Psychiatry research
November 1, 2023
Sipan Haikazian, David C J Chen-Li, Danica E Johnson et al.
121 citations
A systematic review and meta-analysis of 13 studies (686 participants) found that psilocybin therapy produced a large reduction in depressive symptoms compared to control conditions, with a standardized mean difference of -0.78. Response and remission rates were also significantly higher with psilocybin. Open-label trials showed robust decreases in depression after psilocybin administration. The findings suggest antidepressant efficacy for psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy, but the authors note that further studies are needed to confirm safety and efficacy and to optimize treatment protocols.
World Journal of Biological Psychiatry
January 18, 2023
Shakila Meshkat, Sipan Haikazian, Joshua D. Di Vincenzo et al.
61 citations
Oral ketamine shows potential as an antidepressant for unipolar and bipolar depression, based on a systematic review of 22 studies involving 2336 patients. All included studies reported significant improvement after ketamine administration, and it was well tolerated without serious adverse events. However, the review identified important limitations, including a small number of randomized clinical trials (only four) and a high risk of bias in those trials due to analysis methods and adverse events monitoring. Ketamine dosages ranged from 0.5 to 1.25 mg/kg, with administration frequency from daily to monthly. Further research with larger samples and longer follow-up is needed to determine its antisuicidal effect and efficacy in treatment-resistant depression.
Therapeutic Advances in Psychopharmacology
January 1, 2023
Farhan Fancy, Sipan Haikazian, Danica E. Johnson et al.
23 citations
Ketamine given intravenously at subanesthetic doses (0.5–0.75 mg/kg) or as esketamine (28–84 mg) appears safe and effective as an add-on treatment for bipolar depression when combined with a mood stabilizer. Across eight studies (235 participants), 48% of those receiving ketamine achieved at least a 50% reduction in depression severity, compared with 5% on placebo. Real-world response rates were lower (30%) than in clinical trials (63%). Some studies noted reductions in suicidal ideation, though not all findings were statistically significant. Ketamine was generally well tolerated, but 2% of participants (five receiving ketamine) developed hypomanic or manic symptoms, and significant dissociative effects occurred at 40 minutes in some trials.
Psychiatry Research
August 15, 2025
Sipan Haikazian, Roger S. McIntyre, Shakila Meshkat et al.
7 citations
Ketamine infusions, given intravenously at sub-anesthetic doses, reduced depression and suicidality scores in patients with treatment-resistant major depressive disorder and treatment-resistant bipolar depression. Improvements from an acute course persisted during maintenance infusions over weeks and months, with no cases of suicidal behavior or addiction. One bipolar patient (4%) experienced an affective switch that stabilized. These results provide preliminary support for the long-term use of maintenance ketamine infusions.