Abstract

It is estimated that electroconvulsive therapy is still administered to approximately a million people a year. It involves passing enough electric current through the human brain, eight to twelve times, to cause convulsions, in the hope of somehow alleviating emotional suffering, primarily depression. There have only ever been 11 placebo-controlled studies (where general anaesthesia is administered but the electric shock is withheld), all of which were pre-1986, had very small sample sizes and were seriously methodologically flawed. Five of these studies found no difference between the two groups at the end of treatment, four found ECT produced better outcomes for some patients, and two produced mixed results, including one where psychiatrists' ratings produced a difference, but the ratings of nurses and patients did not. In the 80 years since the first ECT no studies have found any evidence that ECT is better than placebo beyond the end of treatment. Nevertheless, all five meta-analyses relying on these studies have somehow concluded that ECT is more effective than placebo despite the studies' multiple failings. Meanwhile, evidence of persistent or permanent memory loss in 12% to 55% of patients has accumulated. Attempts to highlight this failure of ECT proponents to provide robust evidence that their treatment is effective and safe are routinely dismissed, diminished, denied and denounced. This paper responds to one such attempt, by Drs Meechan, Laws, Young, McLoughlin and Jauhar, to discredit two systematic reviews of the eleven pre-1986 studies, in 2010 and 2019, the latter of which also reviewed five meta-analyses that had ignored the studies' failings. The criticisms and claims of the recent crtiique of the two systematic reviews are examined in detail, by the first author of both reviews, for accuracy, relevance and logic. The critique is found to include multiple errors, misrepresentations, omissions, inconsistencies and logical flaws. It is concluded that Meechan et al. fail to make a fact-based, coherent argument against suspending ECT pending a series of large, carefully designed placebo-controlled studies to establish whether ECT does have any beneficial effects against which to weigh the significant established adverse effects.

Highlights

  • It is estimated that electroconvulsive therapy is still administered to approximately a million people a year

  • I thank Chis Meechan et al for focusing attention on two systematic reviews of randomised placebo-controlled trials (RCTs) of the efficacy of electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) for depression (Read and Bentall, 2010; Read et al, 2019a), the latter of which reviewed the five meta-analyses of those studies. Both reviews had concluded that the RCTs, all small pre-1986 studies, were so flawed that no conclusions about efficacy can be based on them, and that the meta-analyses failed to take into account these flaws, and ignored the absence of any RCT evidence of positive outcomes beyond the end of treatment, when claiming that ECT is effective

  • Meechan et al.’s central strategy for dismissing the two reviews, and their inconvenient findings, is to portray them as narrative, rather than systematic, reviews. This point is so central to their mission that the term is highlighted in their title, ‘A critique of narrative reviews of the evidence-base for ECT in depression’, repeated in all four subsections of their Abstract, and used seven times in the body of their article, including, at the very end: ‘we have identified numerous substantial problems that stem from these narrative reviews’

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Summary

Special Article

A response to yet another defence of ECT in the absence of robust efficacy and safety evidence. Epidemiology and Psychiatric Sciences 31, e13, 1–10.

Two reviews of ECT for depression
Narrative or systematic?
Evaluated and approved?
The quality scale
Scale items and scoring
Are RCTs necessary?
The six defences
Blinding and the placebo effect
Findings
Conclusions

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