• J Fam Pract · Apr 2021

    Review

    Q/Is ketamine effective and safe for treatment-resistant depression?

    • Amanda Zorn, Sean Linn, Mat Jenkinson, Jon O Neher, Sarah Safranek, and Gary Kelsberg.
    • Valley Family Medicine Residency, University of Washington at Valley, Renton.
    • J Fam Pract. 2021 Apr 1; 70 (3): E1-E3.

    AbstractMAYBE, but it's too soon to tell. There is limited evidence that ketamine by itself is effective in the very short term. Single-dose intravenous (IV) ketamine is more likely than placebo (odds ratio = 11-13) to produce improvement (> 50%) in standardized depression scores in 1 to 3 days, lasting up to a week. Twice- or thriceweekly IV ketamine improves symptom scores by 20%-25% over 2 weeks (strength of recommendation [SOR]: B, meta-analysis of small, low-quality, randomized controlled trials [RCTs] and a single small RCT).Augmentation of sertraline with daily oral ketamine moderately improves symptom scores for 6 weeks in patients with moderate depression (SOR: B, small, lowquality RCTs).Augmentation of oral antidepressants (duloxetine, escitalopram, sertraline, venlafaxine) with intranasal esketamine spray improves response and remission rates at 4 weeks (16% for both outcomes) in patients with predominantly treatment-resistant major depression (SOR: A, meta-analysis of RCTs).Ketamine therapy is associated with confusion, emotional blunting, headache, dizziness, and blurred vision (SOR: A, metaanalyses).Nasal esketamine spray produces the adverse effects of dizziness, vertigo, and blurred vision severe enough to cause discontinuation in 4% of patients; it also can produce transient elevation of blood pressure (SOR: A, meta-analyses).

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