JAMA Psychiatry
April 15, 2026
Diana Orsini, Sabrina Wong, Sara Di Luch et al.
4 citations
In randomized clinical trials of psychedelic drugs for psychiatric disorders, the drugs' strong subjective effects often reveal which treatment participants or raters think they received, a phenomenon called functional unblinding. A systematic review of 112 trials found that only 29.5% assessed whether blinding was maintained, yet 57.1% cited blinding as a limitation. Blinding failure exceeded 90% in psilocybin, LSD, and ayahuasca studies and 85% in MDMA trials with inert placebos. Ketamine trials rarely assessed blinding but fared better when midazolam was used as an active comparator. No control strategy consistently preserved ideal blinding, raising concerns about the validity of efficacy estimates.
Journal of psychopharmacology (Oxford, England)
June 24, 2026
Shreya Vasudeva, Gabrielle F M Lovell, Sabrina Wong et al.
Ketamine and its enantiomer esketamine show low risk of abuse, dependence, or misuse when administered under controlled clinical supervision, based on a systematic review of 30 studies (25 clinical and 5 preclinical). Clinical studies found minimal evidence of craving, dose escalation, or illicit use in monitored settings. Preclinical work indicated that (S)-ketamine produces reward-related behaviors, racemic ketamine shows reinforcing effects at higher doses, and (R)-ketamine has minimal reinforcing effects. Abuse risk was identified mainly in case reports lacking proper monitoring. The findings support safe incorporation of ketamine into mood disorder treatment protocols with structured administration and ongoing monitoring.
General hospital psychiatry
January 1, 2026
Gabrielle F M Lovell, Shreya Vasudeva, Diana K Orsini et al.
Ketamine, an anesthetic also used for mood and anxiety disorders, may cause mild, temporary elevations in liver enzymes, but serious liver damage appears rare. A systematic review of 13 studies (5 randomized trials, 3 observational studies, and 5 case reports) involving 1,017 patients—mostly with major depressive disorder or bipolar disorder—found 75 mild liver enzyme elevations across trials, with only a few cases of impaired liver function. No cases met Hy's Law criteria for severe drug-induced liver injury. Case reports described more severe liver issues that improved with dose reduction or stopping treatment. Routine liver monitoring during ketamine treatment remains advisable.