Medical Device Company Flow Neuroscience Raises $1.5m to Transform Treatment of Depression

Startup uses brain stimulation headset and therapy app to treat depression

23 Jul 2019
Lois Manton-O'Byrne
Executive Editor

Medical device company Flow Neuroscience, creators of the first-of-its-kind medically-approved treatment for depression, has announced it has raised $1.5m in an investment round led by Khosla Ventures to tackle one of the world’s most urgent mental health challenges. The investment will be used to support Flow’s European rollout, introduce Flow to healthcare clinics, and fund clinical studies.

Flow is a physical and behavioral at-home treatment for depression which comprises a portable brain stimulation headset and therapy app. It combines clinical psychology, neuroscience and innovative technology including machine learning. Classified as a Class IIa medical device, Flow launched in June 2019 in the UK and Sweden.

Randomized controlled trials published in the New England Journal of Medicine and the British Journal of Psychiatry showed that brain stimulation, of the type used in the Flow headset, had a similar impact to antidepressants but with fewer and less-severe side effects.

‘Epidemic levels’
According to WHO, depression is the leading cause of disability worldwide affecting over 300 million people - and effective, non-pharmacological alternative treatments cannot come soon enough. Meanwhile, in the UK, nearly one in four adults are affected by a mental illness. Suicide is the most common cause of death for men aged 20-49 years in England and Wales. The economic costs of mental illness in England is estimated at £105.2 billion annually. And one in three work sickness notes handed out by GPs are for mental health reasons, including depression.

People diagnosed with depression often have lower neural activity in their left frontal lobe, the part of the brain controlling important cognitive skills including emotional expression. The Flow headset uses transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS), a form of neurostimulation that delivers constant, low direct current via electrodes on the head to stimulate and rebalance neural activity in this area.

The brain stimulation headset is used in combination with a therapy app. This educates users with videos about depression and advice on how to reduce symptoms using the latest expert knowledge from the fields of sleep, nutrition, fitness and meditation. The Flow headset retails at £399 and the Flow virtual therapy app, available on iOS, is free. Flow is starting talks with the NHS to have its brain stimulation headset available on prescription. In 2019, Flow will be working with the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to seek regulatory clearance in the U.S.

Daniel Mansson, Clinical Psychologist and Co-Founder of Flow, said: "We’re increasing treatment choice and empowering people to self-manage their symptoms at home with an effective, personalized and non-pharmacological alternative. This has the potential to improve the standard of care, and reduce global healthcare costs. The Khosla Ventures investment will support the next stage of our journey as we cement our position as European leaders of brain stimulation treatment for depression.”

Alexander Morgan, MD PhD, Principal at Khosla Ventures adds: "We are very happy to be supporting Flow Neuroscience in this effort to bring a new medication-free treatment for depression into the market. The research on tDCS shows efficacy similar to pharmacological treatment with antidepressants, and the Flow team worked hard to show safety, which earned them approval for sale in Europe as a Class IIa medical device. The technology combines portable hardware and software, and we believe this offers an exciting and scalable solution for potentially hundreds of millions of people living with depression globally, empowering patients directly with new options for treatment."

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