Towards a Network Control Theory of Electroconvulsive Therapy Response
Tim Hahn, Hamidreza Jamalabadi, Erfan Nozari, Nils R. Winter, Jan, Ernsting, Marius Gruber, Marco J. Mauritz, Pascal Grumbach, Lukas Fisch,, Ramona Leenings, Kelvin Sarink, Julian Blanke, Leon Kleine Vennekate, Daniel, Emden, Nils Opel, Dominik Grotegerd, Verena Enneking

TL;DR
This paper introduces a control-theoretic framework based on Network Control Theory to predict individual responses to Electroconvulsive Therapy using brain network data, providing a mechanistic understanding of treatment variability.
Contribution
It develops and empirically tests a novel NCT-based model that predicts ECT response from structural brain networks, linking controllability metrics with treatment outcomes.
Findings
Controllability metrics predict ECT response effectively.
Mediation effects of PSI support the mechanistic model.
Model performs comparably to machine learning approaches.
Abstract
Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) is arguably the most effective intervention for treatment-resistant depression. While large interindividual variability exists, a theory capable of predicting individual response to ECT remains elusive. To address this, we posit a quantitative, mechanistic framework of ECT response based on Network Control Theory (NCT). Then, we empirically test our approach and employ it to predict ECT treatment response. To this end, we derive a formal association between Postictal Suppression Index (PSI) - an ECT seizure quality index - and whole-brain modal and average controllability, NCT metrics based on white matter brain network architecture, respectively. Exploiting the known association of ECT response and PSI, we then hypothesized an association between our controllability metrics and ECT response mediated by PSI. We formally tested this conjecture in N=50…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Electroconvulsive Therapy Studies · Mental Health Research Topics
