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Muhammad Youshay Jawad

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

5 papers in the library · 336 citations · publishing 2022-2023

Papers

Real-world effectiveness of ketamine in treatment-resistant depression: A systematic review & meta-analysis.

Journal of Psychiatric Research May 1, 2022 Yazen Alnefeesi, D. Chen-Li, Ella Krane et al. 177 citations

Ketamine shows substantial real-world antidepressant effects in treatment-resistant depression, with about 45% of patients responding and 30% achieving remission, based on a systematic review and meta-analysis of 79 studies involving 2665 patients. The effect varies considerably among individuals; more treatment-resistant cases remit less often, but response rates do not differ. The therapeutic benefit does not significantly decline with repeated treatments, indicating that even the most treatment-resistant patients may benefit and that mid-to-long term treatment is effective for many.

The abuse liability of ketamine: A scoping review of preclinical and clinical studies.

Journal of Psychiatric Research May 1, 2022 Tuyen T. Le, Isabel Pazos Cordero, Muhammad Youshay Jawad et al. 82 citations

Ketamine and its enantiomers show different abuse liability. Preclinical evidence indicates that (R,S)-ketamine and (S)-ketamine carry greater risk for abuse than (R)-ketamine, which at antidepressant-relevant doses in rodents appears safe with minimal liability. In clinical settings, limited studies suggest that single or repeated ketamine administrations under professional control did not lead to misuse, dependence, diversion, or gateway activity in patients with treatment-resistant depression. However, most clinical studies were retrospective and lacked systematic evaluation with validated scales. The review identified 65 eligible studies (55 preclinical, 10 clinical), with only 4 preclinical studies evaluating enantiomer abuse liability.

The Role of Ketamine in the Treatment of Bipolar Depression: A Scoping Review.

Brain sciences June 4, 2023 Muhammad Youshay Jawad, Saleha Qasim, Menglu Ni et al. 46 citations

Ketamine shows promise as a treatment for bipolar depression, though evidence remains weak. A scoping review of 10 clinical studies (5 randomized controlled trials and 5 open-label studies) found that ketamine was generally tolerable, with minimal risk of triggering manic or hypomanic episodes, and demonstrated some effectiveness in reducing depressive symptoms and suicidality. The treatment may be particularly useful for patients with treatment-resistant bipolar depression. However, more research is needed to establish ketamine's role in both acute and maintenance treatment phases, and to study its potential for preventing recurrence and suicidal behavior.

The therapeutic role of ketamine and esketamine in treating psychopathological domains of depression.

Neuropharmacology November 1, 2022 Muhammad Youshay Jawad, Joshua D. Di Vincenzo, Sebastian Badulescu et al. 29 citations

Ketamine is an effective rapid-acting antidepressant, but most research has focused on overall depression severity rather than specific symptom domains. This narrative review synthesizes evidence on ketamine's effects on cognition, anhedonia, suicidality, and psychosocial functionality. The strongest evidence supports ketamine's ability to reduce suicidality, and its rapid action may help prevent suicide. Evidence for other domains is weak, largely because few robust studies have assessed them as primary outcomes. The authors call for future research to examine ketamine's effects on specific depression domains to optimize treatment.

Neurobiological Correlates of Psilocybin Response in Depression.

The primary care companion for CNS disorders May 23, 2023 Saleha Qasim, Zaofashan Zaheer, Muhammad Youshay Jawad et al. 2 citations

A systematic review of five neuroimaging studies found that psilocybin therapy transiently increases global connectivity in major neural tracts and activates specific brain areas, and these changes are associated with antidepressant response in depressed patients. The pattern of functional brain changes resembles a 'brain reset' phenomenon and may serve as a predictor of psilocybin's antidepressant effects. Four of the studies were open-label, and one combined an open-label design with a randomized controlled trial. Three studies included psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy, and participants in most studies had treatment-resistant depression.