A brain stimulation device could fight binge-eating

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Photo by Denny Müller on Unsplash
Photo by Denny Müller on Unsplash

A deep brain stimulation device could be used to help curb food cravings for those with binge eating disorders, according to international researchers who tested a device in two people with severe obesity and binge eating disorder diagnoses. The team monitored their brain activity and found a signature they associated with food cravings and bingeing. After six months of brain stimulation targeting this signature, the researchers say both patients had significantly fewer binge-eating sessions, and lost weight as a result, with one no longer meeting the criteria for their binge-eating disorder diagnosis. The researchers say more research needs to be done with a larger group to confirm whether the brain stimulation caused this.

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From: Springer Nature

Health: Brain stimulation aids treatment of binge eating in two patients

Brain stimulation, guided by patterns of neural activity associated with food cravings, improved self-control of food intake and weight loss in two people with binge-eating disorder and severe obesity, according to a paper published in Nature Medicine. These findings — which form part of an ongoing clinical trial — demonstrate the feasibility and safety of treating people with loss-of-control eating through physiologically guided, closed-loop deep brain stimulation.

Loss-of-control (LOC) eating is pervasive in all binges and is characterized by a loss of inhibitory control in response to appetite cues and cravings. Despite the prevalence and severity of LOC eating, most treatments for obesity fail to address it directly, which limits the efficacy of the most aggressive measures, such as bariatric surgery.

Casey Halpern and colleagues recorded electrophysiological activity patterns, over a 6-month period, in the ventral and dorsal region of the nucleus accumbens in the brains of two patients (both female, 45 and 56 years old) diagnosed with binge-eating disorder and treatment-refractory, severe (Class III) obesity. Brain-activity measurements were collected from these patients during periods associated with anticipation of food during standard meals, during food cravings and with LOC eating. Using these data, the authors identified a low-frequency brain-activity signature that was specifically associated with food cravings and LOC in both patients. The authors then used this newly identified brain biomarker to guide deep brain stimulation of the nucleus accumbens in both patients using a device capable of responsive or closed-loop, deep brain stimulation. Significant reductions in LOC eating events and subsequent weight loss were observed in both patients after 6 months of brain stimulation. One of the patients no longer met criteria for binge-eating disorder. No serious adverse side effects were reported.

The preliminary results of this pilot study highlight the potential clinical feasibility of this novel intervention and support the continued study of larger cohorts of patients with binge-eating disorder.

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Nature Medicine
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Organisation/s: Stanford University, USA
Funder: This work was supported by the National Institutes of Health (grant no. 5UH3NS103446- 02 and 1R01MH124760-01A1 CHH). C.H.H. received funding for this work from the Blume Foundation. C.J.K. was supported by grant no. R01MH129018 and the Burroughs Wellcome Fund Career Award for Medical Scientists. P.A.T. gratefully acknowledges funding support by the John A. Blume Foundation. C.B. was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health (grant no. K23 MH106794).
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