In France, lifetime prevalence of depression is 21 %, with major consequences: handicap, loss of productivity, reduction in quality of life, increased mortality. The efficient and long-lasting care of depression is consequently a priority of public health.
Despite well-conducted conventional therapeutic strategies, it is estimated that about 30 % of the depressed patients do not respond at all to an antidepressant, that 30 % will present a partial response, and that 40 % only patients will have a complete remission.
Non-pharmacological alternative treatments have been promoted, particularly with repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS). A recent meta-analysis with 29 randomized controlled trials versus placebo reports a 29.3 % response rate and a 18.6 % remission rate after active stimulation vs respectively, 10.4 % and 5 % after placebo stimulation.
However, predictive biomarkers of response are unknown, and cerebral metabolism may be a good candidate. It is admitted that the depressive state is correlated with specific modifications of glucose metabolism in circuits which are involved in the neurobiology of depression. The amplitude of these changes may correlate with clinical severity or may differ with treatment type, and cerebral metabolic changes might be an additional guide to treatment. Finally, the therapeutic effect might normalize cerebral functional activity and this might be an early correlate of clinical response. However the studies using functional imaging in a therapeutic approach or in the understanding of the physiopathology of the depression are not usable in a clinical practice of routine.
The investigators suggest using a well-known analysis software (Scenium software, Siemens GmbH) who allows an automated analysis by the distribution of the cerebral metabolism by means of the F18-FDG TEP-TDM and a quantitative measure, expressed in regional consumption of glucose expressed by g / 100 g / min for every 18F-FDG TEP-TDM and for every region of interest. Image registering by the camera, remote of the injection of the tracer, lasts less than 10 minutes.The software also allows to compare the data acquired for a patient with a standardized database.
The investigators will perform a opened study in two centers (Monaco Hospital/Nice CHU) on 50 depressed patients aged from 40 to 65 years old, not having answered 2 lines of well led antidepressants. Low-frequency rTMS will be proposed in acute cure (3 in 6 weeks) in monotherapy followed by 6 months of rTMS for patients who have responded to acute treatment phase.
Cerebral metabolic modifications (location and intensity) will be calculated after two PET-TDM in every patient, realized before and after the acute treatment by rTMS. We shall use the SCENIUM software which allows to compare each patient's data with a standardized database.
At the end of the acute period of treatment, it will be proposed to patients who have responded to pursue rTMS treatment in a consolidation phase for 6 months. All patients will be longitudinally assessed during this consolidation period. One objective is to assess if initial TEP-TDM data and/or the amplitude of the induced metabolic variation is associated with the stability of the clinical answer in respondent patients