Brain sciences
June 4, 2023
Muhammad Youshay Jawad, Saleha Qasim, Menglu Ni et al.
46 citations
Ketamine shows promise as a treatment for bipolar depression, though evidence remains weak. A scoping review of 10 clinical studies (5 randomized controlled trials and 5 open-label studies) found that ketamine was generally tolerable, with minimal risk of triggering manic or hypomanic episodes, and demonstrated some effectiveness in reducing depressive symptoms and suicidality. The treatment may be particularly useful for patients with treatment-resistant bipolar depression. However, more research is needed to establish ketamine's role in both acute and maintenance treatment phases, and to study its potential for preventing recurrence and suicidal behavior.
Current neuropharmacology
January 1, 2025
Gianluca Rosso, Giacomo d'Andrea, Stefano Barlati et al.
23 citations
Among patients with treatment-resistant depression who continued esketamine nasal spray for at least six months, 76.2% responded or achieved remission. Of those who had not responded by six months, a subset improved by twelve months. Side effects occurred in 71.8% of patients at six months, decreasing to 42% at twelve months; the most common were sedation and dissociation. Only two patients stopped treatment due to tolerability issues. The findings suggest esketamine is effective and safe for mid- to long-term treatment, with a novel observation of late clinical response in some patients. Results require confirmation in larger samples and longer observation periods.
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.
Journal of affective disorders
December 15, 2024
Giacomo d'Andrea, Andrea Miuli, Mauro Pettorruso et al.
6 citations
In patients with treatment-resistant depression, combining vortioxetine with esketamine nasal spray reduces depressive symptoms as effectively as the standard combination of an SSRI or SNRI with esketamine. The vortioxetine combination also showed a larger reduction in emotional blunting after three months and had fewer treatment-emergent side effects. These findings come from a post-hoc analysis of twenty patients, ten in each group. The authors suggest the vortioxetine-plus-esketamine regimen may be a valuable alternative, but they call for larger randomized controlled trials to confirm the results.