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Sivan Kinreich

State University of New York Downstate Medical Center, Brooklyn, NY 11203, USA.

1 paper in the library · 8 citations · publishing 2025

Papers

Combined ketamine and psychotherapy provide no additional benefit beyond ketamine alone in treating depression or PTSD: Evidence from a help-seeking sample.

Journal of affective disorders July 15, 2025 Tyler M Moore, Kathryn Walker, Emma Tung et al. 8 citations

Ketamine alone and ketamine combined with psychotherapy both rapidly reduce depression and PTSD symptoms, with no significant difference between the two approaches over 30 or 180 days. Analyzing overlapping samples of 202, 470, and 624 help-seeking individuals (about 60% female, average age 42) who received either ketamine alone or ketamine plus psychotherapy across 4 to 14 sessions, both groups showed substantial improvement with rapid initial decline followed by stabilization. Exploratory patterns suggested younger females may benefit more from combined treatment, while older males may do better with ketamine alone, but these differences were not statistically significant. Ketamine's effects appear robust enough that adding psychotherapy during acute treatment does not enhance outcomes, though longer-term benefits warrant further study.