In a long-term extension study (SUSTAIN-3) involving 1,148 adults with treatment-resistant depression, esketamine nasal spray combined with an oral antidepressant was evaluated for safety and efficacy over up to 79 months (median 45.8 months). Common adverse events included headache (36.9%), dizziness (33.9%), and nausea (33.6%). Nine participants died, with causes including COVID-19 and suicide. Depressive symptoms, measured by the MADRS, improved during the initial induction phase (average reduction of 12.8 points) and this improvement was maintained during the optimization/maintenance phase. At the end of maintenance, 49.6% of participants were in remission. No new safety concerns emerged, and depression improvement generally persisted for those continuing treatment.
In patients with treatment-resistant depression, adding esketamine nasal spray to a newly initiated oral antidepressant did not harm cognitive function over the short or long term. Across three short-term double-blind studies (747 patients aged 18–64 years) and one long-term maintenance study (137 patients aged 65 or older), cognitive performance on tests of psychomotor function, attention, and memory either remained stable or slightly improved from baseline to the end of treatment. At the start, patients showed mild-to-moderate cognitive impairment. The correlation between depression severity and cognitive performance was weak. The analysis found no evidence that esketamine worsens cognition in treatment-resistant depression.