| Literature DB >> 30860456 |
Simon Vann Jones1, Rick McCollum2.
Abstract
Aims and methodFew studies have looked at subjective memory impairment from electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) after treatment completion. We aimed to systematically review all available evidence for subjective post-treatment effects.Entities:
Keywords: Electroconvulsive therapy; cognition; depression; memory; side-effects; treatments
Year: 2019 PMID: 30860456 PMCID: PMC6472304 DOI: 10.1192/bjb.2018.45
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BJPsych Bull ISSN: 2056-4694
Fig. 1Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analyses flow diagram mapping search history. CINAHL, Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature database.
Summary of included papers
| Study (first author, year) | Participants | Questionnaire used | Modality | Assessment | Results summary |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mohn 2016 | Everyday Memory Questionnaire | Bifrontal, | Baseline, 6 weeks and 6 months | Pre-ECT, 104.0 (SD 37.9); 6 weeks post-treatment, 107.9 (SD 43.6); 6 months post-treatment, 98.6 (SD 42.6); higher score indicates worse memory | |
| Brus 2017 | Seven-point variant of the ‘failing memory’ component of the Comprehensive Psychopathological Rating Score | 86.9% had more than six treatments; 91.6% had unilateral electrode placement | Baseline and <1 week post-treatment | Subjective memory worsened in 28% of the sample (31% women | |
| Bag 2016 | SSMQ | Bilateral, brief pulse; mean number of sessions was seven across all groups | Baseline and immediately post-treatment | Mean SSMQ score dropped −49.5 points between baseline and end of therapy; patients with bipolar disorder reported less complaints than patients with unipolar depression | |
| Kumar 2016 | Subjective Assessment of Memory Impairment | 96% received right unilateral; the majority received brief pulse | Baseline and 1 day post-treatment | No change in subjective memory score during therapy despite objective evidence of impairment | |
| Mayur 2013 | SSMQ | Right unilateral; 50% ultra-brief pulse; 50% brief pulse | Baseline, after 8 sessions and 3 months post-treatment | Brief pulse: −21.6 at baseline ( | |
| Fernie 2014 | SSMQ and PRMQ | Not described | Baseline, 1 month, 3 months and 6 months post-treatment | SSMQ improved from −14.1 at baseline to −4.58 at 6 months, with the greatest improvement seen 1 month after therapy: −1.59 (SD 2.73); PRMQ score improved by approximately 10% from baseline | |
| Fazzino 2013 | Selected SSMQ questions | 17/26 received right unilateral; 17/26 received ultra-brief pulse width | 3–7 questions daily for 60 days (including treatment) | No change in subjective memory scores despite objective memory improvement | |
| Ng 2000 | Self-Rating Scale of Memory Function | Right unilateral | Baseline, after six treatments and 1 month post-treatment | Improved subjective memory score at end of treatment; negative correlated with HRSD score | |
| Schulze-Rauschenbach 2005 | SSMQ | Right unilateral and brief pulse width | Baseline and within 1 week of completing | 5.5-point improvement in SSMQ score, although not statistically or clinically significant | |
| Frith 1983 | Single binary question: ‘do you experience memory problems?’ | Bifrontal ECT, median course of eight sessions | Baseline, after treatment and at 6 months | Sham ECT responders, ECT responders and sham ECT non-responders all reported improvement in memory; ECT non-responders memory remained stably poor | |
| Smith 2010 | SSMQ | Bilateral ECT; half had ten sessions of continuation ECT Half had continuation pharmacotherapy | Baseline (post- ECT), 12 weeks and 24 weeks | Both groups’ SSMQ scores significantly improved from baseline; study looked at continuation treatment only | |
| Sienaert 2010 | SSMQ | Ultra-brief bifrontal | Baseline and 6 weeks | 73% patients were glad they had ECT; SSMQ performance strongly correlated with satisfaction on multiple regression analysis but also correlated with depression score, so may not be independent | |
| Berman 2008 | CFQ memory subscale | 40% bilateral, 34.7% unilateral, 24.3% combination; 14% sine-wave, 86% brief pulse | Baseline, 1 week and 24 weeks | Baseline 14.97 (SD 6.75), 1 week 13.01 (SD 6.39), 24 weeks 14.05 (SD 6.85) (higher scores indicate greater impairment) | |
| Arts 2006 | CFQ | Bilateral | Baseline, 5 days and 30 days | CFQ score improved from coefficient of −0.2 at baseline to −0.17 at 30 days | |
| Coleman 1996 | SSMQ | Mixture of bifrontal, RUL and bilateral | Baseline and 2 months | −31.5 at baseline, −5.4 at 2 months | |
| Ikeji 1999 | Two binary questions: ‘Is your memory poor?’ ‘Do you worry about your memory?’ | Bilateral | Baseline and seven intervals up to 6 months post-treatment | Subjective memory complaints at 6 months: 37.1% of ECT group, 22.6% of control group |
CFQ, Cognitive Failures Questionnaire; ECT, Electroconvulsive Therapy; HRSD, Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression; PRMQ, Prospective and Retrospective Memory Questionnaire; RUL, Right Unilateral; SD, Standard Deviation; SSMQ, Squire Subjective Memory Questionnaire.
Fig. 2Subjective memory change over time. A comparison of studies using the Squire Subjective Memory Questionnaire (SSMQ). Studies used brief pulse unless stated otherwise.,,,, ECT, Electroconvulsive Therapy.