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Declan M. Mcloughlin

2 papers in the library · 66 citations · publishing 2018-2025

Papers

Kynurenine pathway metabolism and the neurobiology of treatment-resistant depression: Comparison of multiple ketamine infusions and electroconvulsive therapy.

Journal of Psychiatric Research February 10, 2018 Andrew P. Allen, Maura Naughton, J. Dowling et al. 53 citations

Current first-line antidepressants often take weeks to improve symptoms, but low-dose ketamine may work faster, even in treatment-resistant depression. This study compared the effects of ketamine infusion and electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) on biological markers related to stress and inflammation in patients with treatment-resistant depression versus healthy controls. Both treatments improved depressive symptoms. At baseline, patients showed differences in cortisol and kynurenine pathway metabolites compared to controls, though inflammatory markers were similar. After ECT, the cortisol awakening response decreased in responders. Ketamine showed a trend toward reduced kynurenine in responders but did not significantly alter any measured biomarkers.

Serial Ketamine Infusions as Adjunctive Therapy to Inpatient Care for Depression

JAMA psychiatry October 22, 2025 A. Jelovac, Cathal Mccaffrey, Masashi Terao et al. 13 citations

Repeated intravenous ketamine infusions are no more effective than a placebo (midazolam) for reducing depressive symptoms in inpatients with moderate to severe depression. In a randomized clinical trial, there was no statistically significant difference between the ketamine and midazolam groups on the primary outcome of depression severity at the end of treatment. No significant differences were found on secondary measures of efficacy, cognition, economic outcomes, or quality of life. These results do not support a superior antidepressant effect for serial intravenous ketamine as an addition to usual inpatient care.