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Ian Reardon

University of Pennsylvania

1 paper in the library

Papers

Concurrent Changes in Self-Reported Sleep Disturbance During At-Home Ketamine-Assisted Therapy for Depression: A Retrospective Analysis of 13,963 Adults

Research Square Jack Swain, Davis Carter, Leonardo Vando et al.

Among 13,963 adults with moderate-to-severe sleep disturbances who received at-home ketamine-assisted therapy for depression, 67.4% showed at least a 1-point improvement on a single sleep-related item from a depression screening tool after two sessions. By session six, 76.8% of completers met that threshold, and the average score dropped 48.8% from baseline. However, the study could not separate sleep changes from mood improvement because all participants were treated for depression and no control group was included. Side effects were reported by 3.7% to 5.0% of participants across sessions.