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A. Petralia

3 papers in the library · 62 citations · publishing 2024-2025

Papers

Efficacy and safety of ketamine and esketamine for unipolar and bipolar depression: an overview of systematic reviews with meta-analysis

Frontiers in Psychiatry February 1, 2024 Alessandro Rodolico, Pierfelice Cutrufelli, A. di Francesco et al. 28 citations

Ketamine and its enantiomer esketamine show promise for quickly relieving suicidal thoughts in unipolar and bipolar depression, but the evidence is weak. An overview of 26 systematic reviews and 44 randomized controlled trials involving 3,316 subjects found the intervention effective and well-tolerated, but the quality of the included reviews and original studies is poor, resulting in low certainty of evidence. Insufficient data prevent differentiation between effects in unipolar versus bipolar depression. Enhanced methodological rigor in future research is needed to inform treatment guidelines.

Patient Experience with Intranasal Esketamine in Treatment-Resistant Depression: Insights from a Multicentric Italian Study (REAL-ESKperience)

Journal of Personalized Medicine April 1, 2025 Marco Di, M. Pepe, G. D’andrea et al. 18 citations

Most patients with treatment-resistant depression reported positive experiences with esketamine nasal spray. In a survey of 236 outpatients, 88.4% reported enhanced quality of life. Satisfaction levels varied: 10.2% were unsatisfied, 19.1% partially satisfied, 44.4% satisfied, and 26.3% very satisfied. The most satisfied patients noted early improvements in depressed mood, suicidal thoughts, and restlessness, and reported functional gains across all domains. Artificial intelligence analysis of open-ended responses identified themes of personal growth and a desire for tailored treatment settings. Integrating patient-reported experiences may help personalize care and improve adherence.

Effectiveness of repeated Esketamine nasal spray administration on anhedonic symptoms in treatment-resistant bipolar and unipolar depression: A secondary analysis from the REAL-ESK study group.

Psychiatry Research July 26, 2025 G. D’andrea, C. Cavallotto, M. Pettorruso et al. 16 citations

Anhedonia, the reduced ability to experience pleasure, is a core symptom of both unipolar and bipolar depression that often responds poorly to standard antidepressants. In a real-world observational study of 253 treatment-resistant patients (199 with unipolar depression, 54 with bipolar depression), repeated doses of esketamine nasal spray added to ongoing medication significantly reduced anhedonia over three months. The effect was distinct from overall mood improvement. At three months, 51.92% of bipolar and 38% of unipolar patients showed at least a 50% reduction in anhedonia scores. Dropout rates were low (around 13–14%), and manic switches were rare. The findings suggest esketamine has a targeted, transdiagnostic anti-anhedonic effect.