| Literature DB >> 31956406 |
Wenying Xu1, Chencheng Zhang1, Wissam Deeb2, Bhavana Patel2, Yiwen Wu3, Valerie Voon1,4, Michael S Okun2, Bomin Sun1.
Abstract
Tourette syndrome (TS) is a childhood-onset neuropsychiatric disorder characterized by the presence of multiple motor and vocal tics. TS usually co-occurs with one or multiple psychiatric disorders. Although behavioral and pharmacological treatments for TS are available, some patients do not respond to the available treatments. For these patients, TS is a severe, chronic, and disabling disorder. In recent years, deep brain stimulation (DBS) of basal ganglia-thalamocortical networks has emerged as a promising intervention for refractory TS with or without psychiatric comorbidities. Three major challenges need to be addressed to move the field of DBS treatment for TS forward: (1) patient and DBS target selection, (2) ethical concerns with treating pediatric patients, and (3) DBS treatment optimization and improvement of individual patient outcomes (motor and phonic tics, as well as functioning and quality of life). The Tourette Association of America and the American Academy of Neurology have recently released their recommendations regarding surgical treatment for refractory TS. Here, we describe the challenges, advancements, and promises of the use of DBS in the treatment of TS. We summarize the results of clinical studies and discuss the ethical issues involved in treating pediatric patients. Our aim is to provide a better understanding of the feasibility, safety, selection process, and clinical effectiveness of DBS treatment for select cases of severe and medically intractable TS.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptive close loop; Capsulotomy; Connectivity; Deep brain stimulation; Tourette syndrome
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31956406 PMCID: PMC6956485 DOI: 10.1186/s40035-020-0183-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Neurodegener ISSN: 2047-9158 Impact factor: 8.014
Summary of the studies in this review
| Study | Target | Patients (n) | Age of surgery (years) | Subjects (ages) | Follow-up | Study Design | Outcome of Tics | Outcome of Comorbidities and Quality of life | Side effects | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| < 18 | < 25 | |||||||||
| Ladan et al.2017 [ | amGPi | 15 | 18–49 | NR | NR | 17–82 mo | Retrospective review | 1. YGTSS 38.2% improvement motor scores 33.2% improvement vocal scores 38.2% improvement 2. 2.MRVRS 3. observed 40.5% improvement unobserved 34.1% improvement | 1.OCB (Y-BOCS) ( 2.Anxiety (STAI) significantly improve 3.Deprresion (BDI) significantly improve 4.GTS-QOL significantly improve | 1.Stimulation-related weight gain, dizziness, feelings of nausea, freezing of gait episode, speech articulation, and akathisia |
| Rubens et al. 2016 [ | CM-Pf | 1 | 23 | NR | 1 | 18 mo | Case report | 1.YGTSS 70.5% improvement impairment 60% improvement | 1.Anxiety (HAS) 53% improvement | NR |
| Paola et al. 2016 [ | CM-Pf | 11 | 17–46 | 2 | 4 | 2–91 mo | Retrospective review | 1.YGTSS 54% improvement motor scores 46% improvement vocal scores 52% improvement impairment 59% improvement | 1.be employed( | 1.Surgery-related: scalp erosion and purulent drainage 2.Postsurgical adverse effects: decreased memory, attention and mental flexibility, shock-like sensations, neck tightness, temporary anterograde amnesia, recurrent headache, nausea, vomiting, photophobia and phonophobia 3.Stimulation-induced: recurrent tension headache, worsening of pre-existing tremor, transient blurring of vision; intensity increase result dizziness and paresthesias; intensity decrease result dysarthria, involuntary movements of the tongue and jaw, and mouth opening, single seizure-like episode |
| Takanobu et al. 2010 [ | CM-Pf-Voi | 5 | 19–21 | 0 | 3 | 12 mo | Prospective, open-labeled case series study | 1.YGTSS 52–71% improvement | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) improvement( 2.Depression (BDI-II) improvement( 3.Intelligence level full scale intelligence quotient score, FIQ from 64 to 82(n = 1) Performance intelligent quotient scores, PIQ from 78 ± 14 to 88 ± 13(n = 3) 4.Social impairment scores from 52 to 71% to 56–71% | 1.Stimulation-related sensations of irritation, hotness of the body and blurred vision |
| Marano et al. 2019 [ | CM-Pf | 1 | 28 | 0 | 0 | 24 mo | Case report | 1.YGTSS: sustained motor and phonic tic relief | 1.OCB (SCL90), depression (BDI), and anxiety (BAI) showed a remarkable improvement | 1.Stimulation-related: mild transient dysarthria and hand kinetic tremor |
| Richard S. et al. 2018 [ | Medial Thalamus | 13 | 16–33 | 5 | 12 | 6–58 mo | Retrospective review | 1.YGTSS 50% improvement | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) ( 2.Clinical Global Impression scale much or very much improve | 1.Device-related: wound erosion and infection |
| Daniel.et al. 2016 [ | Ventral anterior and ventrolateral motor parts of the thalamus | 8 | 19–56 | 0 | 2 | 12 mo | Retrospective open-label trail | 1.YGTSS 58% improvement motor scores 51% improvement vocal scores 53% improvement impairment 60% improvement 2.MRVRS 58% improvement | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) no significant improvement 2.Depression (BDI) no significant improvement 3.Anxiety (STAI) trait anxiety significant improve state anxiety no significant improve 4.DAPP-BQ: no effect on personality dimensions of emotional dysregulation, dissocial behavior, inhibition and compulsivity 5.GAF: a significant effect on the patients’ overall level of functioning 6.Modular System for Quality of Life: significant effect on the patients’ general satisfaction with life, psychosocial quality of life, and their affective quality of life | 1.Surgery-related: NR 2.Postsurgical adverse effects infection of the IPG pouch 3.Stimulation-related: weight gain, tic severity increase, consecutive deterioration of mood, disturbance of sleep, dysarthria, feelings of heaviness, heat, headache, a humming feeling during head rotation, feelings of a sudden twitch or twinge, agitation and loss of strength in one leg, numbness and tremor of the tongue, lower jaw, and cramps of the hands; intensity increase result dysarthria, disturbance of eye motility and fine motor skills; intensity decrease result disturbance of eye motility and tremor of the lower jaw |
| Anouk Y.J.M et al.2016 [ | Cm-Spv-Voi; GPi | 7 | 35–48 | NR | NR | 12–78 mo | Case series | 1.YGTSS 27.5–88.9% improvement | NR | 1.Surgery-related: vertical gaze paralysis (bleeding) 2.Postsurgerial adverse effects infection of IPG, binge eating, lethargy, dysarthria, gait disturbances and apathy 3.Stimulation-related sleeping disorders, gaze disturbances; intensity increase result reduced level of energy, minor visual disturbances, and alteration of sexual function |
| Zinovia et al. 2015 [ | GPi | 15 | 24–55 | 0 | 1 | 8–36 mo | Randomized, double-blind, crossover trial | 1.YGTSS blinded phase (on-stimulation vs stimulation-off): 15.3% improvement baseline vs open-label stimulation phase: 40.1% improvement | Baseline vs open-label stimulation phase 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) no significant change 2.Depression (BDI) significantly improve 3.Axiety (STAI) no significant change 4.GTS-QOL significantly improve | 1.Surgery-related: infection of the hardware 2.Stimulation-related deterioration of tics and hypomanic behavior |
| Elisabeth et al. 2012 [ | amGPi | 11 | 18–50 | 0 | 2 | 4–30 mo | Retrospective review | 1.YGTSS 49.6% improvement at 3 mo motor score 48% improvement at final follow-up vocal score 56.5% improvement at final follow-up | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) ( 2.Depression (HAM-D) ( 3.GTS-QOL change from 39.09 to 79.09 at final follow-up 4.GAF change from 47.27 to 74.55 at final follow-up | 1.Surgery-related: NR 2.Device-related lead breakage or damage, lead infection 3.Stimulation-related: anxiety with panic attacks |
| Perminder S. et al. 2014 [ | amGPi | 17 | 17–51 | 2 | 6 | 8–46 mo | Retrospective review | 1.YGTSS 54.3% improvement motor score 47.8% improvement vocal score 51.5% improvement | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) ( 2.Depression (HDRS)( 3.GTS-QOL change from 40.88 to 66.47 4.GAF change from 50.0 to 72.12 | 1.Surgery-related: NR 2.Device-related: lead breakage or damage, lead infection 3.Stimulation-related: transient anxiety, agitation, dizziness, poor balance and worsening of pre-existing stuttering, intermittent speech arrest |
| Johnson et al. 2019 [ | CM thalamus; anterior GPi; posterior GPi; NA/ALIC | 123 | 14–61 | NR | NR | 1–120 mo | Multisite study | 1.YGTSS 46.7% improvement 2.Median time to clinical response (≥40% reduction in YGTSS) CM thalamus: 12 mo GPi:18 mo all patients: 13 mo | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) 21.1% improvement 2.Median time to clinical response (≥40% reduction in YGTSS) TS with OCD: 24 mo TS without OCD: 11 mo | NR |
| A.Y.J.M Smeets et al. 2016 [ | anterior GPi | 5 | 35–57 | 0 | 0 | 12–38 mo | Retrospective review | 1.YGTSS motor score s64.8% improvement vocal scores 78.2% improvement 2.MRVRS motor scores 79.7% improvement vocal scores 81.0% improvement | 1.Anxiety (BAI) no significant change 2.Depression (BDI) no significant change 3.ADHD (CAARS) no significant change 4.OCB (Y-BOCS) no significant change | 1.Postsurgery adverse effects: infection of IPG and neck pain 2.Stimulation-related:apathy, weight loss and agitation |
| Hauseux et al. 2017 [ | posteroventral GPi; posteroventral GPi + NA | 3 | 12–18 | 2 | 3 | 40–69 mo | Case series | 1.YGTSS motor tics improved(n = 2), vocal tics remained(n = 1) or exacerbation( | 1.OCD no improvement(n = 1), exacerbation(n = 1) or recurrence(n = 1) 2.GTS-QOLmoderate( | 1.Stimulation-related: exacerbation of phonic tics and OCD, dysarthria, recurrence of severe depressive symptoms and self-injurious behaviors |
| Fabian et al. 2013 [ | GPe | 1 | 47 | 0 | 0 | 6 mo | Case report | 1.YGTSS 70.5% improvement | 1.Anxiety (HARS) 75%improvement 2.Depression (HDRS) 82.3% improvement 3.GAF score 36.4% improvement 4.MMSE scores 17.4% improvement | 1.Stimulation-related:battery depletion and loss of stimulation |
| Jens et al. 2008 [ | NAc/ALIC | 1 | 26 | 0 | 0 | 10 mo | Case report | 1.YGTSS 20% improvement at 4 weeks 50% improvement at 10 months | NR | 1.Stimulation-related: manic-like state (euphoric mood and elation, partially inappropriate behavior, overly familiar interaction patterns, restlessness, psychomotor agitation, and mild logorrhea) |
| Perminder Singh et al. 2012 [ | NAc | 1 | 32 | 0 | 0 | 8 mo | Case report | 1.YGTSS 57% improvement at 1 month 79% improvement at 7 months | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) 90% improvement at 1 month 68% improvement at 7 months | NR |
| Irene et al. 2009 [ | NAc/ALIC | 1 | 38 | 0 | 0 | 36 mo | Case report | 1.YGTSS 46% improvement at 3 months 44% improvement at 36 months 2.MRVRS 60% improvement at 3 months 58% improvement at 36 months | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) 53% improvement at 3 months 56% improvement at 36 months | NR |
| Irene et al. 2010 [ | NAc/ALIC | 1 | 42 | 0 | 0 | 36 mo | Case report | 1.YGTSS 44% improvement 2.MRVRS 58% improvement | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) 56% improvement | NR |
| Adam et al. 2010 [ | NAc/ALIC | 1 | 22 | 0 | 0 | 30 mo | Case report | 1.YGTSS 15% worsen | OCD (Y-BOCS) no significant improvement | NR |
| Clemens et al. 2017 [ | Field H1 of Forel | 2 | 19–31 | 0 | 1 | 6–18 mo | Case series | 1.YGTSS patient 1: 91.1% improvement tic severity 82.1% improvement impairment 100% improvement patient 2: 62.7% improvement tic severity 36.4% improvement impairment 83.3% improvement | 1.Depression (BDI) patient 1100% improvement patient 2 89.7% improvement 2. Anxiety (STAI) State anxiety (STAI-X1) patient 1 63.9% improvement patient 2 38.3% improvement Trait anxiety (STAI-X2) patient 1 63.8% improvement patient 2 38.8% improvement 3.OCD (Y-BOCS) patient 1 93.8% improvement patient 2 slightly reduction 4.MSQoL patient 1 53.1% improvement patient 2 43.1% improvement 5.GAF change from serious to minimal impairment | 1.Stimulation-related: patient 2: worsening of tics |
| Irene et al. 2009 [ | STN | 1 | 38 | 0 | 0 | 12 mo | Case report | 1.Tics frequency 89% improvement at 6 mo 97% improvement at 1 year | NR | NR |
| Domenico et al. 2016 [ | CM-Pf-Voi, NA-ALIC, amGPi, pvGPi | 37 | 17–57 | 1 | 8 | 8–32 mo | Retrospective review | 1.YGTSS all patients: 42.0 reduction CM-Pf-Voi( | 1.Y-BOCS> 16 and BDI < 19(n = 7) OCD (Y-BOCS): improvement(n = 6) or slight worsening(n = 1) 2.Y-BOCS< 16 and BDI > 19(n = 6) Depression (BDI): improvement(n = 5) or exacerbation(n = 1) 3.Y-BOCS> 16 and BDI > 19:( | 1.Device-related: inflammatory reaction to the DBS system, infection, wall hematoma in the IPG pouch, skin erosion |
| B.Kakusa et al. 2019 [ | CM-Pf complex+ VC/VS | 1 | 20 | 0 | 1 | 12 mo | Case report | 1.YGTSS 84% improvement | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) 70% improvement 2.Depression (HDRS-D17) 95% improvement | 1.Stimulation-related: sensory disturbances and dizziness |
| Raphaëlle et al. 2018 [ | 1st: pvl GPi 2nd: ventral anterior and ventrolateral motor regions of the thalamus 3rd: radiosurgery: ventral portions of the ALIC | 1 | 47 | 0 | 0 | 6 yrs | Case report | 1.YGTSS 1st: no change 2nd: 69% improvement | 1.OCD(Y-BOCS) 1st: 40% improvement 2nd: 40% improvement 3rd: 70% improvement 2.QIDS-SR 16 2nd to 3rd: 21 to 9 3.GAF 2nd to 3rd: 22 to 87 | 1.Stimulation-related: weight gain |
| Zhang et al. 2019 [ | GPi and anterior capsulotomy | 10 | 19–43 | 0 | 6 | 24–96 mo | Retrospective review | 1.YGTSS 77% improvement motor scores 75% improvement vocal scores 78% improvement 2.CGI-SI score 71% improvement | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) 87% improvement 2.Depression (HAMD-24) 93% improvement 3.Anxiety (HAMA) 94% improvement 4.ADHD (ADHD-RS-IV) 28% improvement 5.GAF score 134% improvement 6.GTS-QQL 92% improvement | 1.Stimulation-related: fatigue, laziness, confusion, disorientation; an episode of inarticulate speech and transient epileptic seizure 2.Device-related: extension wire–related infection |
| Zhang et al. 2019 [ | pv GPi and capsulotomy | 1 | 20 | 0 | 1 | 3 mo | Case report | 1.YGTSS 53% improvement tics 45% improvement impairment 60% improvement | 1.OCD (Y-BOCS) 42% improvement 2.Anxiety (BAI) 20% improvement 3.Depression (BDI-II) 62.5% improvement | NR |
| Anouk Y. J. M et al. 2018 [ | anterior GPi | 2 | 19 | 0 | 2 | 2 yrs | Case series | 1.YGTSS patient 1: 53% improvement at 2 years motor scores 43% improvement vocal scores 60% improvement patient 2: 69% improvement at 1 year motor scores 65% improvement vocal scores 78% improvement | NR | 1.Stimulation-related: patient 1: hyperkinesia, dyskinesia in the legs and a dejected mood patient 2: increased agitation, an increase in tic frequency and severity |
| Rene et al. 2018 [ | CM-Pf | 1 | 27 | 0 | 0 | 12 mo | Case report | 1.YGTSS scheduled stimulation 33% improvement responsive stimulation 48% improvement 2.MRTRS scheduled stimulation 53% improvement responsive stimulation 64% improvement | NR | NR |
Abbreviations: ADHD attention deficit hyperactivity disorder; amGPi, anteromedial or limbic, GPi ALIC anterior limb of internal capsule, BAI Beck Anxiety Inventory, BDI Beck Depression Inventory, CAARS Conner’s Adult ADHD Rating Scale, CM-Pf-Voi centromedian-parafascicular-ventro-oral internus complex, CGI-SI Clinical Global Impression–Severity of Illness scale score, DAPP-BQ Dimensional Assessment of Personality Pathology–Basic Questionnaire, FIQ Full scale Intelligence Quotient score, GAF Global Assessment of Functioning Scale, GTS-QOL Gilles de la Tourette Syndrome-Quality of Life, HARS Hamilton Anxiety Rating Scale, HDRS Hamilton Depression Scale, MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination, mo month, MRVRS Modified Rush Video-Based Rating Scale, NAc nucleus accumbens, NR not reported, OCD Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder, plGP/pvGPi/pvlGPi, posterolateral/posteroventral/posteroventrolateral, GPi, QIDS-SR16 Quick Inventory Depression Scale – Self Report 16, SCL90 Symptoms Checklist List 90, STAI State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, STN subthalamus nucleus, VC/VS ventral capsule/ventral striatum, Y-BOCS Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale, YGTSS Yale Global Tic Severity Scale, yr year
Fig. 1Quantitative susceptibility map of targets proposed for DBS in Tourette’s syndrome
Abbreviations: ALIC, anterior limb of internal capsule; amGPi, anteromedial or limbic GPi; CM-Pf, centromedian-parafascicular complex; GPe, Globus Pallidus externus; NAc, Nucleus Accumbens; pvGPi, posteroventral GPi.