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Tyler S Kaster

4 papers in the library · 29 citations · publishing 2025-2026

Papers

Emergency Department Visits Involving Hallucinogen Use and Risk of Schizophrenia Spectrum Disorder.

JAMA psychiatry February 1, 2025 Daniel T Myran, Michael Pugliese, Jennifer Xiao et al. 23 citations

People who had an emergency department visit involving hallucinogen use were more likely to be diagnosed with a schizophrenia spectrum disorder within three years compared with the general population (3.99% vs 0.15%). After accounting for other substance use and mental health conditions, the risk remained elevated: they were about 3.5 times as likely as the general population, 4.7 times as likely as those with an alcohol-related ED visit, and 1.5 times as likely as those with a cannabis-related ED visit. The rate of hallucinogen-related ED visits rose 86% between 2013 and 2021.

Efficacy of intranasal esketamine versus rTMS for treatment-resistant depression: analysis of individual participant data from two clinical trials.

EClinicalMedicine December 1, 2025 Tyler S Kaster, Yi Dai, Fidel Vila-Rodriguez et al. 5 citations

Both repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and intranasal esketamine are more effective than starting a new antidepressant medication for treatment-resistant depression. In a secondary analysis of individual patient data from two clinical trials involving 282 matched participants, rTMS reduced depression severity scores by 5.35 points and esketamine by 2.89 points more than medication alone. The difference between rTMS and esketamine was not statistically significant, but the results suggest rTMS may be at least as effective as esketamine. The analysis highlights the need for direct head-to-head trials comparing these two interventions.

Ketamine Infusions and Rapid Reduction of Suicidal and Depressive Symptoms in Major Depressive Episode: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

JAMA psychiatry July 1, 2026 Sung Ryul Shim, Hye Su Jeong, Tanner J Bommersbach et al. 1 citation

A systematic review and meta-analysis of 26 randomized clinical trials with 1,166 patients experiencing a major depressive episode found that intravenous ketamine infusions significantly reduce suicidal and depressive symptoms in the acute phase. A single ketamine infusion lowered suicidal symptoms at 24 hours and at 1 month, and repeated infusions produced similar reductions. Depressive symptoms decreased significantly from 4 hours through 1 week after a single infusion and after repeated infusions. Serious adverse events were unrelated to the interventions, and other side effects were transient. Longer-term outcomes remain unclear.

Symptom trajectories and clinical outcomes of intravenous ketamine in treatment-resistant depression: A real-world study using group-based trajectory modeling.

Journal of affective disorders January 23, 2026 Reinhard Janssen-Aguilar, Jithin Joseph, Huda Al-Shamali et al.

In a retrospective chart review of 209 adults with treatment-resistant depression treated with intravenous ketamine, depressive and anxiety symptoms improved significantly over four or six infusions, but the improvements were modest and highly variable across individuals. Anxiety symptoms improved more slowly and less robustly than depressive symptoms. End-of-treatment response and remission rates were numerically higher after six infusions than after four, but the difference was not statistically significant. Four distinct patterns of symptom change emerged for both depression and anxiety, highlighting the heterogeneity of treatment response. Durability after six infusions could not be assessed because follow-up data were available only for the four-infusion group.