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ELEctroconvulsive therapy (ECT) vs. Ketamine in patients with Treatment-resistant Depression: The ELEKT-D study protocol.

S. Mathew, S. Wilkinson, Murat Altinay, A. Asghar-Ali, Lee C Chang, K. Collins, R. Dale, Bo Hu, K. Krishnan, C. Kellner, D. Malone, J. Murrough, R. Ostroff, G. Sanacora, M. Shao, A. Anand

Contemporary Clinical Trials February 1, 2019 DOI: 10.1016/j.cct.2018.12.009 via Semantic Scholar

Summary

Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) and ketamine show similar response rates for treatment-resistant depression, but a head-to-head comparison in a large, well-powered trial has been lacking. This protocol describes a non-inferiority trial randomizing 400 patients with treatment-resistant depression to receive either ECT thrice weekly or intravenous ketamine twice weekly for 3-5 weeks. The primary outcome is the proportion of responders based on a patient-reported depression scale. The study is designed to determine whether ketamine retains at least 90% of ECT's treatment effect. Results will inform patient choice, clinical practice, and insurance policies.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Randomized controlled trial Peer reviewed
Sample size 400
Population Patients with treatment-resistant depression
Keywords Medicine
Citations 54
Key finding The protocol describes a non-inferiority trial comparing ECT and ketamine for treatment-resistant depression, with results expected to inform clinical practice and policy.

Abstract

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is the most common mental illness and the leading cause of disability worldwide. Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is the most effective treatment for MDD and the gold-standard therapy for treatment-resistant depression (TRD), yet it remains underutilized due to factors such as limited availability, stigma, and concerns about cognitive side effects. Ketamine has emerged as the first rapid-acting antidepressant and shows robust short-term efficacy in clinical trials, but there are concerns about its long-term safety and efficacy. While response rates are similar between ECT and ketamine in clinical trials, these treatments have never been compared head-to-head in a sufficiently large, well-powered randomized study. Here we describe the study protocol for ELEctroconvulsive therapy (ECT) vs. Ketamine in patients with Treatment-resistant Depression (ELEKT-D), a non-inferiority, comparative effectiveness trial. Patients with TRD seeking clinical treatment are randomized (1:1) to receive ECT (thrice weekly) or intravenous ketamine (twice weekly) for 3-5 weeks. The primary outcome is the proportion of responders in each group at the end of study visit, as measured by a patient-reported outcome measure (Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology-Self Report). The study is powered such that the non-inferiority margin allows for ketamine to retain 90% of the ECT treatment effect, with a projected sample size of 400 patients (200 per group). Secondary outcomes include remission rates, depression severity, cognitive functioning, quality of life, adverse events, and tolerability. The results of the ELEKT-D study will have important implications for patient choice, clinical practice, and health insurance policies.

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