Clinical Predictors of Ketamine Response in Treatment-Resistant Major Depression
The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry May 15, 2014 Mark J. Niciu, David A. Luckenbaugh, Dawn F. Ionescu et al. 167 citations
Higher body mass index and a family history of alcohol use disorder in a first-degree relative were associated with greater improvement in depression symptoms after a single ketamine infusion. Patients with no prior suicide attempts also showed greater improvement, but only at day 7. The analysis combined data from four studies of treatment-resistant inpatients with major depressive disorder or bipolar depression who received a single 0.5 mg/kg ketamine infusion over 40 minutes. The findings suggest that certain clinical characteristics may help predict who benefits most from ketamine's rapid antidepressant effects, though the analysis was post hoc and the models explained only 13% to 36% of the variation in symptom improvement.