Smiling patient with vagus nerve stimulator scar in lab viewing RECOVER trial data on depression recovery.
Smiling patient with vagus nerve stimulator scar in lab viewing RECOVER trial data on depression recovery.
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RECOVER trial suggests vagus nerve stimulation benefits some patients with severe treatment-resistant depression for at least two years

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An implanted device that stimulates the vagus nerve was associated with sustained improvements in symptoms, functioning and quality of life among adults with long-standing, treatment-resistant major depression, according to researchers reporting two-year follow-up data from the ongoing RECOVER study led by Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis.

For people with treatment-resistant depression—when standard medications and psychotherapy do not provide enough relief—new two-year findings from the RECOVER study suggest that adjunctive vagus nerve stimulation (VNS) may deliver durable benefits for some patients.

Researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis led the multicenter trial, which enrolled nearly 500 patients across 84 locations in the United States. The VNS approach involves surgically placing a device under the skin in the chest that delivers controlled electrical impulses to the left vagus nerve, a major communication pathway between the brain and internal organs.

The participants represented a highly treatment-resistant group. On average, they had lived with depression for 29 years and had tried about 13 prior treatments, including electroconvulsive therapy and transcranial magnetic stimulation. About three-quarters of participants were unable to work because of their symptoms.

The latest peer-reviewed results were published Jan. 13, 2026, in the International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology. The paper reports outcomes through 24 months for 214 participants who received active VNS during the first year of the trial and then continued stimulation for a second year.

Rather than focusing solely on symptom scores, investigators assessed depressive symptoms, day-to-day functioning and quality of life, and evaluated how well improvements held up over time. Across multiple measures, the study found that most participants who had reached a prespecified threshold of “meaningful benefit” at 12 months continued to show benefit at 24 months, with median durability at or above roughly 80%. The analysis also found that a substantial share of participants who did not meet criteria for meaningful benefit at 12 months later did so during the second year of stimulation.

“We were shocked that one in five patients was effectively without depressive symptoms at the end of two years,” said lead author Charles R. Conway, MD, a professor of psychiatry and director of the Treatment Resistant Mood Disorders Center at WashU Medicine. Conway said the durability of improvement is notable in a population that typically has low odds of sustained benefit.

The implanted VNS system used in RECOVER is manufactured by LivaNova USA, Inc., which sponsored and funded the study. According to the researchers and the company, a key purpose of RECOVER is to generate evidence that can inform U.S. Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) coverage decisions; CMS has said Medicare coverage is available under a “coverage with evidence development” framework when VNS is provided in a CMS-approved randomized trial.

Major depression is common, with researchers noting that roughly one in five U.S. adults will experience major depression at some point in their lives. In the same report, the researchers said that for as many as one-third of patients, standard antidepressants or psychotherapy do not provide sufficient relief, a pattern often described as treatment-resistant depression.

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Reactions on X to the RECOVER trial's two-year follow-up on vagus nerve stimulation for treatment-resistant depression are primarily neutral to positive, with medical accounts like Medscape and UTHealth Psychiatry sharing key findings of sustained symptom relief, improved functioning, and low relapse rates. Users highlight benefits for long-term sufferers who exhausted other treatments, with some drawing connections to ancient practices.

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UCLA study illustration: Patient receiving accelerated TMS therapy in clinic, with efficacy graphs comparing 5-day vs 6-week treatments.
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UCLA study finds five-day accelerated TMS schedule performed similarly to conventional six-week course for treatment-resistant depression

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Researchers at UCLA Health report that delivering transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) in an intensive five-day schedule—five sessions per day for five days—was associated with depression symptom improvements comparable to a conventional six-week schedule in a retrospective analysis of 175 patients with treatment-resistant depression. The study also found that some patients who showed little immediate change after the accelerated course improved noticeably in the following weeks.

A small randomized, double-blind trial suggests that MRI-based measures of brain structure may help predict which patients with major depressive disorder will show early symptom improvement after treatment with the traditional Chinese medicine Yueju Pill. In the four-day study, Yueju Pill and escitalopram were both associated with lower depression rating scores, but only Yueju Pill was linked to a rise in blood levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF).

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Researchers have discovered a cluster of sensory neurons that link the brain and heart, triggering an immune response crucial for recovery after a heart attack. This finding reveals a feedback loop involving the nervous and immune systems that could lead to new therapies. Experiments in mice showed that manipulating these neurons speeds up healing and reduces scarring.

Epia Neuro, a newly launched startup in San Francisco, is developing a brain-computer interface to help stroke patients regain hand movement. The system combines a brain implant with a motorized glove. Stroke remains a leading cause of long-term disability, affecting hand and arm function in about two-thirds of survivors.

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Many patients hesitate to stop antidepressants due to fears of withdrawal syndrome or symptom relapse. A study published in The Lancet shows that a gradual withdrawal, combined with psychological support, does not increase relapse risk compared to continuing the treatment.

Researchers analyzing brain-imaging and treatment data from hundreds of people report that Parkinson’s disease is associated with abnormal connectivity involving the somato-cognitive action network (SCAN), a motor-cortex network described in 2023. In a small trial, stimulation aimed at this network produced a higher response rate than stimulation of nearby motor areas, raising the possibility of more targeted noninvasive treatments.

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A study in Molecular Psychiatry used PET imaging with a new tracer to track changes in AMPA-type glutamate receptors in people with treatment-resistant depression receiving ketamine, reporting that region-specific receptor changes were associated with symptom improvement.

 

 

 

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