World Psychiatry
September 15, 2023
Roger S. McIntyre, Mohammad Alsuwaidan, Bernhard T. Baune et al.
712 citations
At least 30% of people with depression meet the common definition of treatment-resistant depression (TRD): inadequate response to two or more antidepressants despite adequate trials and adherence. Many cases are actually pseudo-resistant due to insufficient treatment or non-adherence. No consensus definition with proven predictive utility for clinical decisions exists, leading to varied prevalence estimates and inconsistent care. Intravenous ketamine and intranasal esketamine are effective for TRD. Some second-generation antipsychotics (e.g., aripiprazole, quetiapine XR) help as adjuncts in partial responders, but only the olanzapine-fluoxetine combination has been studied in FDA-defined TRD. Repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation and electroconvulsive therapy are established effective interventions. Evidence for extending trials, switching, or combining antidepressants is mixed, and manual-based psychotherapies are not effective alone but help when added to antidepressants.
BMC Medical Ethics
January 14, 2016
Melvyn W. Zhang, Keith M. Harris, Roger Ho
69 citations
Ketamine, a dissociative anaesthetic and phencyclidine derivative with known abuse liability, has shown rapid antidepressant effects in some clinical trials for treatment-resistant depression, but methodological flaws and possible reporting bias may have influenced those findings. Regulatory agencies have not approved ketamine for depressive disorders, and a Canadian review did not recommend its prescription. Off-label repeat prescribing raises ethical concerns, especially given the comorbidity of substance abuse with depression and the lack of evidence ruling out long-term abuse risk. Two clinical vignettes illustrate ethical principles—autonomy, nonmaleficence, fidelity, and consequentialism—relevant to off-label ketamine use. Clinicians should exhaust standard antidepressant therapies before considering ketamine.
Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics
September 21, 2020
Hartej Gill, Barjot Gill, David Chen‐li et al.
62 citations
Psychedelics like psilocybin and MDMA show promise as a new type of therapy for mental health disorders. Evidence suggests they may work with just one dose, produce rapid effects, and be effective for treatment-resistant conditions, possibly serving as a standalone treatment. More clinical trials are needed to test their safety, tolerability, and effectiveness in real-world patient populations.
Journal of affective disorders
July 1, 2024
Cameron N Calder, Angela T H Kwan, Kayla M Teopiz et al.
31 citations
Ketamine is effective for adults with treatment-resistant depression. A systematic review of 21 placebo-controlled randomized trials with 2042 participants calculated the number needed to treat (NNT) for racemic ketamine: 7 at 4 hours, 3 from one day to one week, and 9 at four weeks. Esketamine had an NNT of 2 at one day and 11 at four weeks. Numbers needed to harm indicated low risk. The NNTs under 10 across observation intervals are considered highly clinically meaningful for this difficult-to-treat disorder. Limitations include potential functional unblinding and selective reporting bias.
Journal of affective disorders
June 15, 2024
Gia Han Le, Sabrina Wong, Sebastian Badulescu et al.
25 citations
A systematic review examined how serotonergic psychedelics (psilocybin, LSD) and ketamine affect brain wave patterns measured by EEG and MEG in people with major depressive disorder, treatment-resistant depression, and healthy controls. Ketamine and psychedelics both increase theta power in depressed individuals. In healthy controls and depressed persons, both drug classes decrease alpha, beta, and delta power. Ketamine also increases gamma power in both groups. Theta power specifically rises in those with major depressive disorder when given psychedelics. The studies varied in patient populations, dosing, and measurement devices. The findings support disease models involving altered network connectivity and may guide future treatment discovery.
Journal of affective disorders
April 1, 2024
Sabrina Wong, Angela T H Kwan, Kayla M Teopiz et al.
19 citations
A systematic review of randomized controlled trials compared the clinical efficacy of psilocybin and esketamine in adults with treatment-resistant depression. 25 mg of psilocybin significantly reduced depressive symptoms at 21 days post-dose, with a number needed to treat (NNT) of 5. Psilocybin-induced nausea had a number needed to harm (NNH) of 5. Fixed doses of esketamine (56 mg and 84 mg) showed significant effects at 28 days post-dose, with NNTs of 7. Esketamine-induced headache, nausea, dizziness, and dissociation had NNHs below 10. The preliminary results may reflect only a small portion of the patient population and require replication and longer-term studies. Both agents showed clinically meaningful NNT estimates and acceptable NNH profiles, underscoring their clinical relevance for treatment-resistant depression.
CNS drugs
October 1, 2022
Niloufar Pouyan, Zahra Halvaei Khankahdani, Farnaz Younesi Sisi et al.
16 citations
A systematic review of psilocybin research organized by the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework found that psilocybin has beneficial effects across multiple domains, particularly on positive valence systems, negative valence systems, and social processes. Short-term (23 assessments) and long-term (15 assessments) benefits were reported for positive valence systems. For the negative valence system, 12 outcome measures indicated increased fear, 19 showed no significant effect, and 7 parameters indicated lowered sustained threat over the long term. Thirty-four outcome measures revealed short-term alterations in social systems, including enhanced perception and understanding of others and affiliation. Cognitive systems findings mostly reported dyscognitive effects. Seven studies suggested transdiagnostic effects.
Journal of affective disorders
October 15, 2024
Angela T H Kwan, Joshua D Rosenblat, Rodrigo B Mansur et al.
13 citations
Ketamine and esketamine are increasingly prescribed for treatment-resistant mood disorders and suicide risk, but ketamine is also misused. Analyzing reports in the World Health Organization pharmacovigilance database up to January 2024, ketamine showed elevated reporting odds ratios for alcohol abuse (3.24), substance dependence (12.48), substance use disorder (170.44), substance abuse (2.94), drug dependence (2.88), drug use disorder (11.54), and drug abuse (2.85). Esketamine had reduced odds for substance abuse (0.41), drug dependence (0.083), and drug abuse (0.052), and no increased odds for any alcohol or substance misuse parameter. These associations do not establish causation.
Psychiatry research
January 1, 2022
Joshua D Di Vincenzo, Orly Lipsitz, Nelson B Rodrigues et al.
11 citations
A small proportion of people with treatment-resistant depression experience clinically significant worsening of symptoms during a course of intravenous ketamine, but the rate is very low—between 1.83% and 5.49% across infusion time points—and similar to that seen with conventional antidepressants. In a retrospective analysis of 164 adults (142 with unipolar depression and 22 with bipolar depression) who received four ketamine infusions over two weeks, no individuals with bipolar depression reported worsening. The findings suggest that symptomatic worsening with ketamine is uncommon, though the study's uncontrolled, single-center design limits certainty.
CNS spectrums
October 31, 2024
Sabrina Wong, Gia Han Le, Angela T H Kwan et al.
10 citations
A systematic review and meta-analysis of seven randomized controlled trials found that a single dose of esketamine given around childbirth significantly reduced the incidence of postpartum depression (PPD). Within one week of delivery, the odds of a PPD diagnosis were 70% lower for those who received esketamine compared to a control; between four and six weeks postpartum, the odds were 67% lower. The results suggest that esketamine may have preventive antidepressant effects during the postpartum period, with implications for both the mechanisms and clinical treatment of PPD.
Expert opinion on therapeutic targets
June 1, 2025
Naomi Xiao, Liyang Yin, Kayla M Teopiz et al.
5 citations
Sigma-1 receptors (S1Rs) may be a target and mediator of antidepressant activity. They regulate neurotransmitter release (including monoamines and glutamate), influence intracellular calcium levels, and affect immune inflammatory responses. In August 2022, the FDA approved dextromethorphan-bupropion, the first antidepressant whose hypothesized mechanism includes activity at S1Rs. The review synthesizes preclinical and clinical data on S1R physiology, pathophysiology, and function. Modulating sigma-1 systems is relevant to current FDA-approved treatments for major depressive disorder and may inform future therapeutic development. Whether sigma-1 modulation uniquely targets difficult-to-treat symptoms like anhedonia remains unknown.
The Journal of clinical psychiatry
July 7, 2025
Angela T H Kwan, Moiz Lakhani, Joshua D Rosenblat et al.
2 citations
In a global pharmacovigilance analysis of adverse event reports from the World Health Organization's VigiBase database, esketamine was associated with higher reporting odds for suicidal ideation compared to lithium (5.13 times) and fluoxetine (3.34 times), while ketamine showed lower reporting odds for suicidal ideation, suicide attempt, and completed suicide relative to both reference drugs. Both drugs had lower reporting odds for suicide attempts and completed suicides. The authors caution that causality cannot be determined from these observational data.
Pharmacopsychiatry
February 5, 2026
Tianyi Xu, Sabrina Wong, Gia Han Le et al.
Lysergic acid diethylamide and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine activate the 5-hydroxytryptamine 2B receptor, a pathway known to cause drug-induced valvular heart disease. This systematic review of 17 studies found no research on psilocybin, dimethyltryptamine, or mescaline. Both lysergic acid diethylamide and 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine show high or moderate affinity for this receptor and promote signaling linked to fibrotic changes in heart valve tissue. In vivo studies confirm serotonin-induced valvulopathy, and chronic 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine use has been associated with valve abnormalities in humans. No clinical cases of lysergic acid diethylamide-induced valvulopathy have been reported, but preclinical data suggest potential for fibrotic signaling under sustained exposure. Preliminary evidence supports the need for cardiac safety monitoring in psychedelic research.