Novel perspectives for glutamatergic strategies, psychedelics and antipsychotic augmentation in Treatment Resistant Depression: A narrative review
Clinical Neuropsychopharmacology and Addiction September 25, 2025 Stefania Chiappini, Clara Cavallotto, Andrea Miuli et al. 2 citations
About 30–50% of patients with major depression do not respond to two or more antidepressant trials, a condition called treatment-resistant depression (TRD). A narrative review of 60 studies found that glutamatergic agents such as intravenous ketamine and intranasal esketamine consistently produce rapid and clinically meaningful reductions in depressive symptoms. Augmentation with atypical antipsychotics also helps partial responders. Psychedelic-assisted therapies show sustained antidepressant benefits and affect biomarkers like BDNF and inflammatory markers. The findings suggest a shift toward personalized, mechanism-driven treatments for TRD, with ketamine and esketamine offering rapid relief for acute high-risk cases and psychedelics remaining experimental but promising as adjunctive options.