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Em Ellerman-Tayag

VA San Diego Healthcare System

2 papers in the library · publishing 2023-2026

Papers

Real‐World Effectiveness and Cost‐Differential of Intranasal Esketamine Versus Intramuscular Ketamine

Psychiatric Research and Clinical Practice July 2, 2026 Kush V. Bhatt, Tara Austin, Danny Alam et al.

Intramuscular (IM) ketamine is as effective as intranasal (IN) esketamine for treatment-resistant depression, with comparable safety and a dramatically lower cost. In a retrospective cohort of 179 Veterans, the difference in depression symptom improvement was only 0.04 points on the PHQ-9, well within the non-inferiority margin. PTSD symptom reductions were also similar, and rates of emergency department visits or hospitalizations did not differ significantly. The cost per eight-treatment course was $6069 for IN esketamine versus $647 for IM ketamine, driven primarily by the cost of the nasal spray. These results indicate that IM ketamine could be a high-value alternative that expands access to care.

Effects of cannabis use on antidepressant treatment response to repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation and ketamine

medRxiv Preprint Server June 28, 2023 Mohammad Ali Shenasa, Houtan Totonchi Afshar, Eric A. Miller et al. preprint

Cannabis use may weaken the antidepressant effects of ketamine and repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS). The antidepressant effects of these treatments rely on long-term potentiation and synaptic plasticity, but cannabis activates CB1 receptors, which can impair synaptic plasticity. This suggests that cannabis use might reduce the effectiveness of ketamine and rTMS for depression treatment.