Introduction

The discovery of medications with clinically meaningful antidepressant and antipsychotic effects in the mid-twentieth century was a landmark in the treatment of mental disorders. However, soon afterwards it was recognised that in some patients, their condition showed limited or no response to these drugs [1,2,3]. Where an illness does not respond despite an adequate course of treatment, it is generally termed treatment resistant. Treatment resistance is now recognised across a range of psychiatric disorders, including schizophrenia, major depressive disorder (MDD), bipolar affective disorder [4], and obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) [5]. Despite this, treatment resistance was not a focus of psychiatric drug development for decades and, to date, only one treatment, clozapine, is a licensed monotherapy for treatment resistance in psychiatry, and then specifically for schizophrenia. However, there are signs of change, with companies developing drugs for treatment resistance for a number of psychiatric disorders [6,7,8], and there is now broad recognition that a ‘one size fits all’ approach has reached the limits of effectiveness [9]. To evaluate research interest in treatment resistance in psychiatry, we conducted an analysis of scientific publications on treatment resistance in psychiatry between 2000–2019 inclusive (see eAppendix 1 for methods and full results). This shows a significant year-on-year increase in the number of papers published focussing on treatment resistance in psychiatry, after accounting for the increase in total number of publications over time (β = 0.84, R2 = 0.71, p < 0.0001, Fig. 1). It is thus timely to review the concepts of treatment resistance used in psychiatry, its prevalence and burden across disorders, and to consider current and future therapeutic directions.

Fig. 1: Scatterplot showing the relationship between the number of papers published in the field of treatment resistance in psychiatry and time (2000–2019).
figure 1

The number of papers published on treatment resistance in psychiatry are presented as a percentage of the total number of publications in the field of psychiatry overall. The solid blue line corresponds to the regression estimate with the corresponding 95% confidence interval, indicated by grey shading, showing a significant increase in the percentage of psychiatric research focusing on treatment resistance over the last two decades.

The origins of the concept of treatment resistance

The use of the term treatment resistance in psychiatry pre-dates the discovery of antipsychotics, antidepressants and mood stabilisers. More than a century ago, Freud used the term ‘resistance’ to describe unconscious mental reactions and behaviour exhibited during psychoanalysis that inhibited the response to therapy; identifying and addressing resistance is, in this context, considered therapeutic [10]. The term was also used in the 1930s when insulin coma therapy was used for schizophrenia, to describe the scenario where patients maintained consciousness despite delivery of large insulin doses [11]. Early reports of treatment resistance to antipsychotics and antidepressants did not include the Freudian concept of an unconscious mental reaction, but focused instead on inadequate symptomatic response to treatment [1,2,3]. This concept was crystallised in the late 1980s [12] with the demonstration of clozapine’s efficacy over chlorpromazine in patients with schizophrenia whose illness had not responded to at least three previous antipsychotic trials. Since then, a number of criteria have been developed to define treatment resistance in different disorders.

Current definitions of treatment resistance across disorders

We conducted a systematic review of national and international consensus definitions of treatment resistance for common psychiatric diagnoses (see eAppendix 2 for full search strategy). This identified 23 guidelines: 9 for schizophrenia; 10 for depression; 1 for the depressed phase of bipolar affective disorder; and 3 for OCD. The criteria used in these guidelines are summarised in Table 1. These highlight three core components required to establish treatment resistance seen across disorders and guidelines; these are that the correct diagnosis has been made, that adequate treatment has been given, and that there has been inadequate response (see Fig. 2).

Table 1 Definitions of treatment resistance used across psychiatry from consensus statements and national/international guidelines.
Fig. 2: Treatment resistance consists of three core components.
figure 2

Establishing treatment resistance requires concurrent confirmation of the following: 1) that the correct psychiatric diagnosis has been made; 2) that a patient has received adequate treatment; 3) that symptoms have not adequately responded despite treatment.

However, whilst these core components are seen in the definitions of treatment resistance across disorders, there is considerable variation in the specific criteria used between different disorders. Surprisingly, marked variation in criteria is also seen within the same psychiatric diagnoses, particularly regarding how adequate pharmacotherapy is defined and how response to treatment is assessed. For example, the number of treatment trials that an individual should receive prior to a diagnosis of treatment resistance is, for some criteria for OCD and depression, either not defined, or inconsistent, ranging between 2–3 different drugs for depression. Furthermore, certain criteria for schizophrenia, depression, and OCD recommend using different drug classes (e.g., ensuring a trial of first and second-generation antipsychotics in some criteria for schizophrenia), while others do not make this specification. Moreover, the target drug dose is often not defined, despite some conditions having well-described dose-equivalents at which clinical response is expected [13]. Thus, subtherapeutic trials of treatments may be erroneously considered adequate trials, leading to an over-inclusive classification of treatment resistance. For OCD, definitions of treatment trials also are inconsistent on whether or not psychological therapy should be included as a treatment alongside pharmacological therapy. For some criteria, recommended treatment durations are either not defined, or range between 2–12 weeks. Treatments such as those delivered in long-acting injectable formulation may take months to reach steady state, thus there is the risk that shorter trials of certain medications may be inadequate [14, 15]. There is also a lack of clarity regarding use of some neuro-stimulatory treatments. For example, although most MDD guidelines discuss use of transcranial magnetic stimulation as a therapeutic option, advice regarding its role in the context of treatment resistance, whether it should be used as monojunctive or adjunctive therapy, and what position it should take in a treatment algorithm for resistant symptoms is often not stated.

Inherent to the concept of treatment resistance is the idea that there is inadequate treatment response. Of the 23 guidelines identified, we observed that criteria for defining inadequate treatment response varied widely and were not provided in two definitions. Three defined inadequate treatment response in absolute terms using statements such as ‘no effect’, four recommended assessments of quantitative change in symptom severity using symptom rating scales and thresholds to define response, and fourteen used amorphous terms such as ‘inadequate’ or ‘minimal’ response. Failure to objectively quantify symptom severity increases risk of inter-rater variability, where one clinician may differ from another based on their subjective opinions of what constitutes treatment response. Using ‘no effect’ as a criterion is likely to be too restrictive in most clinical scenarios given natural variation in the course of disorder and placebo response [16], even without considering what level of therapeutic response might be adequate. In contrast, many criteria focus on definitions of failure to meet a minimum response threshold, which allows for natural variation and placebo response, but implies there may be a response, albeit inadequate. Failure to achieve a specific therapeutic response, but achieving a partial response to treatment, is not equivalent to no change in symptoms at all, particularly where the response threshold is high, and results in different conceptualisations of treatment resistance and potentially leading to very different patients being included in studies. Although defining response in a binary fashion is necessary to guide subsequent management (e.g., a change in medication), grouping patients together with putatively different presentations (i.e., absolute non-responders with partial-responders) may result in ineffective and inappropriate treatment being offered to certain patients. Partial response to a given pharmacological treatment could indicate that the drug is having some benefit, but the dose or duration of treatment may not be sufficient. In contrast, absolute non-response to treatment suggests the drug’s mechanism of action is not relevant for this patient, and thus a treatment with a medication with an alternate mode of action may be more appropriate. The potential consequence of grouping partial-responders and absolute non-responders together is that absolute non-responders may then be offered a treatment that is ineffective, and partial-responders may be unnecessarily offered riskier or experimental treatments. Inconsistency and lack of clarity in definitions of treatment resistance also has implications for interpretation of findings across clinical trials, as characteristics of patients in one study population may contrast markedly with the characteristics in another. Inconsistencies in definitions of treatment resistance between studies may be responsible for surprising results from meta-analyses examining efficacy of pharmacological treatments in treatment resistant psychiatric disorders [17, 18].

We were unable to identify operationalised definitions of treatment resistance for mania, panic disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and substance dependence. This is surprising given the evidence that nonresponse to standard therapies is a common clinical challenge in the treatment of these disorders [19,20,21], and represents a key outstanding issue for the field. It is not clear why this is the case but may reflect the fact that drug treatments for some of these disorders are less well established than for conditions like schizophrenia and major depression. Another consideration for definitions is whether functional impact is needed in addition to on-going symptoms. Only one criterion required a quantitative assessment of functioning to define treatment response [22].

Finally, a core component of the concept of treatment resistance is that the patient has taken the prescribed medication. Despite this, Table 1 shows that assessment of medication adherence is rarely included as a criterion for treatment resistance, and only one guideline recommended checking plasma drug levels to assess adherence. Thus, there is a risk that non-adherent patients may be considered as treatment resistant, which has implications for clinical trials of drugs for treatment resistance. Over a third of patients with schizophrenia identified as ‘treatment resistant’ show evidence of poor adherence [23], and poor adherence is reported in 10–60% of patients with depression [24]; this could mean that a large proportion of patients entering a trial are non-adherent rather than treatment resistant, potentially obscuring an effect or biasing results. Non-adherence is one contributor to pseudo-resistance, which is considered in the next section. Table 1 also shows that, where adherence is mentioned, most of the guidelines use statements such as ‘ensure adherence’ or ‘exclude poor adherence’ without making clear what constitutes adherence or poor adherence.

Overall, our review of the criteria shows considerable variability and lack of specificity in definitions of treatment resistance across psychiatric disorders, which has both clinical and research implications. The lack of clear definitions and, thus, risk of marked differences in patient characteristics between studies could be addressed by the use of standardised rating scales with established psychometric properties coupled with operationalising criteria to provide clear cut-offs. Heterogeneity could be reduced by harmonising criteria across guidelines within a disorder. Difficulties in knowing if studies recruited similar patients could be addressed by using a reporting checklist for treatment resistance that make clear, how each of the three components of treatment resistance was established in patients, an example of which is provided in Box 1.

Primary versus secondary treatment resistance

Longitudinal studies indicate that trajectories to treatment resistance vary [25]. In some patients the illness shows an inadequate response to treatment from first presentation, whilst in others it initially shows a good response to treatment but over time this declines [25]. These prototypic trajectories have been respectively termed primary and secondary treatment resistance [26], although this terminology has been criticised as implying different mechanisms that are not known [22]. Alternatively, the descriptive terms ‘early onset’ and ‘late onset’ of treatment resistance may be used [22]. Notwithstanding discussions on terminology, this distinction is potentially important for research and clinical practice as it is unclear if treatments will be equally effective in these groups [22]. Putative neurobiological mechanisms for primary versus secondary treatment resistance are described below. Furthermore, a proportion of therapeutic benefit is derived from non-specific effects, which may be larger earlier in the course of illness [27].

The distinction between primary and secondary treatment resistance is only referred to in one of the consensus statements or guidelines recorded in Table 1 [22]. In this context, it would be helpful for future studies to investigate if there are differences between patients with primary versus secondary treatment resistance in treatment outcomes or neurobiology. Where this is not possible or warranted, clear reporting of the relative proportion of patients with primary versus secondary treatment resistance would help enable comparisons with other studies.

Pseudo-resistance: diagnostic and treatment-related factors

Pseudo-resistance describes the circumstance where a patient’s condition does not respond to treatment, but the criteria for treatment resistance have not been fulfilled; for example, because the diagnosis was incorrect or the exposure to treatment was not adequate. Diagnostic instability, especially early in the course of a mental illness, is well described [28]. For example, bipolar affective disorder may initially present with a major depressive episode and be treated as unipolar depression. If such a patient has a poor outcome because of a treatment emergent mixed state or worsening of selected symptoms (e.g., insomnia or agitation), the patient may be deemed to have treatment resistant depression, when in actuality the wrong treatment had been selected [29]. This scenario highlights the need to ensure careful history and assessment of patients and cautions against concluding treatment resistance after only a short presentation.

Another common cause of pseudo-resistance is an inadequate therapeutic trial of treatment. Psychiatric drugs need to cross the blood-brain barrier and bind to their target in the brain. Several factors can lead to insufficient drug reaching the target in the brain. These are summarised in Table 2 and Fig. 3 (see eTable 1 for additional evidence). They include non-concordance with treatment, poor absorption of oral medication at the level of the gut endothelia, fast metabolism of medication by the liver, and poor blood-brain-barrier penetrance of medication. Some treatments may also be associated with a bell-shaped dose-response curve, where increasing dose leads to increasing efficacy only up to a point, whereupon further dose increases lead to decreasing efficacy [30]; in this scenario, high doses of treatment may be responsible for pseudo-resistance.

Table 2 Potential contributors to pseudo-resistance in schizophrenia and depression.
Fig. 3: Pseudo-resistance to treatment in psychiatry: treatment related factors.
figure 3

A Poor concordance with medication or forgetfulness may result in insufficient drug being taken to achieve a therapeutic response, B Polymorphisms in P-glycoproteins in the gut endothelia may result in poor absorption of drugs and insufficient drug exposure. C Smoking tobacco induces expression of CYP450 enzymes, particularly CYP1A2, in the liver (D) resulting in enhanced break down of psychiatric medication metabolised by these enzymes. Polymorphisms in CYP450 enzymes that enhance their activity or co-administration of other psychiatric/non-psychiatric medications that act as enzyme inducers will have a similar effect. E Poor brain accumulation of drug owing to poor blood brain barrier permeability and/or polymorphisms in P-glycoprotein may result in insufficient central nervous system drug levels to achieve a therapeutic response.

The clinical assessment of treatment resistance

The clinical assessment of potential treatment resistance is summarised in Fig. 4. A key step is to rule out pseudo-resistance as far as possible (Table 2 and Fig. 3). As such, clinical assessment should rule out alternate psychiatric diagnoses, e.g., features of autism spectrum disorder or OCD which may be mistaken for schizophrenia [31, 32] or bipolar-type depression which may be mistaken for unipolar depression [33, 34]. Where possible, duration and severity of symptoms, associated distress, and level of functioning should be quantified using validated clinical rating scales, which facilitates objective and accurate longitudinal assessment of treatment response. A comprehensive medication history should be taken to ensure that previous psychiatric medication trials were adequate, documenting dose and duration, and associated response. Finally, current treatment should be defined, and plasma levels measured where possible. This process should allow the assessment of key factors requisite for determining treatment resistance summarised in Fig. 4.

Fig. 4: Algorithm for approaching non-response to treatment in psychiatric illness.
figure 4

Persistent symptoms despite treatment could be due to treatment resistance or due to other factors that give the impression of treatment resistance when in fact adequate treatment has not been received (pseudo-resistance). Pseudo-resistance may be secondary to an incorrect primary diagnosis/psychiatric comorbidity/substance abuse, or be treatment related, including poor treatment adherence, malabsorption of drug, poor blood brain barrier penetrance of drug or fast metabolism of drug (see Table 2 and Fig. 3).

Epidemiology and impact of treatment resistance

Prevalence estimates of TRS, TRD and treatment resistant OCD vary from 20 to 60% of the population with the condition [26, 35,36,37,38,39,40]. We were unable to identify prevalence data for treatment resistant bipolar affective disorder (whether depression or mania) or PTSD. Differences in the definitions of resistance between studies, as discussed above, are certain to substantially determine this variation. Another important factor is the population from which prevalence estimates are calculated, which can lead to ascertainment biases. For example, studies examining hospital populations with chronic illness are likely to record higher rates of treatment resistance compared with studies examining outpatient samples made of patients at the onset of illness.

In the USA, annual direct medical costs associated with TRS are conservatively estimated at over $34 billion [41]. It has been estimated that hospitalisation costs and total health resource utilisations for TRS are 10-fold higher than those for non-TRS, and that up to 80% of the total yearly health costs associated with schizophrenia in the USA are attributed to TRS [41]. Direct medical costs associated with TRD are estimated to be 2–6 times higher compared with other patients with MDD [42, 43], with costs increasing with chronicity and severity of TRD [44]. Patients with TRD are twice as likely to be hospitalised compared with non-TRD patients, and require increased numbers of psychiatric outpatient visits [43]. Patients with TRS have more functional impairment in the community compared with other serious mental illnesses [45], and the mean quality of life is estimated to be 20% lower in TRS compared with non-TRS [41]. Mean quality of life is approximately 25–40% lower in patients with TRD compared with patients who respond to treatment or who are in remission [46], and 30% of TRD patients attempt suicide in their lifetime [47].

The neurobiology of treatment resistance

There are three broad disease models proposed by the literature to explain treatment resistance, summarised in Fig. 5 (see eAppendix 3 for search details) [48,49,50,51]. The first possibility (Fig. 5A) is that the treatment resistant form of a given psychiatric illness has the same underlying neurobiology as the treatment responsive illness, but the pathophysiological alterations are more severe such that standard treatment is inadequate. This is partly supported by evidence that resistant symptoms of depression and schizophrenia may improve with higher doses of treatment in some patients [52,53,54]. Furthermore, as discussed above, secondary treatment resistance may be a consequence of either progressive neurobiological changes (pathoplasty) or iatrogenic effects. For example, in schizophrenia, an upregulation in dopamine D2/3 receptor levels with treatment could mean that a given antipsychotic dose is no longer enough to block dopaminergic neurotransmission adequately, leading to break-through resistant symptoms and necessitating higher doses [48].

Fig. 5: Main putative disease models to explain treatment resistance in psychiatry.
figure 5

A Treatment responsive and resistant illnesses are defined by the same neurobiological alterations (neurotransmitter 1), however the alterations are more marked in patients with treatment resistance. As such, higher doses of drugs targeting neurotransmitter system 1 (orange triangles) are required for therapeutic benefit. B Treatment responsive and resistant illnesses are defined by different underlying neurobiological mechanisms, for example two different neurotransmitter systems (neurotransmitters 1 and 2). As such, a drug targeting only neurotransmitter system 1 will be ineffective in patients with dysregulation in neurotransmitter system 2. C Treatment resistance arises from a combination of neurobiological alterations seen in responsive illness (neurotransmitter 1) in combination with a different neurobiological process (neurotransmitter 2). As such, treatments that act on both targets are likely to be needed.

Alternatively, treatment resistance could be neurobiologically distinct from treatment responsive illness (Fig. 5B). Supporting this, in some individuals, their illness shows little or no benefit from adequate treatment from illness onset despite evidence of high target engagement [55, 56], and there is some evidence of neurobiological differences between patients with TRS or TRD [57,58,59]. For example, studies using proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy have observed that levels of glutamatergic metabolites are particularly elevated in the anterior cingulate cortex in TRS compared to levels in patients, who respond to antipsychotic treatment and healthy controls and genetic and post-mortem studies also implicate glutamatergic pathways in TRS [60,61,62]. It should also be recognised that secondary treatment resistance may theoretically be a consequence of iatrogenic-change in neurotransmitter systems other than those primarily targeted by drugs, owing to off-target receptor actions.

The third possibility (Fig. 5C) is a hybrid model where patients show a combination of both the same pathophysiology as responsive illness and additional neurobiological alterations meaning that standard treatment is inadequate. One example is that of immune dysregulation. Converging lines of genetic, post-mortem, and pre-clinical evidence suggest immune dysregulation may play a role in the pathogenesis of both schizophrenia [63,64,65,66,67] and depression [68, 69], and it is hypothesised that immune alterations are seen only in a proportion of these patients (immune/inflammatory subgroups) and are linked to poor treatment response [67, 70,71,72]. For example, in depression, levels of C-reactive protein (CRP) are higher in TRD compared with those who respond to antidepressant treatment [73]. Furthermore, some [74], but not all [75], clinical trials examining immunotherapy in depression have observed efficacy only in patients with peripheral inflammation. Immune dysregulation has been implicated in dysregulation of multiple neurotransmitter systems [76,77,78] that some antipsychotic and antidepressant agents may not therapeutically target. Thus, without specifically targeting immune dysregulation alongside conventional therapy, symptoms will persist. This highlights the need to better understand the neurobiology of treatment resistance to help guide treatment design. Furthermore, it introduces the possibility that drugs previously deemed ineffective on a group-level may yet provide benefit to subgroups of patients.

Therapeutic approaches to treatment resistance

For a drug to be considered in the management of treatment resistant psychiatric illness, its efficacy and specificity for use in treatment resistance must be demonstrated. Although studies that test drugs against placebo (or with no treatment) control for the scenario where symptoms improve with time, they do not control for the fact that longer treatment duration with an existing medication may lead to response. Thus, to demonstrate efficacy, the agent should demonstrate superiority over active comparators. Pharmacotherapy strategies for treatment resistance can be divided into two groups: monotherapies and adjunctive strategies.

To date, the only drug that has been licensed as monotherapy for a treatment resistant condition in psychiatry is clozapine for TRS, which gained regulatory approval on the basis of two studies [12, 79]. Although clozapine is a dopamine antagonist, relative to other antipsychotics it exhibits low D2 dopamine receptor occupancy [80], suggesting that disease model 1 is unlikely and modulation of other neurotransmitter systems may play a therapeutic role [81]. This is most in keeping with disease model 2 of treatment resistance described above (Fig. 5B), although it should be recognised that this needs testing and the mode of action of clozapine for TRS remains unclear.

Two adjunctive strategies for treatment resistance have been approved, both for TRD. Esketamine in combination with antidepressant therapy has recently received approval in both the US and Europe [82]. Esketamine blocks the NMDA receptor channel, and there is evidence that it induces plastic changes at glutamate synapses to improve connectivity [83], and may also affect other neurotransmitters [84]. The novel mechanism of action and efficacy of esketamine as an adjunct to conventional antidepressants (serotonin/norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors) are in keeping with disease model 3 (Fig. 5C). In the US, olanzapine combined with fluoxetine is a licensed therapy for TRD. FDA approval was based on data from studies that examined the olanzapine/fluoxetine combination compared with olanzapine or fluoxetine monotherapy [85,86,87]. These studies were 8-weeks in duration, and defined TRD as depression meeting DSM-IV criteria with persistence of symptoms despite at least two different antidepressant trials, including a prospective course of fluoxetine monotherapy. In all trials, depressive symptoms of patients who met criteria for treatment resistance improved significantly more when treated with the olanzapine/fluoxetine combination versus olanzapine or fluoxetine monotherapy. There is also evidence that adjunctive aripiprazole alongside antidepressant therapy is effective in people with MDD and inadequate response to antidepressant monotherapy [88]; furthermore, the magnitude of symptomatic improvement with adjunctive therapy was observed to be greater in those with only minimal response to antidepressant monotherapy compared to those with partial response [88]. The superior efficacy of combination therapy points towards patients with TRD presenting with a combination of the same neurochemical abnormality seen in first-line treatment responders with an additional neurochemical dysfunction, which is most in keeping with disease model 3 of treatment resistance detailed above (Fig. 5C).

As mentioned above, there is also some evidence that high doses of certain antidepressants (e.g., venlafaxine) [53, 89] or antipsychotics (e.g., olanzapine) [52] can be effective strategies in the management of treatment resistant depression and schizophrenia respectively. In the case of venlafaxine, there is evidence that increasing the dose beyond 150 mg/day results in a greater effect on noradrenergic neurotransmission [90]. This approach is most in keeping with disease model 1 of treatment resistance detailed above (Fig. 5A), although it should be recognised that, at higher doses, drug actions at other receptors may become more important.

In terms of neuro-stimulatory treatments, the FDA has approved use of transcranial magnetic stimulation in the treatment of MDD in patients who have failed to achieve ‘satisfactory improvement from one prior antidepressant medication’ [91]. However, it is unclear if such a definition reliably describes true treatment resistance (see ‘Current definitions of treatment resistance across disorders’ section above), and the FDA warns that efficacy of transcranial magnetic stimulation has not been established in patients with ‘varying degrees of medication resistance’. Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) has widespread regulatory approval for treatment resistant depression and mania. The mechanism by which ECT effects response where medication has been unsuccessful remains poorly defined, but may stem from alterations in cerebral blood flow and regional metabolism [92]. This novel mechanism of action is in keeping with disease model 2 of treatment resistance detailed above (Fig. 5B).

New treatment directions

To identify new treatments in the pipeline, we searched clinicaltrials.gov for phase 2 and 3 studies examining novel agents and interventions specifically for treatment resistant depression, schizophrenia, bipolar affective disorder, OCD, panic disorder, post-traumatic stress disorder, and substance dependence (see eAppendix 4 for search details). We identified 15 studies currently recruiting, covering treatments for schizophrenia, depression, bipolar affective disorder, and OCD. These are summarised in Table 3 (see eTable 2 for further details). They all have estimated completion dates within the next 2 years. Where stated, all the pharmacological interventions are adjunctive strategies, other than a clinical trial of LuAF35700 (an antagonist at dopaminergic, serotonergic and α-adrenergic receptors) as monotherapy for TRS that has just been completed. The headline results of this study indicate that it failed to demonstrate superiority over risperidone or olanzapine (clinical trials identifier: NCT02717195), although the full trial results remain to be published. In terms of non-pharmacological interventions, we identified studies examining transcranial magnetic stimulation in schizophrenia, vagus nerve stimulation in depression, deep brain stimulation in MDD and OCD, and radio-surgical (gamma capsulotomy) interventions in OCD.

Table 3 Novel interventions currently being examined in the management of treatment resistant schizophrenia, major depressive disorder, bipolar affective disorder, and obsessive compulsive disorder. Please see eTable 2 for further details and study links to clinicaltrials.gov.

Outstanding issues and future directions

There are several outstanding issues in the field of psychiatric treatment resistance (Table 4). As discussed in the overview of operationalised descriptions of treatment resistance, there is marked heterogeneity in definitions used. This could lead to heterogeneity of study populations, which in turns limits the validity of research. Furthermore, for certain conditions such as mania, anxiety disorders, and PTSD, consensus definitions of resistance have yet to be agreed, and for some other conditions, such as autism spectrum disorder, there are no licenced drugs for core symptoms, thus, by definition, there is no treatment resistance. Although here we have predominantly focused on resistance to drug treatments, similar limitations apply to psychological and other therapies (e.g., in defining adequate treatment duration/number of psychology sessions). Furthermore, most approaches to treatment resistance consider the illness in terms of a single over-arching symptom dimension. However, these fail to recognise that some patients may have ongoing domain-specific disabling symptoms despite treatment, such as negative symptoms of schizophrenia or somatic symptoms of depression. Thus, the definitions of treatment resistance based on global rating may exclude people with one very disabling non-responsive symptom. Moreover, the imperfect nature of symptom rating scales may mean that degree of disability associated with some ratings of symptom severity are not captured. Finally, in the context of recognised phenomenological overlap between various psychiatric conditions, a transdiagnostic approach focussed on symptom domains, such as psychosis in schizophrenia and bipolar affective disorder, or depression in major depressive disorder and bipolar affective disorder [93], might help disentangle common underlying mechanisms linked to response and resistance. Clear objectives for the field are therefore to agree and adopt unified definitions of treatment resistance for each disorder, and to consider treatment resistance in terms of specific symptom domains (as already recommended by some definitions) [22] and their associated disability.

Table 4 Outstanding issues and future directions for research and clinical practice in the field of psychiatric treatment resistance.

We identified circumstances that could lead to an illness being mistaken as treatment resistant, when non-response is in fact related to factors such as misdiagnosis or non-adherence (pseudo-resistance). Importantly, these factors are often not systematically assessed in research or clinical practice. Future work on identifying pseudo-resistance in the clinic and defining assessment pathways would be useful.

Greater understanding of the pathoaetiology of treatment resistance in psychiatric disorders could help identify new targets to guide the development of novel treatments. It could also help develop biomarkers to identify subgroups of patients with specific biological alterations that may benefit from tailored interventions earlier in the illness course, and to guide patient selection and evaluate target engagement in clinical trials. Furthermore, improved understanding of the mechanisms underlying different psychiatric symptom domains will provide insight into the transdiagnostic nature of their neurobiology and thus potential for overlapping treatments. Efforts to identify TRS based on genetics and neuroimaging are on-going [61, 94], and there has been considerable recent interest in stratifying patients with schizophrenia and depression based on blood immune markers with a view to identifying a subgroup whose psychiatric symptoms may respond to immunotherapy [67, 74, 75].

Strikingly, although the number of studies published annually on the topic of treatment resistance has increased over the last decade, the proportion of the literature dedicated to the topic of remains small (approximately 0.5% in 2019, see Fig. 1 and eAppendix 1). Given that the prevalence of treatment resistance in psychiatric conditions is 20–60%, and it is associated with high burden, there is a clear need for greater resources to be directed towards research in psychiatric treatment resistance.

Conclusions

Treatment resistance comprises the trinity of establishing the correct psychiatric diagnosis, adequate treatment (in terms of dose and duration), and inadequate symptomatic response. It is commonly seen in many psychiatric disorders and associated with substantial functional impairment and economic and social costs. Whilst there has been a marked increase in research and industry interest in treatment resistance, the proportion of psychiatric research in this field remains very low relative to its burden. There is both marked variation and lack of clear criteria in the definition of treatment resistance both within and between disorders, which could lead to heterogeneity in the patients included in studies, making comparisons difficult. This highlights the need for greater consistency and operationalisation in the definitions of treatment resistance used, and we have provided a reporting checklist that future clinical trials can use to demonstrate on what basis patients with treatment resistance are recruited. There are only three pharmacological interventions licensed for treatment resistance, and only one, clozapine, licenced as a monotherapy. However, fifteen novel interventions are currently being examined in clinical trials of treatment resistant psychiatric conditions. Future drug development and clinical care will be informed by our improved understanding of the neurobiology of treatment resistance, and by employing various neuroimaging, molecular, and genetic techniques, may pave the way for precision medicine in the field.