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Correspondence to:

BRIEF COMMUNICATIONS:
P. R. Burkhard, F. J.G. Vingerhoets, A. Berney, J. Bogousslavsky, J.-G. Villemure, and J. Ghika
Suicide after successful deep brain stimulation for movement disorders
Neurology 2004; 63: 2170-2172 [Abstract] [Full text] [PDF]
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[Read Correspondence] Suicide after successful deep brain stimulation for movement disorders
Alberto Albanese, Sylvie Piacentini, Luigi M.A. Romito, Massimo Leone, Angelo Franzini, Giovanni Broggi, Gennaro Bussone, MD   (15 March 2005)
[Read Correspondence] Reply to Albanese et al
Pierre R. Burkhard, Joseph Ghika, Alexandre Berney, Jean-Guy Villemure, François J.G. Vingerhoets   (15 March 2005)

Suicide after successful deep brain stimulation for movement disorders 15 March 2005
 Next Correspondence Top
Alberto Albanese,
Istituto Nazionale Neurologico Carlo Besta
Via Celoria 11 - 20133 Milano (Italy),
Sylvie Piacentini, Luigi M.A. Romito, Massimo Leone, Angelo Franzini, Giovanni Broggi, Gennaro Bussone, MD

Send Correspondence to journal:
Re: Suicide after successful deep brain stimulation for movement disorders

alberto.albanese{at}unicatt.it Alberto Albanese, et al.

Burkhard et al [1] report a high rate of suicide in patients who received deep brain stimulation (DBS) implants in four different targets for three different indications. The conclusion that patients treated with DBS have an increased risk of suicide appeared inadequately supported by the evidence provided and prompted us to review our own series collected at the Besta Institute (Table). Our data showed that there was not a non-specific increase in the risk of suicide following DBS implants and suggest instead that psychiatric unwanted reactions occur following subthalamic nucleus, but not posterior hypothalamus implants.

Only four of Burkhard’s patients had Parkinson disease (PD), and three of them had early-onset PD that was genetically determined in most instances. Early-onset PD has a strong impact on quality of life and a high incidence of depression (and possibly of suicides). Indeed, the early-onset PD patients of the Swiss series had depression and other signs of psychosis. Considering only PD patients included in the heterogeneous Swiss series, the rate of suicides is reduced to 2.8%, more than double that of another series of 77 PD patients treated in France with bilateral STN stimulation. [2]

There may be more than one reason why patients with movement disorders in southwestern Switzerland have a higher rate of suicide than expected. First, Switzerland has one of the highest suicide rates in Europe. [3]

Second, the patients enrolled in the Swiss study did not comply with current selection criteria for DBS, such as CAPSIT guidelines, [4] which exclude PD patients with severe depression from undergoing surgical interventional therapies. All patients but one in the Swiss series had a previous history of severe depression, and two of them had suicidal ideations or attempts before undergoing surgery. A pre-morbid mood disorder is a predictor of lower outcome and of psychiatric complications following DBS in PD. [2,5]

In the Swiss series, four of the six patients who committed suicide had two DBS implants, which involve three surgical procedures (implant-explant-implant) and an undisclosed number of surgical tracks in each hemisphere. It is doubtful that such multiple sequences are representative of standard clinical practice. A combination of microscopic lesions in strategic brain areas may have contributed to the observed suicidal behaviors. Furthermore, three patients had dementia. There is insufficient information on their cognitive dysfunction and on changes in medication that may have affected the patients’ outcome.

References

1. Burkhard PR, Vingerhoets FJ, Berney A, Bogousslavsky J, Villemure JG, Ghika J. Suicide after successful deep brain stimulation for movement disorders. Neurology 2004; 63:2170-2172.

2. Funkiewiez A, Ardouin C, Caputo E et al. Long term effects of bilateral subthalamic nucleus stimulation on cognitive function, mood, and behaviour in Parkinson's disease. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2004; 75:834-839

3. WHO Regional Office for Europe. Highlights on health in Switzerland. http://www.euro.who.int/document/e73485.pdf , 1-39. 2001.

4. Defer GL, Widner H, Marie RM, Remy P, Levivier M. Core assessment program for surgical interventional therapies in Parkinson's disease (CAPSIT-PD). Mov Disord 1999; 14:572-584.

5. Romito LM, Raja M, Daniele A et al. Transient mania with hypersexuality after surgery for high frequency stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus in Parkinson's disease. Mov Disord 2002; 17:1371-1374.

Table Clinical variables of patients who received DBS implants for PD or chronic cluster headache (CCH) at the Besta Institute.

Indication

PD

CCH

Target site

subthalamic nucleus

posterior hypothalamus

Patients (number)

72

16

Implants (number)

144a

18b

M/F ratio

1.7

7

Age at implant (years)

56.2 ± 7.2

43.0 ± 12.9

Disease duration at implant (years)

12.6 ± 4.2

3.3 ± 2.4

Follow-up (months)

34.2 ± 18.2

23.5 ± 14.5

Levodopa equivalents at implant

1150,5 ± 555,6

-

Levodopa equivalents at last visit

621,4 ± 428,2

-

Average voltage (V)

2.94 ± 0.39

2.1 (0,5-3,2)

Average pulse duration (ms)

63.5± 0.6

60.0 ± 0.0

Energy delivered at last visit (mW)

1.78 ± 0.74

NA

Psychiatric side effects (patients)

15c

0

     Transient increase of sexual desire

8

0

     Transient manic psychosis

5

0

     Transient depression

5

0

     Transient psychic akinesia

3

0

     Cognitive deterioration

3

0

Suicide attempts

0

0

Suicides

0

0

Abbreviations: CCH, chronic cluster headache; PD, Parkinson disease. Notes: a, All patients received a bilateral implant; b, Two patients received a bilateral implant; c, Six patients had more than one side effect.

Reply to Albanese et al 15 March 2005
Previous Correspondence  Top
Pierre R. Burkhard,
Department of Neurology
Geneva University Hospitals and Medical School, CH-1211 Geneva 14, Switzerland,
Joseph Ghika, Alexandre Berney, Jean-Guy Villemure, François J.G. Vingerhoets

Send Correspondence to journal:
Re: Reply to Albanese et al

Pierre.Burkhard{at}hcuge.ch Pierre R. Burkhard, et al.

We aimed to alert the medical community about DBS being a potential risk factor for suicide at a time when DBS is progressively becoming a routine procedure for advanced movement disorders, notably PD. [1] This concern is shared by many other groups which have observed similar cases in their DBS cohort [2,6-8] and requires extensive pre-operative evaluation and intensive psychiatric support in at-risk patients. [9]

We were interested to learn that Albanese et al might be one of the few groups spared by this complication. In our patients, all but one suicide occurred between 2 to 7 years after the DBS procedure, suggesting that the follow-up of Albanese et al’s patients (PD: 3 years, CCH: 2 years) may be too short for such a complication statistically to occur.

Furthermore, with an estimated prevalence of one every 25 patients in our cohort, it seems clear that their yet unpublished CCH group (16 patients) is too small to substantiate the claim that posterior hypothalamus DBS is safer than STN. Finally, Albanese et al are purposefully mixing patients with CCH and PD, forgetting that the psychodynamics of these two unrelated conditions may be enormously different.

The correspondence by Albanese et al contains several errors. First, none of our suicide patients was demented, neither before nor at the time of death. Three PD patients exhibited mild neuropsychological abnormalities consistent with the underlying pathology, but did not fulfill the DSM-IV criteria for dementia. Second, as we discussed, no changes of stimulation parameters or medications occurred at or near the time of suicide. Third, while most patients had a past history of depression, none was severely depressed when assessed pre-operatively and all had low scores on the Montgomery and Asberg depression rating scale. [10] All cases fulfilled the CAPSIT-PD4 guidelines at the time of evaluation, as required by our DBS program.

We were particularly interested in the 11% rate of transient hypersexuality reported by Albanese et al. This was only rarely observed in our cohort. Whether this unexpected reaction reflects a cultural trait, a bias related to authors’ domains of interest or a true DBS-induced complication needs further investigation.

References

6. Houeto JL Mesnage V, Mallet L et al. Behavioural disorders, Parkinson’s disease and subthalamic stimulation. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2002;72:701-707.

7. Doshi PK, Chhaya N, Bhatt MH. Depression leading to attempted suicide after bilateral subthalamic nucleus stimulation for Parkinson’s disease. Mov Disord 2002;17:1084-1085.

8. Krack P, Batir A, Van Blercom N et al. Five-year follow-up of bilateral stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus in advanced Parkinson’s disease. N Engl J Med 2003; 349:1925-1934.

9. Anderson KE, Mullins J. Behavioral changes associated with deep brain stimulation surgery for Parkinson’s disease. Curr Neurol Neurosci Rep 2003;3:306-313.

10. Montgomera SA, Asberg MA. A new depression scale designed to be sensitive to change. Br J Psychiatry 1975;134:382-389.

Authors have nothing to disclose.


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