Anorexia Nervosa Clinical Trial
Official title:
Deep Brain Stimulation for the Treatment of Refractory Anorexia Nervosa
Anorexia Nervosa (AN) is a challenging, chronic, refractory illness with the highest mortality rate of any psychiatric condition. Advances in the neuroimaging, genetics and neurobiology of AN has led to a greater understanding of its underlying pathophysiology, although few significant advances in treatment have been made in the last half-century. The central features of AN, which include an intense fear of gaining weight, a refusal to maintain a normal weight, as well as significant anxiety, anhedonia and dysphoria surrounding food, have been linked to dysfunction in key brain structures and circuits. Deep Brain Stimulation (DBS) is a neurosurgical procedure that involves the insertion of electrodes into structures believed to drive pathological behavior. The procedure is approved for the management of movement disorders, such as Parkinson's Disease, and has shown promising early results in the management of some psychiatric conditions, such as Major Depression. The purpose of this study is to explore the safety and initial efficacy of DBS, in patients with treatment resistant AN.
Anorexia nervosa is a chronic, and debilitating psychiatric disorder associated with the
highest mortality rate of any psychiatric condition. Despite advances in neuroimaging,
genetics, pharmacology and psychosocial interventions in the last half century, little
progress have been made in altering the natural history of the condition or its outcomes. It
has further become increasingly accepted that the thoughts and behaviors at the root of AN
derive from dysfunctional neuroanatomic circuits, whose activity and deviations can be
detected with sophisticated neuroimaging techniques. Much progress has also been made in
mapping the psychology of the illness to underlying neuroanatomic and neurophysiologic
processes that drive and maintain these behaviors, even in the face of severe starvation and
impending death. Dysfunctional reward processing, compulsive hyperactivity, chronic anxiety
and depression, all suggest that AN shares much in common with other conditions, such as OCD,
for which surgical therapy has been tried, and met with success.
Deep Brain Stimulation is a neurosurgical tool that has been widely used for over twenty
years. Most of the experience with DBS comes from the movement disorder literature where
significant success has been had with the management of disabling Parkinson's disease (PD)
and dystonia. The most experience so far has been in Parkinson's disease where well over
50,000 patients globally have received the operation. DBS is believed to work by using small
amounts of electricity to disrupt the activity of brain structures that produce troublesome
symptoms. DBS has also been used in psychiatric patients, both as part of treatment and
research, in cases of Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD), and research, in cases of
Depression. Current research suggests that there are similarities between Anorexia Nervosa
and conditions such as OCD and depression. Given that DBS has shown promise in the treatment
of those conditions, this trial was designed to see if it could be an effective therapy for
Anorexia Nervosa as well.
This study would be the first exploration of a surgical therapy for refractory AN. The
rationale stems from clear and robust evidence pointing at a dysfunctional
cortical-subcortical loop driving abnormal behavior, with several important nodes in the loop
being particularly important, and recurring, players. The subgenual cingulate plays a role in
affective decision making, reward processing, as well as subsequent anxiety and dysphoric
mood.
There are currently no brain based, targeted therapies for AN. The scientific significance of
this study will be:
i) The first clinical trial exploring deep brain stimulation in an eating disorder population
ii) The first demonstration of the influence of deep brain stimulation on dysfunctional
reward processing with co-morbid anxiety/dysphoria
iii) The first 'brain-based' treatment for any eating disorder
;
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