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European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists

ISSN 0924-9338

4 papers in the library · 10 citations · publishing 2024-2026

Papers

Functional connectivity of the amygdala subregions and the antidepressant effects of repeated ketamine infusions in major depressive disorder.

European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists April 4, 2024 Haiyan Liu, Chengyu Wang, Xiaofeng Lan et al. 7 citations

Abnormal connectivity between a specific amygdala subregion (the left laterobasal amygdala) and the left precuneus in people with major depressive disorder is linked to how well ketamine treatment works. After six doses of ketamine (0.5 mg/kg), differences in connectivity changes between responders and nonresponders appeared in the bilateral centromedial amygdala with the left orbital part of the superior frontal gyrus and in the left laterobasal amygdala with the right middle frontal gyrus. A baseline difference in connectivity between the left laterobasal amygdala and the right superior/middle temporal gyrus predicted the antidepressant effect on Day 13, suggesting that ketamine may improve symptoms by regulating amygdala subregion networks.

Esketamine use in real-world clinical practice in patients with treatment-resistant depression.

European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists August 26, 2025 Ismael Conejero, Raquel Alvarez García, Alejandro Porras-Segovia et al. 2 citations

In a naturalistic study across four Madrid hospitals, 55% of 65 patients with treatment-resistant depression who received esketamine as an augmentation treatment achieved remission over follow-up. Among those who completed the standard protocol, remission rates rose to 67%, and to 70% for those receiving more than 19 administrations. Remission was associated with completing the standard protocol and with the absence of dissociative symptoms. Receiving more than 19 esketamine administrations increased the odds of remission. Adverse effects did not affect treatment continuation.

Sleep-administered ketamine/psychedelics: A streamlined strategy to address two challenges in research on ketamine and psychedelics.

European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists February 5, 2025 Shokouh Arjmand, Mats B Lindström, Carl M Sellgren et al. 1 citation

The dissociative effects of ketamine and psychedelics may be linked to their rapid antidepressant properties, but it is unclear whether these effects are necessary for therapeutic action. Because patients can often tell whether they received an active drug or placebo based on the dissociative experience, clinical trial results may be biased. The authors propose a novel approach: administering these drugs to patients during sleep to separate the subjective dissociative experience from the drug's biological effects, potentially allowing for better-controlled studies.

Functional outcomes with esketamine in treatment-resistant depression: A 6-month multicenter real-world study.

European psychiatry : the journal of the Association of European Psychiatrists June 10, 2026 Riccardo Guglielmo, Miriam Olivola, Alberto Inuggi et al.

Over six months of routine esketamine treatment for treatment-resistant depression, depressive symptoms and daily functioning both improved progressively. By month six, 78.3% of patients showed a symptomatic response and 46.7% reached symptomatic remission, while 78.3% showed a functional response but only 33.3% achieved functional remission. Functional remission accumulated more slowly than symptomatic remission, with cumulative rates of 5% at one month, 15% at three months, and 33.3% at six months. Higher baseline disability and more previous antidepressant trials were linked to lower odds of functional remission at six months. The findings suggest that functional improvement follows a distinct trajectory from symptom improvement and should be monitored separately in treatment-resistant depression.