Background

About FELIX

From basic neuroscience to a clinical trial of light-based treatment for depression.

FELIX is a clinical research protocol investigating whether non-invasive 40 Hz gamma neurostimulation delivered through light can reduce depressive symptoms. The study is motivated by the need for novel and scalable treatment options for depression, where a substantial proportion of patients do not achieve sufficient benefit from existing interventions.

The project was developed within Horizon Europe's Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions programme under the Astrotech consortium, a multidisciplinary research and training network comprising 15 early-stage researchers across host institutions and projects spanning astrocyte biology, neurotechnology, and light-based stimulation. Building on a growing preclinical and translational evidence base linking 40 Hz sensory stimulation to neurobiological effects — including enhanced gamma-band oscillatory activity, glymphatic clearance, and neuroimmune modulation — FELIX constitutes a significant part of the early efforts to systematically evaluate this intervention in a psychiatric population. The study aims not only to assess clinical efficacy, but to contribute mechanistic insight into the neurophysiological processes engaged by gamma-frequency entrainment in the context of major depressive disorder.

Read more about the Astrotech consortium

The study is conducted as a randomized, double-blinded, placebo-controlled trial at Psychiatric Centre Copenhagen in collaboration with the Technical University of Denmark and OptoCeutics ApS, developer of the patented Invisible Spectral Flicker technology. By evaluating a home-based, non-invasive intervention, FELIX examines whether this approach may be practical and potentially scalable as an adjunct to existing depression treatment.

Want to learn more about the science behind the study?

The science behind FELIX