| Literature DB >> 32717984 |
Philibert Duriez1,2, Rami Bou Khalil3,4, Yara Chamoun3, Redwan Maatoug5, Robertas Strumila6, Maude Seneque4,7, Philip Gorwood1,2, Philippe Courtet4,7, Sébastien Guillaume4,7.
Abstract
The management of eating disorders (EDs) is still difficult and few treatments are effective. Recently, several studies have described the important contribution of non-invasive brain stimulation (repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation, transcranial direct current stimulation, and electroconvulsive therapy) and invasive brain stimulation (deep brain stimulation and vagal nerve stimulation) for ED management. This review summarizes the available evidence supporting the use of brain stimulation in ED. All published studies on brain stimulation in ED as well as ongoing trials registered at clinicaltrials.gov were examined. Articles on neuromodulation research and perspective articles were also included. This analysis indicates that brain stimulation in EDs is still in its infancy. Literature data consist mainly of case reports, cases series, open studies, and only a few randomized controlled trials. Consequently, the evidence supporting the use of brain stimulation in EDs remains weak. Finally, this review discusses future directions in this research domain (e.g., sites of modulation, how to enhance neuromodulation efficacy, personalized protocols).Entities:
Keywords: anorexia; binge eating disorders; bulimia; deep brain stimulation; rTMS; treatment
Year: 2020 PMID: 32717984 PMCID: PMC7465000 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9082358
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) in eating disorders.
| Reference | Type of Study | Participants | Modulation Target | Treatment Characteristics | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anorexia Nervosa | |||||
| Kamolz et al., 2008 [ | Case report | 24-year-old female with AN | Left DLPFC | 41 sessions | Full remission |
| Van den Eynde et al., 2013 [ | Case series (pilot study) | 10 patients with AN | Left DLPFC | 1 session, | Reduced levels of feeling full, feeling fat, and feeling anxious |
| McClelland et al., 2013 [ | Case report | 23-year-old and 52-year-old women with AN 1 | Left DLPFC | 20 and 19 sessions | Significant improvement |
| McClelland et al., 2016 [ | Case series | 5 women with AN 1 | Left DLPFC | ~20 sessions, | Significant improvement of ED and affective symptoms after 6 months, but positive results waned at 12 months follow-up |
| McClelland et al., 2016 [ | RCT | 49 patients with AN 1 | Left DLPFC | 1 session | No significant effect on core symptoms of ED compared to sham rTMS, but improvement in individuals who received real rTMS when compared before and after the session and the results persisted at 24 h of follow-up |
| Choudhary et al., 2017 [ | Case report | 23-year-old female with AN | Left DLPFC | 21 sessions | Significant improvement |
| Jaššová et al., 2018 [ | Case report | 25-year-old female with AN | Left DLPFC | 10 sessions, 10 Hz, 15 trains/day, 100 pulses/train, intertrain interval 107 s | No improvement of ED, anxiety, or depression |
| Woodside et al., 2017 [ | Case series | Fourteen subjects with eating disorders (6 AN, 5 BN, and 3 ednos) and comorbid PTSD | DMPFC | 20–30 sessions | Improvement in emotional regulation and PTSD symptoms |
| Dalton et al., 2018 [ | RCT | 30 patients (16 real, 14 sham) with AN 2 | Left DLPF | 20 sessions, | Between-group effect sizes of change scores (baseline to follow-up) were small for BMI (d = 0.2, 95% CI −0.49 to 0.90) and eating disorder symptoms (d = 0.1, 95% CI −0.60 to 0.79), medium for quality of life and moderate to large (d = 0.61 to 1.0) for mood outcomes, all favoring rTMS over sham |
| Knyahnytska et al., 2019 [ | Case series (pilot study) | 8 women with AN | Insula | 42 sessions, H-coil dTMS 18 Hz, 2 s on, 20 s off, number of pulses 36, number of trains 80, over 20 min | Reduction in AN-related obsessions and compulsions, as well as depression and anxiety scores |
| Dalton et al., 2020 [ | RCT | 34 anorexic female patients (17 real, 17 sham) vs. 30 healthy controls 2 | Left DLPFC | 20 sessions | No significant effect of rTMS nor time on food choices related to fat content. Among AN participants who received real rTMS, there was a decrease in self-controlled food choices at post-treatment |
| Bulimic Disorders (Bulimia and/or Binge Eating Disorders) | |||||
| Hausmann et al., 2004 [ | Case report | One woman with BN and depression | Left DLPFC | 10 sessions, 20 × 5 s trains/55 s inter-train interval, 10 Hz, intensity of 110% MT | Significant improvement in BN symptoms |
| Walpoth et al., 2008 [ | RCT | 14 females with BN | Left DLPFC | 15 sessions, 10 × 10 s trains/60 s inter-train interval at 20 Hz, = 2000 pulses; 120% MT | No difference between real and sham group |
| Van den Eynde et al., 2010 [ | RCT | 38 females with BN 3 | Left DLPFC | 1 session, 20 × 5 s trains/55 s inter-train interval, 10 Hz, intensity of 110% MT, 1000 pulses over 20 min | Real rTMS associated with a decrease in self-reported urge to eat and binge eating |
| Van den Eynde et al., 2011 [ | RCT | 33 females with BN 3 | Left DLPFC | 1 session, 20 × 5 s trains/55 s inter-train interval, 10 Hz, intensity of 110% MT, 1000 pulses over 20 min | No differences between the real and sham groups on stroop task |
| Van den Eynde et al., 2011 [ | RCT | 38 females with BN 3 | Left DLPFC | 1 session, 20 × 5 s trains/55 s inter-train interval, 10 Hz, intensity of 110% MT, 1000 pulses over 20 min | TMS did not alter blood pressure or heart rate |
| Claudino et al., 2011 [ | RCT | 22 patients (11 real, 11 sham) with BN 3 | Left DLPFC | 1 session, 20 × 5 s trains/55 s inter-train interval, 10 Hz, intensity of 110% MT, 1000 pulses over 20 min | Decreased salivary cortisol concentrations compared with sham rTMS |
| Van den Eynde et al., 2012 [ | Case series | 7 left-handed females with BN | Left DLPFCM | 1 session, 20 × 5 s trains/55 s inter-train interval, 10 Hz, intensity of 110% MT, 1000 pulses over 20 min | Different effects in left- and right-handed people |
| Downar et al., 2012 [ | Case report | One woman with severe refractory BN and depression | DMPFC | 2 × 20 sessions 60 trains of 10 Hz stimulation at 120% of resting motor threshold in 5 s trains with a 10-s inter-train interval | Significant improvement in BN symptoms |
| Baczynski et al., 2014 [ | Case report | One woman with BED and comorbid depression | Left DLPFC | 20 sessions 20 × 4 s trains/26 s inter-train interval, 10 Hz, intensity of 110% MT | Improvement in binge eating scale |
| Dunlop, 2015 [ | Case series | 28 subjects with anorexia nervosa, binge-purge subtype or bulimia nervosa | DMPFC | 20–30 sessions | Enhanced frontostriatal connectivity was associated with responders to DMPFC-rTMS for binge/purge behavior |
| Sutoh et al., 2016 [ | Case series (pilot study) | 8 women | Left DLPFC | 1 session, 15 × 5 s trains/55 s inter-train interval, 10 Hz, intensity of 110% MT, 1000 pulses over 20 min within each session | Significant reduction of food craving and decrease in cerebral oxygenation of the left DLPFC |
| Gay et al., 2016 [ | RCT | 47 women (23 real, 24 sham) with BN 4 | Left DLPFC | 10 sessions, 20 × 5 s trains/55 s inter-train interval, 10 Hz intensity of 110% MT, 1000 pulses over 20 min within each session | No significant improvement of bingeing or purging |
| Guillaume et al., 2018 [ | RCT | 39 patients (22 real, 17 sham) with BN 4 | Left DLPFC | 10 sessions, 20 × 5 s trains/55 s inter-train interval, 10 Hz, intensity of 110% MT | Improvement of inhibitory control and decision-making |
Note: All studies are cited in bibliography, because when a recent systematic review was available, it was included and prioritized in the synthesis of results. 1,2,3,4: Partial or total overlap on sample.
Transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) and eating disorders.
| Reference | Type of Study | Participants | Modulation Target | Treatment Characteristics | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Khedr et al., 2014 [ | Open-label, single arm study (pilot study) | 7 patients with AN | Left DLPFC | 10 sessions | Immediate improvement in 3 patients after the sessions on eating and depressive symptoms, with one patient maintaining the response at 1 month |
| Burgess et al., 2016 [ | RCT (proof-of-concept study) | 30 participants with BED | Right DLPFC | 1 session, 2 mA, 20 min | Decreased craving for sweets, savory proteins, and an all-foods category, with strongest reductions in men |
| Kekic et al., 2017 [ | RCT | 39 patients (2 male) with BN | Right and left DLPFC (3 montages: AR/CL; AL/CR; sham) | 1 session | Reduction in ED cognitions with AR/CL tDCS |
| Sreeraj et al., 2018 [ | Case report | 37 year old female with schizophrenia and binge-eating | Right DLPFC | 10 sessions, 2 mA, 30 min | Improvement in subjective reporting on cognitive restraint and control over eating as well as feeling of satiation and ability to eat after exposure to cues |
| Strumila et al., 2019 [ | Open-label study | 10 females with AN | Anode over left DLPFC and cathode over right DLPFC | 20 sessions of anodal 2 mA stimulation during a period of two weeks | Improvement of anorexic and depressive symptoms |
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) and eating disorders.
| Reference | Type of Study | Participants | Modulation Target | Treatment Characteristics | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anorexia Nervosa | |||||
| Davis et al., 1961 [ | Case report | 12-year-old girl with AN-R | - | 12 sessions (bilateral) | Weight gain and discharge |
| Bernstein et al., 1964 [ | Case report | 20-year-old female with AN-R and personality disorder | - | 21 sessions followed by maintenance ECT | Weight gain and mood improvement |
| Bernstein et al., 1972 [ | Case report | 94-year-old female with AN-R and psychotic disorder | - | 5 sessions | Short term weight gain |
| Ferguson et al., 1993 [ | Case series | 3 patients with AN and MDD | - | 11, 8 and 16 sessions (bilateral) | Transient improvement on weight and symptomatology for 2/3 patients |
| Bek et al., 1996 [ | Case series | 8 females with AN, one had psychosis and five had personality disorders | - | 11 sessions | Modest weight gain |
| Hill et al., 2001 [ | Case report | 77-year-old female with AN-R and MDD | - | 9 sessions | Modest weight gain and mood improvement |
| Poutanen et al., 2009 [ | Case report | 21-year-old female with AN-B/P and MDD | - | 45 sessions in three courses (bilateral) | Modest thymic and eating amelioration. Cognitive impairment. |
| Andrews et al., 2014 [ | Case report | 17-year-old with AN-B/P, MDD, and NSSI | - | 10 unilateral and 21 bilateral sessions/13 weeks | Mood improvement |
| Andersen et al., 2017 [ | Case report | 14-year-old girl with AN-R, MDD, and GAD | - | 22 sessions (bilateral) | Weight gain |
| Saglam et al., 2018 [ | Case report | 24-year-old male with AN-B/P, OCD, and MDD | - | 12 sessions (bitemporal) | Weight restoration and OCD improvement, stopped diuretic and laxative abuse. |
| Pacillio et al., 2019 [ | Case report | 30-year-old female patient with AN and MDD | - | 11 sessions (unilateral) | Modest increase of eating disorder, mood improvement |
| Naguy et al., 2019 [ | Case report | 16-year-old female with AN and personality disorder | - | 6 sessions (bitemporal) | Weight gain and improvement in eating behavior |
| Duriez et al., 2020 [ | Case report | 19-year-old female with AN | - | 10 sessions | No improvement of AN symptoms |
| Shilton et al., 2020 [ | Case series | 30 female adolescents with AN and MDD | - | - | Mood improvement, treatment well tolerated, no specific improvement for eating disorder symptoms |
| Bulimic Disorders (Bulimia and/or Binge Eating Disorders) | |||||
| Rapinesi et al., 2013 [ | Case report | 41-year-old male with BED and bipolar disorder. Personal history of AN | - | 8 sessions (bitemporal) | Important weight loss and decrease of psychotic symptoms |
AN: anorexia nervosa; AN-R: anorexia nervosa restricting subtype; AN-B/P: anorexia nervosa binge/purge subtype; BED: binge eating disorder; OCD: obsessive-compulsive disorder; MDD: major depressive disorder; NSSI: non-suicidal self-injury.
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) in eating disorders.
| Reference | Type of Study | Participants | Modulation Target | Treatment Characteristics * | Main Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Anorexia Nervosa | |||||
| Israël et al., 2010 [ | Case report | 56-year-old female with AN and | SCC (bilateral) | Intermittent stimulation | Maintenance of normal BMI (average 19.1 kg/m2) at 3 years, normal scores in restraint and weight and shape concerns |
| Barbier et al., 2011 [ | Case report | 39-year-old female with AN and severe OCD | ALIC and BNST | Unknown | Full recovery of AN and strong improvement of OCD |
| McLaughlin et al., 2012 [ | Case report | 52-year-old female with refractory OCD and AN | Ventral capsule and ventral striatum (bilateral) | Left unilateral, monopolar | Significant weight improvement, reduction in AN-related obsession and patient can go out to eat |
| Wu et al., 2013 and Sun et al., 2012 [ | Case series | 4 females with AN | NAcc (bilateral) | Unknown | Full remission of AN, restoration of menstrual cycle and return to school for 3 patients |
| Wang et al., 2013 [ | Case series | 2 females with AN, depression, and OCD | NAcc (bilateral) | 2.5–3.8 V/120–210 µs/135–185 Hz | Significant weight gain and affective improvement |
| Lipsman et al., 2013 [ | Open label clinical trial | 6 females with AN, | SCC (bilateral) | 5–7 V/90 µs/130 Hz | Weight gain in 3 patients, changes in brain metabolism |
| Hayes et al., 2015 [ | Ancillary Study | 8 females with AN, | SCC (bilateral) | Unknown | Weight loss in 3 patients, weight gain in 5 patients |
| Lipsman et al., 2017 [ | Open label clinical trial | 16 females with AN, 14 with psychiatric comorbidities (MDD, OCD, SUD, PTSD, GAD, BPD) 2 | SCC (bilateral) | 5–6.5 V/90 µs/130 Hz | Significant weight gain for 8 patients |
| Blomstedt et al., 2017 [ | Case report | 60-year-old female with AN and depression | MFB | Bipolar MFB stimulation 3 V/60 µs/130 Hz | Improvement of affective symptoms |
| Manuelli et al., 2019 [ | Case report | 37-year-old female with AN-BP | BNST (bilateral) | 4 V/60 µs/130 Hz | Full weight restoration after 4 months |
| Wei Liu et al., 2020 [ | Open label clinical trial | 29 females with AN, | NAcc (bilateral) | 2.5–4 V/120–150 µs/160–180 Hz | 12 patients obtained full weight restoration and 5 significant weight increase after 2 years of follow up |
| Martinez et al., 2020 [ | Open label clinical trial 3 | 7 female and 1 male with AN, | SCC (bilateral) or NAcc (bilateral) | 7–8 mA/90 µs/130 Hz | No weight gain. Subjective improvement of quality of life |
| Bulimic Disorders (Bulimia and/or Binge Eating Disorders) | |||||
| Whiting et al., 2013 [ | Case series | 3 patients with BED | LHA (bilateral) | Monopolar | 1/3 significantly improvement in binge eating |
| Tronnier et al., 2018 [ | Case report | 47-year-old female with BED and severe depression | NAcc (bilateral) | Bipolar | Weight loss (2.8 kg/month), |
AN: anorexia nervosa; AN-R: anorexia nervosa restricting subtype; AN-BP: anorexia nervosa binge/purge subtype; BED: binge eating disorder; OCD: obsessive-compulsive disorder; MDD: major depressive disorder; GAD: generalized anxiety disorder; SUD: substance use disorder; PTSD: post traumatic stress disorder; BMI: body mass index; BNST: bed nucleus of the stria terminalis; SCC: subgenual cingulate cortex; NAcc: nucleus accumbens; MFB: medial forebrain bundle; ALIC: anterior limb of internal capsule; LHA: lateral hypothalamus; PET: positron emission tomography. * We retained the main stimulation parameter after adjustments: amplitude/pulse width/frequency. 1,2: Partial overlap on sample; 3: in a second phase, patients will be included in a randomized trial with two arms (ON/OFF or OFF/ON).
Figure 1Overview of main neuromodulation targets in eating disorders. Schematic coronal section of right brain and front view of left brain. DBS: deep brain stimulation; rTMS: repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; tDCS: transcranial direct current stimulation; OCD: obsessive-compulsive disorder.