Brain magnetic resonance imaging outperforms clinical severity ratings in the prediction of treatment outcomes in major depressive disorder
F. Long, Y. Chen, Q. Zhang, Y. Wang, Y. Wang, Q. Li, Y. Zhao, F. Li

TL;DR
Brain MRI is more accurate than clinical ratings in predicting treatment outcomes for major depressive disorder.
Contribution
MRI features outperform clinical severity ratings in predicting MDD treatment outcomes, with resting-state fMRI showing the highest specificity.
Findings
MRI studies showed higher sensitivity (0.89) compared to clinical features (0.61) in predicting treatment outcomes.
Resting-state fMRI had higher specificity than task-based fMRI in predicting treatment outcomes.
Antidepressant and ECT studies identified overlapping but distinct brain networks for predicting outcomes.
Abstract
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a prevalent and disabling condition. Approximately 30-50% of patients do not respond to first-line medication or psychotherapy. Therefore, several studies have investigated the predictive potential of pretreatment severity rating or neuroimaging features to guide clinical approaches that can speed optimal treatment selection. To evaluate the performance of 1) severity ratings (scores of Hamilton Depression/Anxiety Scale, illness duration, and sleep quality, etc.) and demographic characteristic and 2) brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features in predicting treatment outcomes for MDD. Second, to assess performance variations among varied modalities and interventions in MRI studies. We searched studies in PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, and Science Direct databases before March 22, 2023. We extracted a confusion matrix for prediction in each…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Treatment of Major Depression
