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Carla M. Canuso

2 papers in the library · 1,033 citations · publishing 2018-2020

Papers

Efficacy and Safety of Intranasal Esketamine for the Rapid Reduction of Symptoms of Depression and Suicidality in Patients at Imminent Risk for Suicide: Results of a Double-Blind, Randomized, Placebo-Controlled Study

American Journal of Psychiatry April 16, 2018 Carla M. Canuso, Jaskaran B. Singh, Maggie Fedgchin et al. 666 citations

Adding intranasal esketamine to standard care rapidly reduced depression symptoms in people at imminent suicide risk. In a double-blind trial, 68 participants received either esketamine (84 mg) or placebo twice weekly for four weeks. Depression scores improved significantly more with esketamine at 4 hours and 24 hours after the first dose, but not at 25 days. Suicidal thoughts improved at 4 hours but not later. Clinician-rated suicide risk did not differ between groups at any time. Common side effects of esketamine included nausea, dizziness, dissociation, unpleasant taste, and headache. The findings suggest esketamine may offer rapid but temporary relief for severe depression with suicide risk.

Esketamine Nasal Spray for Rapid Reduction of Major Depressive Disorder Symptoms in Patients Who Have Active Suicidal Ideation With Intent

The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry May 11, 2020 Dong-Jing Fu, Dawn F. Ionescu, Xiang Li et al. 367 citations

In adults hospitalized for major depressive disorder with active suicidal thoughts, adding esketamine nasal spray to standard treatment (antidepressants and hospitalization) reduced depression symptoms more than placebo plus standard treatment within 24 hours, with benefits persisting over four weeks. The difference in suicidal ideation severity between groups was not statistically significant. Common side effects of esketamine included dizziness, dissociation, headache, nausea, and drowsiness.