Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Department of Mental Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore MD, USA.
2 papers in the library · 31 citations · publishing 2024-2025
In people with treatment-resistant depression who do not have psychosis, intravenous ketamine works as well as electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) overall. Among outpatients with moderately severe or severe depression, ketamine produced greater improvement in depressive symptoms than ECT. In contrast, inpatients with very severe depression improved more with ECT early in treatment, though by the end of the three-week course both treatments were similarly effective. Higher premorbid intelligence and a diagnosis of posttraumatic stress disorder were linked to greater improvement with ECT, but not with ketamine. These findings may help patients and clinicians decide between the two treatments.
Patients with treatment-resistant depression who preferred ketamine over electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) were more likely to respond to treatment, regardless of which treatment they actually received. Matching patients to their preferred treatment improved response rates for ketamine but not for ECT, and reduced adverse events for ECT-treated patients. Ketamine was the more popular choice overall. The findings suggest that aligning treatment with patient preference can influence effectiveness, safety, and possibly adherence, but these effects vary by treatment modality and context.