry
Published Here
May 13, 2025