Associations between substance use treatment and ketamine use: A hypothesis-generating analysis.

Addictive behaviors reports  – June 01, 2026

Source: PubMed

Summary

Individuals receiving drug treatment for a Substance Use Disorder are significantly more likely to report ketamine use. Among 173,808 participants, 1.39% of those in treatment used ketamine, compared to just 0.22% not in treatment. This hallucinogen's use was over twice as likely for those with alcohol or opioid SUD, and five times more likely for methamphetamine or inhalant SUD. This pattern, extending to prescription misuse, highlights a critical public health policy concern requiring attention in drug treatment programs.

Abstract

Ketamine is increasingly used in clinical settings for mental health and pain management, yet its misuse poses public health risks. While prior studies have examined ketamine trends, few have explored its use among individuals receiving treatment for substance use disorders (SUD). Using 2021-2023 data from the National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), we analyzed the association between past-year ketamine use and receipt of SUD treatment among U.S. residents aged 12 and older. Stratified analyses by substance type and use category (use, misuse, and disorder) were conducted using adjusted logistic regression models. Among 173,808 participants who reported substance use, 3.19 % received past-year treatment and 0.26 % reported past-year ketamine use. Ketamine use was more common among those in treatment (1.39 %) than not (0.22 %). Across SUD strata, treatment was associated with higher odds of ketamine use, including alcohol SUD (aOR = 2.73; 95 % CI: 1.58-4.71), marijuana SUD (2.32; 1.34-4.02), inhalant SUD (5.22; 1.96-13.94), methamphetamine SUD (5.10; 2.08-12.48), pain reliever SUD (2.62; 1.16-5.90), and opioid SUD (2.76; 1.23-6.18). Among misuse strata, associations included pain relievers (2.69; 1.40-5.16), opioids (3.13; 1.71-5.74), and psychotherapeutics (2.09; 1.21-3.62). Among use strata, treatment was associated with higher odds for cigarettes, alcohol, marijuana, heroin, PCP, DMT/AMT/FOXY, methamphetamine, pain relievers, tranquilizers, and stimulants. Past-year treatment is a marker of elevated ketamine exposure across multiple substance domains. Findings are hypothesis-generating and underscore the need for clinical screening, patient education on unsupervised ketamine risks, and research clarifying timing, intent, and outcomes of ketamine use in SUD populations.

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