Abstract

Vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) is a minimally invasive neurostimulation method and was approved for drug-resistant epilepsy in children and adults in Europe in 1994. The observation that depression -the most common comorbidity in epilepsy - improved with VNS prompted trials of VNS in treatment-resistant depression (TRD) leading to European approval of VNS for TRD in 2001. Use of VNS for TRD patients in Germany is currently limited to a few highly specialized tertiary centers and the method is largely unknown in psychiatric clinical practice. We therefore systematically review the most recent publications on VNS in TRD as well as recommendations in guidelines and discuss the use of VNS in clinical practice. In the past 5 years, 5 level-2 studies and 4 level-3 studies were published on the effect of VNS in TRD patients. Clinical studies have failed to demonstrate short-term efficacy of VNS in TRD patients. Long-term efficacy of VNS in TRD patients is documented by multiple studies: the recently published largest ever investigation on the subject confirms favorable outcomes in TRD patients receiving adjunctive VNS in addition to treatment-as-usual compared to patients receiving treatment-as-usual-only over a 5-year period. Long-term efficacy of VNS is documented by level-2 evidence; however, it is not known which TRD patients have a higher probability of responding to VNS, which may complicate patient selection in clinical practice. Additionally, the unclear and variable definition of TRD may hinder or postpone adequate use of neurostimulation treatments.

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