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Intravenous infusion of ketamine can produce rapid and large symptom reduction in patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD) but presents major obstacles to clinical applicability, especially in community settings. Oral esketamine may be a promising addition to our TRD treatment armamentarium.
Aims
To explore the safety, tolerability and potential clinical effectiveness of a 3-week treatment with repeated, low-dose oral esketamine.
Method
Seven patients with chronic and severe TRD received 1.25 mg/kg generic oral esketamine daily, over 21 consecutive days. Scores on the Systematic Assessment for Treatment Emergent Events (SAFTEE), Community Assessment of Psychic Experiences (CAPE), Clinician Administered Dissociative States Scale (CADSS) and Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HRSD) instruments, as well as blood pressure and heart rate, were repeatedly assessed.
Results
Treatment with oral esketamine was well-tolerated. No serious side-effects occurred, and none of the participants discontinued treatment prematurely. Psychotomimetic effects were the most frequently reported adverse events. Mean HDRS score decreased by 16.5%, from 23.6 to 19.7. Three participants showed reductions in HDRS scores above the minimum clinically important difference (eight-point change), of whom two showed partial response. No participants showed full response or remission.
Conclusions
These results strengthen the idea that oral esketamine is a safe and well-tolerated treatment for patients with chronic and severe TRD, but therapeutic effects were modest. Results were used to design a randomised controlled trial that is currently in progress.
Recent studies with intravenous (i.v.) application of ketamine show
remarkable but short-term success in patients with MDD. Studies in
patients with chronic pain have used different ketamine applications for
longer time periods. This experience may be relevant for psychiatric
indications.
Aims
To review the literature about the dosing regimen, duration, effects and
side-effects of oral, intravenous, intranasal and subcutaneous routes of
administration of ketamine for treatment-resistant depression and
pain.
Method
Searches in PubMed with the terms ‘oral ketamine’, ‘depression’, ‘chronic
pain’, ‘neuropathic pain’, ‘intravenous ketamine’, ‘intranasal ketamine’
and ‘subcutaneous ketamine’ yielded 88 articles. We reviewed all papers
for information about dosing regimen, number of individuals who received
ketamine, number of ketamine days per study, results and side-effects, as
well as study quality.
Results
Overall, the methodological strength of studies investigating the
antidepressant effects of ketamine was considered low, regardless of the
route of administration. The doses for depression were in the lower range
compared with studies that investigated analgesic use. Studies on pain
suggested that oral ketamine may be acceptable for treatment-resistant
depression in terms of tolerability and side-effects.
Conclusions
Oral ketamine, given for longer time periods in the described doses,
appears to be well tolerated, but few studies have systematically
examined the longer-term negative consequences. The short- and
longer-term depression outcomes as well as side-effects need to be
studied with rigorous randomised controlled trials.
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