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Characterization of the Quality of Electroconvulsive Therapy Among Older Medicare Beneficiaries

Taeho Greg Rhee, Mark Olfson, Kyaw Sint, Samuel T. Wilkinson

2020The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is an important therapy for treatment-resistant depression and is especially effective for elderly individuals with depression. This is the first US nationally representative description of ECT in the elderly. METHODS: Using 2014-2015 Medicare claims data, we compared elderly individuals with major depressive disorder (using ICD-9 and ICD-10 codes) who received ECT with those who did not on demographic and clinical measures. We characterized treatment patterns by setting and the proportion of individuals receiving index and continuation/maintenance courses, subtherapeutic courses of ECT, and post-ECT follow-up care. RESULTS: Of all Medicare beneficiaries aged 65 years and older diagnosed with depression in 2014-2015, 7,817 (0.41%) received 1 or more ECT sessions. Compared to the general population of elderly Medicare beneficiaries with depression, recipients of ECT were slightly younger and more likely to be male, non-Hispanic, and white and live in a zip code with a higher median income. Among those who received any ECT, 33.7% received < 5 total treatments. Of those who received an index ECT treatment, 33.7% received a continuation/maintenance course of ECT, while 60.9% received some form of post-ECT follow-up treatment (additional ECT or new psychotropic medication). Receipt of psychotherapy was the strongest predictor of those who received ≥ 5 ECT treatments (adjusted odds ratio = 1.43; 95% CI, 1.22 to 1.67). CONCLUSIONS: Despite substantial evidence of efficacy, ECT use remains rare among elderly patients with depression. Findings suggest a potential need for efforts to increase the proportion of patients receiving adequate courses of ECT and evidence-based post-ECT follow-up care.

Topics & Concepts

Electroconvulsive therapyDepression (economics)MedicinePsychiatryOdds ratioPopulationPsychologyInternal medicineCognitionMacroeconomicsEconomicsEnvironmental healthElectroconvulsive Therapy StudiesTreatment of Major DepressionHealthcare Decision-Making and Restraints
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