NEW YORK, November 2, 2005 –
NewYork-Presbyterian Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center is the
first in the greater New York City-area to offer Vagus Nerve
Stimulation (VNS) Therapy as a long-term treatment specifically
approved by the FDA for treatment-resistant depression (TRD).
VNS Therapy is approved as a long-term adjunctive (add-on) treatment
for patients 18 years of age and older who are experiencing a major
depressive episode and have not had an adequate response to four or
more adequate antidepressant treatments. VNS Therapy was approved for
the treatment of drug-resistant epilepsy in 1997, and is now the first
treatment specifically studied and approved for TRD.
Major depressive disorder is one of the most prevalent and serious
illnesses in the U.S., affecting nearly 19 million Americans every
year. Of those, one fifth, or approximately four million people, do not
respond to multiple antidepressant treatments. For these people,
psychotherapy, antidepressant medications, and even sometimes
electroconvulsive therapy do not work, or only work for a short while
and stop working over time. VNS Therapy is a newly approved treatment
option for these people.
“Patients with treatment-resistant depression need safe and
effective therapeutic options. The availability of an FDA-approved
treatment for the long-term management of depression is an important
development for the disturbingly large number of people with depression
who have not responded to other approved treatment options,” says Dr.
Sarah H. Lisanby, director of the Columbia Brain Stimulation Service at
NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University Medical Center and associate
professor of clinical psychiatry at Columbia University College of
Physicians and Surgeons. She is also director of the Brain Stimulation
and Neuromodulation Division, director of the Brain Behavior Clinic,
and research scientist in the Department of Neuroscience at the New
York State Psychiatric Institute.
“Open studies suggest that the benefits from VNS were sustained over
time, and that VNS was very tolerable with few side effects,” continues
Dr. Lisanby.
Early clinical research of VNS Therapy for TRD was conducted at study
sites, including NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia, beginning in 2001.
Recent studies have found that half of patients with an average of 25
years of major depressive disorder and multiple treatment trials
realized some clinical benefit; one-third of patients had at least a 50
percent improvement in their depression; and one out of six was
depression-free after treatment with VNS Therapy. Patients also
reported significant improvements in quality-of-life areas, such as
vitality, mental health, emotional well-being, and social functioning.
“VNS Therapy is delivered from a small pacemaker-like device implanted
in the chest area that sends mild pulses to the brain via the vagus
nerve in the neck. A thin, insulated wire, attached to the generator,
runs under the skin to the left vagus nerve,” says Dr. Guy M. McKhann
II, Florence Irving Assistant Professor of Neurological Surgery at
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons and assistant
attending neurosurgeon at NewYork-Presbyterian/Columbia University
Medical Center. The vagus nerve, one of the 12 cranial nerves, serves
as the body’s “information highway” connecting the brain to many major
organs. Several studies have shown that VNS Therapy may modulate
neurotransmitters such as serotonin and norepinephrine thought to be
involved in mood regulation.
Cyberonics, Inc., of Houston, manufactures the VNS Therapy System™.
For more information, interested patients may call (212) 543-5558 or
email depression@columbia.edu.
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Columbia University
Medical Center provides international leadership in
basic, pre-clinical and clinical research, medical education, and
health care. The medical center trains future leaders in health care
and includes the dedicated work of many physicians, scientists, nurses,
dentists, and public health professionals at the College of Physicians
& Surgeons, the School of Dental & Oral Surgery, the School of
Nursing, the Mailman School of Public Health, the biomedical
departments of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, and allied
research centers and institutions. With a strong history of
discovery
in health care, Columbia University Medical Center researchers are
leading the development of novel therapies and advances to address a
wide range of health conditions. www.cumc.columbia.edu
NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital—based in New York City—is the largest not-for-profit,
non-sectarian hospital in the country, with 2,397 beds. It provides
state-of-the-art inpatient, ambulatory, and preventive care in all
areas of medicine at five major centers: NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center, NewYork-Presbyterian
Hospital/Columbia University Medical Center, Morgan Stanley Children’s
Hospital of NewYork-Presbyterian, The Allen Pavilion, and The
Westchester Division. One of the largest and most comprehensive
health-care institutions in the world, the Hospital is committed to
excellence in patient care, research, education, and community
service. It consistently ranks as one of the top hospitals in the
country in U.S. News & World Report’s guide to “America’s Best
Hospitals,” in New York magazine’s Best Doctors issue, in Solucient’s
top 15 major teaching hospitals, and in many other leading surveys. The
Hospital has academic affiliations with two of the country's leading
medical colleges: Joan and Sanford I. Weill Medical College of
Cornell University and Columbia University College of Physicians &
Surgeons. www.nyp.org