| Literature DB >> 35083968 |
C F Meechan1, K R Laws2, A H Young3, D M McLoughlin4, S Jauhar3.
Abstract
There has been recent debate regarding the efficacy of electroconvulsive therapy in the treatment of depression. This has been based on narrative reviews that contradict existing systematic reviews and meta-analyses. In this special article, we highlight the mistakes that occur when interpreting evidence using narrative reviews, as opposed to conventional systematic reviews and meta-analyses.Entities:
Keywords: Electroconvulsive therapy; depression; evidence-based medicine; meta-analysis
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35083968 PMCID: PMC8851059 DOI: 10.1017/S2045796021000731
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Epidemiol Psychiatr Sci ISSN: 2045-7960 Impact factor: 6.892
Original ECT v. sECT trials identified by Read and Bentall (2010)
| Study (Year) | Relevant treatment arms | Primary outcome | Included by | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Brill | ECT ( | One month after the end of treatment (20 treatments) ECT non-significant percentage improvement 16/21 | Experimental study designed to investigate the extent to which the following contributed to the therapeutic effectiveness of treatment with ECT: (1) passing an electrical current through the brain; (2) rapidly induced loss of consciousness; and (3) motor convulsion | |
| Harris and Robin ( | ECT ( | After 2 weeks (4 treatments), 2/4 ECT patients met the outcome of ‘great improvement’ compared with 0/4 in sECT group | Open trial designed to assess effectiveness of phenelzine for depression. Contained arms including ECT + placebo (ECT) and anaesthesia + placebo (sECT) | |
| Wilson | ECT ( | ECT more effective than sECT using HDRS | Designed to compare ECT, imipramine, ECT + imipramine and sECT, with two of the four arms providing relevant data | |
| Fahy | ECT ( | After 3 weeks (6 treatments) 6/17 ECT | Designed to compare ECT with imipramine, not sECT, but did contain an arm giving thiopentone providing relevant data | |
| Freeman | Bilateral ECT ( | After 1 week (2 treatments) ECT significant improvement in HDRS | After 1 week sECT arm switched to ECT as it was felt unethical to continue sECT | |
| Lambourn and Gill ( | Unilateral ECT ( | After 2 weeks (6 treatments) Wilcoxon test (1-tailed) no difference in HDRS (mean rank 23.12, | Double-blind RCT comparing unilateral ECT with sECT. Utilising unilateral rather than bilateral mode of ECT may have led to under-dosing in the treatment arm | |
| Johnstone | Bilateral ECT ( | After 4 weeks (8 treatments), ECT significantly more effective than sECT using HDRS ( | Double-blind RCT comparing bilateral ECT with sECT | |
| West ( | Bilateral ECT ( | After 3 weeks (6 treatments) ECT significantly more effective than sECT across all three outcomes; psychiatrists' visual analogue rating scale, nurses' 9-point rating scale and BDI | Double-blind RCT comparing bilateral ECT with sECT | |
| Brandon | Bilateral ECT ( | After 4 weeks (8 treatments) ECT showed a significant improvement over sECT on HDRS in the ‘combined depression’ group | Double-blind RCT comparing bilateral ECT with sECT | |
| Gregory | Unilateral ECT ( | After 3 weeks (6 treatments) unilateral and bilateral ECT significantly more effective than sECT on MADRS, HDRS and PIRS | Double-blind RCT comparing bilateral ECT, unilateral ECT and sECT |
BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; HDRS, Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; MADRS, Montgomery Åsberg Depression Rating Scale; MPRS, Malamud Psychiatric Rating Scale; PIRS, Psychological Impairments Rating Scale; CI, confidence interval; SES, standardised effect size.
Pagnin, Pagnin et al. (2004); R & B, Read and Bentall (2010); UKECTRG, UK ECT Review Group (2003).
Meta-analyses of ECT v. sECT studies
| ECT | Number of studies | Number of participants | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|
| Janicak | 6 | 205 | ECT significantly superior to sECT ( |
| Kho | 2 | 106 | ECT significantly superior compared with sECT. Mean effect size 0.95 (0.35–1.54) |
| UK ECT Review Group ( | 6 | 256 | ECT significantly more effective than sECT. Standardised effect size −0.91 (95% CI −1.27 to −0.54) |
| Pagnin | 7 | 245 | ECT significantly more effective than sECT (association |
| Gabor and Laszlo ( | 9 | 321 | ECT significantly superior to sECT ( |
| Greenhalgh | 1 | 70 | ECT significantly more effective than sECT (RR = 1.98, 95% CI 1.05 to 3.73, |
Fig. 1.Meta-analysis of ECT vs sECT trials for depression, included in Read and Bentall (2010).