The debilitating behaviours and all-consuming thoughts which affect people with severe obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) could be significantly improved with targeted deep brain stimulation, according to the findings of an MRC-funded study ran by University College London (UCL).
OCD is characterised by unwanted intrusive thoughts (obsessions) and repetitive stereotyped behaviours (compulsions – sometimes called rituals) and often means everyday activities become impossible for those with the condition. This repetitive and compulsive behaviour is commonly associated with either depressed mood or impairment in cognitive flexibility – an inability to flexibly adapt to changing situations.
Deep brain stimulation (DBS) is an emerging treatment for a small number of people with extremely severe OCD who have not responded to available treatment, such as cognitive behavioural therapy or medication. It requires neurosurgical implantation of electrodes.
In a study published today in Biological Psychiatry, six patients with treatment-refractory OCD were recruited from NHS England Highly Specialised OCD Services.
As part of the study, in a double-blind cross over trial, each patient received DBS stimulation to brain areas previously associated with OCD, the anteromedial subthalamic nucleus (amSTN) for three months and DBS stimulation to the ventral capsule/ventral striatal area (VC/VS) for three months, followed by DBS stimulation to both amSTN and VC/VS. The neurosurgery and clinical assessments were carried out at the Unit of Functional Neurosurgery and Hughlings Jackson Ward, The National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery, Queen Square, London (part of UCLH).
The study found that DBS at each site significantly and equivalently reduced OCD symptoms. However amSTN but not VC/VS DBS significantly improved cognitive flexibility, but VC/VS DBS had a greater positive effect on depressed mood.
Furthermore, MRI tractography (a form of brain imaging) from optimally activated electrode contacts showed that the two DBS sites affected different neural circuits within the brain. This finding provides clues as to the roles that those specific brain regions play in OCD, and has potentially important implications for treatment.
Lead author, Professor Eileen Joyce (UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology), said: “This is the first study to compare directly the effects of deep brain stimulation at two brain sites and has discovered important information about how the brain changes in severe OCD responsible for obsessions and compulsions, depressed mood and cognitive inflexibility might be alleviated. The finding that amSTN but not VC/VS DBS improved cognitive flexibility and that the effect of DBS on mood was significantly greater for VC/VS DBS, implicates the involvement of different neural circuitries associated with distinct symptoms in OCD. MRI tractography findings revealed that VC/VS and amSTN DBS modulate distinct brain networks implicated in OCD and are compatible with these clinical and cognitive observations.”
Cognitive flexibility was measured by the CANTAB IED test and undertaken by researchers at Cambridge University. Their previous studies have shown that impaired cognitive flexibility is a marker of OCD and improvement implies that patients can break out of maladaptive routines and habits and take on new and rewarding experiences.
All patients had been ill for at least 20 years and failed to respond to high doses of medication plus intensive CBT. Patients were recruited from NHS England Specialised OCD Services, at South West London St George’s Mental Health NHS and Hertfordshire NHS partnership. Additional patient expertise was provided by the Advanced Interventions Service at the University of Dundee and NHS Tayside.
One of the trial participants was first diagnosed at the age of 26 years with OCD but had symptoms since the age of seven. Prior to the trial, the participant had been ‘profoundly debilitated’ by OCD for 10 years and had been living continuously in psychiatric units for six years, receiving treatment from numerous specialist OCD services and specialists.
“I was getting worse and nothing was helping. I had no quality of life and the only tasks I attempted were the basics: I ate, drank, used the loo and slept. When I used the toilet I would be in the bathroom for up to 14 hours each time because of my OCD rituals,” the participant said.
“My overwhelming symptoms were feeling contaminated, obsessional slowness and mentally reviewing every single action.
“The reviewing affected all things I undertook and my slowness was so bad it would take me two to three hours to cross the bedroom and another hour to gets my legs in bed. I showered, changed my clothes and brushed my teeth only once a month as they were such arduous tasks.”
Following surgery, the study participant said:
“I didn’t feel anything for a few days but then I did. I felt inexplicably excited and happy with the great sense of looking forward to life. I recognised the feeling from 20 years before when I had been completely well.
“I found I could walk from room-to-room much more quickly and, miraculously, my need to review subsided and I was soon performing tasks much quicker and on my own. I started getting dressed again and went shopping in London, something I hadn’t done for 10 years.
“The surgery has transformed my life. I am living completely independently and doing volunteer work.”
The trial’s first patient was recruited in 2013 and the sixth and final patient finished the study in November 2016. The study was by funded by grants from the MRC and Wellcome Trust.