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Annemarie van der Meij

Depression Expertise Center, Pro Persona Mental Health Care, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.

3 papers in the library · 29 citations · publishing 2024-2026

Papers

Oral esketamine in patients with treatment-resistant depression: a double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled trial with open-label extension.

Molecular psychiatry September 1, 2024 Sanne Y Smith-Apeldoorn, Jolien K E Veraart, Jeanine Kamphuis et al. 23 citations

A randomized placebo-controlled trial tested whether a fixed low dose of oral esketamine (30 mg three times daily) could reduce depression severity in patients with treatment-resistant depression. Over six weeks, the drug showed no benefit compared to placebo on the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. Dizziness and sleep hallucinations were more common with esketamine. In an open-label extension phase where doses were individually titrated up to 3.0 mg/kg twice weekly, depressive symptoms decreased substantially. The findings suggest that fixed low-dose oral esketamine is ineffective, but individually adjusted higher doses may hold promise for treatment-resistant depression.

Oral esketamine for patients with severe treatment-resistant depression: Effectiveness, safety, and tolerability of a six-week open-label treatment program.

Journal of psychopharmacology (Oxford, England) April 25, 2025 Jolien Ke Veraart, Sanne Y Smith-Apeldoorn, Annemarie van der Meij et al. 6 citations

Oral esketamine, taken twice weekly for six weeks at doses from 0.5 to 3 mg/kg, reduced depressive symptom severity in adults with severe treatment-resistant depression who had not benefited from an average of 8.1 prior antidepressant trials and, in 63% of cases, electroconvulsive therapy. Hamilton Depression Rating Scale scores dropped from 21.2 to 15.8. Nearly half of participants achieved a clinically meaningful improvement, 26.8% responded, and 15.6% remitted. Side effects were common but well tolerated, with a 7.6% dropout rate and no significant urinary or cognitive adverse effects. Treatment continued beyond six weeks in 45.9% of participants to maintain gains.

Predicting changes in depressive symptomatology following oral esketamine treatment in treatment-resistant depression: A machine-learning approach.

Journal of psychiatric research June 12, 2026 Juliana Lima Constantino, Tobias Stephan Freimann, Jens H van Dalfsen et al.

Oral esketamine can be an effective and well-tolerated treatment for treatment-resistant depression (TRD), but about half of those treated do not respond. This study tested whether sociodemographic and clinical features, including depressive symptoms and treatment resistance, could predict how much depressive symptoms would improve in 131 TRD patients receiving individually adjusted oral esketamine doses (0.5 mg/kg to 3 mg/kg) twice weekly for six weeks. Machine learning models—linear regression, elastic net, and random forest—failed to predict symptom change above chance. The findings suggest that oral esketamine may work similarly across the TRD population, regardless of treatment-resistance levels.