-
Arch. Gen. Psychiatry · Aug 2008
Capsulotomy for obsessive-compulsive disorder: long-term follow-up of 25 patients.
- Christian Rück, Andreas Karlsson, J Douglas Steele, Gunnar Edman, Björn A Meyerson, Kaj Ericson, Håkan Nyman, Marie Asberg, and Pär Svanborg.
- Section of Psychiatry M57, Department of Clinical Neuroscience, Karolinska Institutet, Karolinska University Hospital Huddinge, SE-141 86 Stockholm, Sweden. christian.ruck@ki.se
- Arch. Gen. Psychiatry. 2008 Aug 1; 65 (8): 914-21.
ContextCapsulotomy is sometimes used as a treatment of last resort in severe and treatment-refractory cases of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD).ObjectiveTo evaluate the long-term efficacy and safety of capsulotomy in OCD.DesignNoncontrolled, long-term follow-up trial (mean of 10.9 years after surgery).SettingUniversity hospital referral center.PatientsTwenty-five consecutive patients with OCD who underwent capsulotomy from 1988 to 2000.InterventionUnilateral or bilateral capsulotomy. Lesions were created by means of radiofrequency heating (thermocapsulotomy) or gamma radiation (radiosurgery, gammacapsulotomy).Main Outcome MeasureYale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Rating Scale (Y-BOCS) score.ResultsThe mean Y-BOCS score was 34 preoperatively and 18 at long-term follow-up (P < .001). Response (defined as > or = 35% reduction at long-term follow-up compared with baseline) was seen in 12 patients at long-term follow-up. Nine patients were in remission (Y-BOCS score, < 16) at long-term follow-up. Only 3 patients were in remission without adverse effects at long-term follow-up. Response rates did not differ significantly between surgical methods. A mean weight gain of 6 kg was reported in the first postoperative year. Ten patients were considered to have significant problems with executive functioning, apathy, or disinhibition. Six of these 10 patients had received high doses of radiation or had undergone multiple surgical procedures. Results of our magnetic resonance imaging analysis in 11 patients suggest that the OCD symptom reduction may be increased by reducing the lateral extension of the lesions, and a reduction in the medial and posterior extension may limit the risk of adverse effects (ie, smaller lesions may produce better results).ConclusionsCapsulotomy is effective in reducing OCD symptoms. There is a substantial risk of adverse effects, and the risk may vary between surgical methods. Our findings suggest that smaller lesions are safer and that high radiation doses and multiple procedures should be avoided.
Notes
Knowledge, pearl, summary or comment to share?