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Replication of distinct trajectories of antidepressant response to intravenous ketamine.

Authors :
O'Brien, Brittany
Lee, Jaehoon
Kim, Seungman
Nandra, Guriqbal S.
Pannu, Prabhneet
Swann, Alan C.
Murphy, Nicholas
Tamman, Amanda J.F.
Amarneh, Dania
Lijffijt, Marijn
Averill, Lynnette A.
Mathew, Sanjay J.
Source :
Journal of Affective Disorders. Jan2023, Vol. 321, p140-146. 7p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

<bold>Background: </bold>The goal of this study was to replicate previous findings of three distinct treatment response pathways associated with repeated intravenous (IV) ketamine infusions among patients with major depressive disorder (MDD).<bold>Methods: </bold>We conducted growth mixture modeling to estimate latent classes of change in depression (Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology-Self Report, QIDS-SR) across six treatment visits in 298 patients with MDD treated with IV ketamine in an outpatient community clinic. Mean age was 40.36 and patients were primarily male (58.4 %). The sample had relatively severe depression (QIDS-SR = 16.61) at pre-treatment and the majority had not responded to at least two prior medications.<bold>Results: </bold>Best-fit indices indicated three trajectory groups to optimally demonstrate non-linear, quadratic changes in depressive symptoms during ketamine treatment. Two groups had severe depression at baseline but diverged into a group of modest improvement over the treatment course (n = 78) and a group of patients with rapid improvement (n = 103). A third group had moderate depression at baseline with moderate improvement during the treatment course (n = 117). Additional planned trajectory comparisons showed that suicidality at entry was higher in the high depression groups and that change in suicidality severity followed that of depression.<bold>Limitations: </bold>This was a retrospective analysis of a naturalistic sample. Patients were unblinded and more heterogenous than those included in most controlled clinical trial samples.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>This replication study in an independent community-based ketamine clinic sample revealed similar response trajectories, with only about a third of depressed patients benefitting substantially from an acute induction course of ketamine infusions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01650327
Volume :
321
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
160237449
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2022.10.031