Clinical implications of admission anemia for electroconvulsive therapy planning in adolescent major depressive disorder: identifying vulnerable subgroups with poorer response
Dandan Geng, Heyan Xu, Jijia Gou, Yuna Wang, Yujia Chen, Su Hong, Li Kuang

TL;DR
Low hemoglobin levels at admission predict worse ECT outcomes in adolescents with major depression, especially in females and those with psychotic depression.
Contribution
Identifies admission anemia as a novel predictor of poor ECT response in adolescent MDD patients.
Findings
Non-responders had significantly lower baseline hemoglobin levels than responders.
Anemia at admission was linked to lower ECT response probability in adjusted models.
Females and patients with psychotic depression were more affected by admission anemia.
Abstract
Major depressive disorder (MDD) represents a grave worldwide concern, particularly afflicting the adolescent population. Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is widely regarded as a gold-standard intervention for severe forms of MDD, although treatment response varies considerably among individuals. Growing evidence suggests that hematological parameters may influence therapeutic outcomes. This study sought to examine the link between admission anemia and response to ECT treatment. We analyzed 381 adolescent MDD patients who underwent ECT, comparing demographic and hematological indicators between responders and non-responders. Subgroup analyses were conducted based on gender and depressive subtypes. Among the 381 patients treated with ECT, 272 (71.4%) were classified as responders. Non-responders showed significantly lower baseline hemoglobin levels compared to responders (mean ± SD:…
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Taxonomy
TopicsElectroconvulsive Therapy Studies · Treatment of Major Depression · Bipolar Disorder and Treatment
