Anabelle Colaco
14 Dec 2025, 16:24 GMT+10
WASHINGTON, D.C.: For millions of Americans struggling with depression, treatment will soon extend beyond clinics and pharmacies. U.S. regulators have approved the first at-home brain stimulation device designed to treat the condition, marking a milestone in non-drug mental health care.
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has cleared Flow Neuroscience's home-use brain stimulation device, the company said on December 11, offering an alternative to traditional antidepressants, which can cause side effects with long-term use.
Depression rates in the United States have climbed sharply over the past decade, rising about 60 percent and affecting more than 20 million adults, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Flow's device, known as the FL-100, delivers a mild electrical current to a brain region involved in mood regulation. It is designed for use at home under remote medical supervision and is the first such device approved for home treatment of depression in the U.S.
The FDA cleared the device for adults aged 18 and older with moderate to severe major depressive disorder who are not considered resistant to medication. It can be used either as a standalone treatment or in combination with other therapies.
Flow acknowledged that the treatment is not intended for patients whose depression has not responded to medications.
The company plans to introduce the device in the U.S. in the second quarter of 2026 as a prescription-only therapy. Chief Executive Officer Erin Lee told Reuters that Flow is targeting a retail price between US$500 and $800.
Flow is currently in discussions with insurance providers and expects to announce coverage partnerships in early 2026, Lee added.
Outside the United States, the device already has a track record. Flow said more than 55,000 people have used it across Europe, the United Kingdom, Switzerland, and Hong Kong.
The FDA's decision was supported by data from a mid-stage clinical study showing that 58 percent of patients achieved remission after 10 weeks of treatment. The study included patients who were already taking antidepressants or participating in therapy.
Among Flow's broader international user base, 77 percent reported an improvement in symptoms within three weeks, the company said.
Treatment typically follows a 12-week protocol. Patients begin with five sessions per week for the first three weeks, then taper down to two or three sessions per week for the remaining nine weeks. Each session lasts about 30 minutes.
Flow said side effects are generally mild and temporary, including skin irritation, headaches, and tingling sensations at the sites where electrodes are placed. The company added that skin burns have occurred when electrode pads were reused or allowed to dry out.
Get a daily dose of Irish Sun news through our daily email, its complimentary and keeps you fully up to date with world and business news as well.
Publish news of your business, community or sports group, personnel appointments, major event and more by submitting a news release to Irish Sun.
More InformationWASHINGTON, D.C.: For millions of Americans struggling with depression, treatment will soon extend beyond clinics and pharmacies. U.S....
CARACAS, Venezuela: Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado's daughter accepted the Nobel Peace Prize on December 10 as her...
SAN FRANCISCO, California: A federal judge ordered the Trump administration on December 10 to remove the California National Guard...
WASHINGTON, D.C.: All diplomatic correspondence and U.S. government documents will no longer use the Calibri font and will revert to...
ISLAMABAD, Pakistan: Pakistan's newly appointed armed forces chief asked Afghanistan's Taliban government this week to choose between...
NEW YORK CITY, New York: The Department of Justice received approval from a federal judge to publicly release grand jury transcripts...
ROME: Italy's famed food culture earned new global recognition as UNESCO added the rituals surrounding Italian cooking and eating to...
DUBLIN, Ireland: Ireland's media minister said he was annoyed that the EU could not agree on how to deal with children who access inappropriate...
PARIS, France: Workers at the Louvre Museum voted this week to launch strikes to protest their working conditions, a ticket-price hike...
DUBLIN, Ireland: The Irish government has been urged to take a leaf out of the Australian handbook and restrict toxic social media...
DUBLIN, Ireland: The Taoiseach has defended a video shared by the Department of Housing advising young people on how to cope with moving...
Kyiv [Ukraine], December 14 (ANI): Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on Sunday said Russia continues to target Ukraine's energy...
