Skip to content

Umberto Albert

Department of Medicine, Surgery and Health Sciences, University of Trieste, Trieste, Italy.

2 papers in the library · 7 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

The Resistant Depression Response to Esketamine Assessing Metabolomics (ReDREAM) Project-Untargeted Metabolomics to Identify Biomarkers of Treatment Response to Intranasal Esketamine in Individuals with Treatment-Resistant Depression: A Study Protocol.

Alpha psychiatry August 1, 2024 Francesco Bartoli, Daniele Cavaleri, Ilaria Riboldi et al. 4 citations

Treatment-resistant depression (TRD) affects about 20-30% of people with major depressive disorder. Esketamine nasal spray was approved for TRD in 2019, but its mechanisms of action remain unclear. This protocol describes the ReDREAM project, an observational, prospective study that will use metabolomics to identify metabolic biosignatures associated with response to esketamine. Sixty people with TRD from three Italian clinical sites will receive esketamine nasal spray twice weekly for four weeks (induction phase), then once weekly for four more weeks (maintenance phase). The study will test correlations between baseline metabolic profile and depressive symptom improvement at weeks 4 and 8, and explore metabolic differences between responders and non-responders. Hypothesized involvement includes energy metabolism, amino acid metabolism, urea cycle, and nitric oxide synthesis.

Psychedelics, OCD and Related Disorders: Setting methodological strategies for future studies

Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders March 19, 2025 Rodolfo Leuzzi, Giovanni Tardivo, Luca Pellegrini et al. 3 citations

Only two published and seven unpublished studies have investigated psychedelics for Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders. A systematic review found a critical risk of bias in all studies, mainly due to lack of adequate control conditions, expectation bias among participants, and poor blinding. Unpublished studies showed similar problems but also implemented promising strategies like blinded raters, credible controls such as virtual reality, lower drug doses, and including only drug-naive subjects. The shortage of unbiased evidence means early potential efficacy justifies further well-designed research.