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Fiona C Warren

Exeter Clinical Trials Unit, University of Exeter, Exeter, UK.

2 papers in the library · 178 citations · publishing 2022-2025

Papers

Adjunctive Ketamine With Relapse Prevention–Based Psychological Therapy in the Treatment of Alcohol Use Disorder

American Journal of Psychiatry January 11, 2022 Meryem Grabski, Amy Mcandrew, Will Lawn et al. 169 citations

Three weekly infusions of ketamine (0.8 mg/kg) helped people with severe alcohol use disorder stay abstinent more days over six months than placebo infusions did. The ketamine group averaged 10.1% more days abstinent than the placebo group. Combining ketamine with mindfulness-based relapse prevention therapy produced the largest improvement, with 15.9% more abstinent days compared with placebo plus alcohol education. No serious adverse events occurred. Relapse rates did not differ significantly between ketamine and placebo groups. The findings suggest ketamine is safe and may support abstinence, especially when paired with psychological therapy.

Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy versus treatment as usual after non-remission with NHS Talking Therapies high-intensity psychological therapy for depression: a UK-based clinical effectiveness and cost-effectiveness randomised, controlled, superiority trial.

The lancet. Psychiatry June 1, 2025 Thorsten Barnhofer, Barnaby D Dunn, Clara Strauss et al. 9 citations

About half of patients with depression who complete the UK National Health Service Talking Therapies stepped care pathway still have symptoms. A randomized trial tested whether adding mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) via videoconference to treatment as usual improves outcomes for these patients. At 34 weeks, the MBCT group had significantly lower depression scores than the treatment-as-usual group (adjusted difference -2.49 points on the PHQ-9). The MBCT group also had slightly lower healthcare costs and higher quality-of-life scores, with a 99% chance of being cost-effective at the £20,000 per QALY threshold. No serious adverse events occurred. MBCT is an effective and scalable further-line treatment for depression that does not remit after psychological therapy.