Skip to content

Golo Kronenberg

Department of Adult Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Hospital of Psychiatry Zurich, University of Zurich, Lenggstrasse 31, 8032 Zurich, Switzerland. Electronic address: golo.kronenberg@pukzh.ch.

4 papers in the library · 18 citations · publishing 2021-2025

Papers

Novel Insights Into the Neurobiology of the Antidepressant Response From Ketamine Research: A Mini Review

Frontiers in Behavioral Neuroscience December 3, 2021 Michael Colla, Hanne Scheerer, Steffi Weidt et al. 9 citations

Ketamine's rapid antidepressant effects challenge traditional theories that focus on monoaminergic pathways. Current research explores mechanisms including glutamatergic disinhibition, neurotrophic, and neuroplastic effects. Despite extensive study, ketamine has not yet led to new therapies beyond itself, and significant knowledge gaps and study limitations remain.

Combined Effects of Nasal Ketamine and Trauma-Focused Psychotherapy in Treatment-Resistant Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder: A Pilot Case Series.

Behavioral sciences (Basel, Switzerland) August 16, 2024 Judith Rohde, Elena Hickmann, Marco Buchmann et al. 7 citations

A pilot case series tested an eight-week program combining nasally administered ketamine (0.5 mg/kg) with trauma-focused psychotherapy for three individuals with chronic, treatment-resistant PTSD. Clinically relevant reductions in PTSD symptoms were observed, with CAPS-5 scores decreasing by an average of 18 points after treatment and 25 points at follow-up. Depressive symptoms also improved, with HAMD scores dropping by an average of 8.3 points after treatment and 9 points at follow-up. Additional benefits included reduced anxiety, fewer dissociations, and better emotion regulation. The ketamine was well tolerated and provided immediate relief from tension, anxiety, and common PTSD symptoms. The authors note that randomized controlled trials are needed to validate these findings.

EEG vigilance and response to oral prolonged-release ketamine in treatment-resistant depression - A double-blind randomized validation study.

Psychiatry research. Neuroimaging July 1, 2025 Anna Monn, Corinne Eicher, Annia Rüesch et al. 2 citations

A higher percentage of EEG vigilance stage A1, a measure of brain activity, is associated with response to intravenous ketamine in major depression. In a phase-2 randomized controlled trial of oral prolonged-release ketamine for treatment-resistant depression, no significant interaction between response and treatment was found for this EEG marker. However, a small-scale meta-analysis showed a significant pooled mean difference between ketamine responders and non-responders. Applying a previously proposed A1 cutoff of 43% yielded chance-level prediction accuracy in the combined ketamine group but 75% accuracy in the 240 mg subgroup. Responders to 240 mg ketamine also showed more stable vigilance over time. These findings support EEG vigilance as a predictive biomarker for treatment outcomes in depression, though further validation is needed.

Real-World Psilocybin Therapy for Treatment-Resistant Depression: a Retrospective Observational Study

December 10, 2025 Johannes Jungwirth, Samuel Westenhöfer, Helena Aicher et al.

In a real-world clinical setting in Switzerland, 19 patients with treatment-resistant depression received one to four doses of psilocybin (20–35 mg). Depression severity, measured by the Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale and the Beck Depression Inventory II, showed significant and clinically meaningful reductions from before to after treatment. Response rates were 33.3% and remission rates 22.2% on one scale; on the other, both were 27.8%. No serious adverse events occurred, and multiple dosing did not add benefit. These response and remission rates are lower than those seen in earlier controlled trials, but the findings provide some of the first real-world evidence for psilocybin's antidepressant effects.