Skip to content

Maud Rothärmel

University Department of Psychiatry, Therapeutic Excellence Center, Psychiatry Institute, Rouvray Hospital, Sotteville-lès-Rouen, France.

4 papers in the library · 20 citations · publishing 2024-2026

Papers

Use of Esketamine Nasal Spray in Patients with Treatment-Resistant Depression in Routine Practice: A Real-World French Study.

Depression and anxiety January 1, 2024 Ludovic Samalin, Lila Mekaoui, Maud Rothärmel et al. 16 citations

In a French real-world study of 157 patients with treatment-resistant depression who began esketamine nasal spray, most discontinued treatment within about 19 weeks. After one month, 40% of those still on the drug showed clinical response and 20% achieved remission. Adverse events occurred in 69% of patients, with serious events in 17%. The findings align with earlier clinical trials, confirming esketamine's role in treating treatment-resistant depression.

Real-world demographic and clinical profiles of patients with treatment-resistant depression initiated on esketamine nasal spray.

International journal of psychiatry in clinical practice June 1, 2024 Ludovic Samalin, Lila Mekaoui, Pierre De Maricourt et al. 3 citations

An observational study of adults with treatment-resistant depression (TRD) treated with esketamine across three time periods found that patients had moderate-to-severe depression, with an average Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale score of 32.6. The 157 treated patients (average age 49.0 years, 66.2% female) showed varied disease severity, subtypes, and comorbidities across cohorts. Later cohorts used esketamine earlier and before other treatments. The findings indicate a high burden of TRD and suggest esketamine is a potentially useful alternative, especially as clinicians gain more familiarity and access.

Trauma re-experiencing episodes during esketamine treatment in patients with treatment-resistant depression and comorbid PTSD: a retrospective case series.

European journal of psychotraumatology December 1, 2026 Maud Rothärmel, Lila Mekaoui, François Kazour et al. 1 citation

In a retrospective study of 22 adults with treatment-resistant depression and comorbid post-traumatic stress disorder who received esketamine nasal spray, trauma re-experiencing episodes occurred during treatment sessions. For 16 patients (72.7%) these episodes disappeared as sessions progressed. Treatment was stopped for 6 patients (27.3%) due to re-experiencing. Among those who continued esketamine, depression response rate was 45.5% and remission 22.7%; PTSD improvement rate was 45.5% and remission 18.2%. The findings suggest esketamine can be safely administered in this comorbid population and that trauma re-experiencing does not prevent clinical improvement.

Effectiveness and factors associated with esketamine response during the 4-week induction period for treatment-resistant depression: post-hoc analysis of the real-world ESKALE study.

Journal of psychiatric research June 1, 2026 Ludovic Samalin, Maud Rothärmel, Lila Mekaoui et al.

In patients with treatment-resistant depression, depressive symptoms improved rapidly during the first four weeks of intranasal esketamine treatment. Among 128 patients in a French real-world study, the average depression rating score fell by 7.5 points after one week and by 13.5 points after four weeks. The proportion of patients whose score dropped by at least half rose from 19.4% at week 1 to 47.4% at week 4. Experiencing dissociation during the first week was linked to a threefold higher chance of response at week 1, but no other factors predicted response. The findings suggest early dissociation may play a role in treatment response, but more research is needed on prognostic factors.