Exploring the ElectroRetinoGraphy as a biomarker for predicting and monitoring therapeutic response to antidepressants in major depressive disorder: study protocol for the MESANTIDEP trial
Marie de Deus, Charlotte Petit, Marie Moulard, Eve Cosker, Naoual Mellouki Bendimred, Éliane Albuisson, Julia Maruani, Pierre-Alexis Geoffroy, Thomas Schwitzer

TL;DR
This study explores using electroretinography (ERG) as a tool to predict and monitor how well antidepressants work in treating major depressive disorder.
Contribution
The study introduces ERG as a potential biomarker for predicting antidepressant response in MDD patients.
Findings
ERG biomarkers may predict therapeutic response to SSRIs and α2-antagonists in MDD patients.
ERG measurements could be used to monitor treatment progress at 6 and 12 weeks.
ERG is a non-invasive and accessible method for clinical use.
Abstract
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a frequent and highly debilitating condition for which current antidepressant treatments show limited effectiveness. In addition, their implementation requires one or more trial-and-error processes, which involves months of untreated illness. Achieving faster efficacy by identifying the most adapted treatment for each patient as the first line treatment could significantly reduce MDD-related morbidity and mortality while enhancing patients’ quality of life. To achieve this goal, there is a need to identify markers for predicting and monitoring therapeutic response to antidepressants. The MESANTIDEP study is designed to identify electroretinographic (ERG) biomarkers that can predict the therapeutic response at 12 weeks to the two main classes of antidepressants prescribed as first-line treatments for MDD: Selective Serotonin Reuptake Inhibitors (SSRIs)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTreatment of Major Depression · Mental Health Research Topics · Functional Brain Connectivity Studies
