Real World Effectiveness of Repeated Ketamine Infusions for Treatment Resistant Bipolar Depression

This real-world study (n=66) assessed the effects of four sub-anaesthetic doses of intravenous ketamine (35-52.5 mg/70kg) in participants with bipolar depression. Significant antidepressant effects were measured using the QIDS-SR, and further reductions were observed following each subsequent infusion. The rate of remission was 20% after all infusions.

Abstract

Background: Clinical trials have demonstrated rapid antidepressant effects with intravenous (IV) ketamine for major depressive disorder, with relatively less research specifically for bipolar depression. Herein, we describe the real-world effectiveness of repeated ketamine infusions for treatment-resistant bipolar depression.

Methods: This study was conducted in a community clinic in Mississauga, Ontario (Canadian Rapid Treatment Centre of Excellence; Braxia Health). In this observational study (NCT04209296), patients with treatment-resistant bipolar I/II depression (n=66) received four sub-anesthetic doses of IV ketamine (0.5-0.75mg/kg) over a two-week period. Symptoms of depression, suicidality, anxiety and functioning were assessed with validated self-report measures.

Results: Statistically and clinically significant antidepressant effects were observed in the overall sample, as measured by the Quick Inventory for Depression Symptomatology-Self Report-16 (QIDS-SR16) with further reductions in depressive symptoms observed after each subsequent infusion (n=66; mean QIDS-SR16 reduction of 6.08+/-1.39; p < 0.0001). Significant reductions of suicidal thoughts (QIDS-SR16-Suicide Item) and anxiety (Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7) were also observed with functional improvements on the Sheehan Disability Scale (p < 0.0001 on all measures). Moreover, the response rate (QIDS-SR16 total score decrease ≥ 50% from baseline) was 35% and remission rate (QIDS-SR16 total score ≤5) was 20% after four infusions. Infusions were generally well tolerated with treatment-emergent hypomania observed in only three patients (4.5%) with zero cases of mania or psychosis.

Conclusions: Real world effectiveness of IV ketamine for bipolar depression was observed. Repeated doses were associated with greater symptom reduction and adequate tolerability.”

Authors: Farhan Fancy, Nelson B. Rodrigues, Joshua D. Di Vincenzo, Edmond H. Chau, Rickinder Sethi, Muhammad I. Husain, Hartej Gill, Aniqa Tabassum, Andrea Mckenzie, Lee Phan, Roger S. McIntyre & Joshua D. Rosenblat

Study details

Compounds studied
Ketamine

Topics studied
Bipolar Disorder

Study characteristics
Open-Label

Participants
66 Humans

Compound Details

The psychedelics given at which dose and how many times

Ketamine 35 - 52.5
mg | 4x

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