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Home » Major Depressive Disorder

Psychiatric Times. Vol. 29 No. 7
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NEWS 

Ketamine-Induced Optimism: New Hope for the Development of Rapid-Acting Antidepressants

By Gerard Sanacora, MD, PhD | July 13, 2012

Dr Sanacora is Professor of Psychiatry at the Yale University School of Medicine and Director of the Yale Depression Research Program in New Haven, Conn. Dr Sanacora has received consulting fees form Abbott Laboratories, AstraZeneca, Avanir Pharmaceuticals, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Evotec, Hoffmann-La Roche, Eli Lilly and Company, Novartis, and Novum Pharmaceutical Research Services over the past 24 months. He has also received additional grant support from AstraZeneca, Bristol-Myers Squibb, Hoffmann-La Roche, Merck & Co, Sanofi-Aventis, and Sunovion Pharmaceuticals Inc over the past 24 months. In addition, he is a co-inventor on filed patent application by Yale University (PCTWO06108055A1).


Phelps and colleagues19 report that individuals with a family history of alcohol(Drug information on alcohol) dependence had significantly greater mood improvement following ketamine(Drug information on ketamine) infusion than those who had no family history of alcohol dependence. On the basis of these findings, a study (clinicaltrials.gov identifier: NCT01551329) is evaluating the efficacy of ketamine in reducing depressive symptoms in patients with a comorbid major depressive episode and alcohol dependence. In an attempt to examine the potential benefits of ketamine treatment outside of mood disorders, a recent study in patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder showed ketamine to have sustained effects on comorbid mood symptoms but only very transient effects on obsessions and compulsions.20 Another recently initiated study (NCT00749203) is attempting to investigate whether ketamine decreases symptoms of PTSD.

Unresolved issues and concerns

(MORE: New Claims and Findings for Ketamine in Severe Depression)

The aforementioned studies with ketamine have generated great interest from both academic centers and the pharmaceutical industry. However, there remain several unresolved issues with the studies and concerns about the drug’s safety in this setting that need to be better addressed before widespread implementation in clinical practice. First, there is the concern that none of the studies published to date have been able to maintain a true blind. Since the effects of ketamine on perception and cognition are usually evident to both the patient and the investigators, the blind is likely compromised in studies in which saline is used as the placebo control. Attempts are now under way to more effectively institute blinding by using midazolam(Drug information on midazolam) as the comparator in a randomized clinical trial (NCT00768430).

Second, the optimal dose and route of delivery have yet to be determined. Most studies use the 0.5 mg/kg dose delivered by IV infusion over 40 minutes, as initially reported in the Berman study over a decade ago. Studies are under way that examine both the optimal dose range (NCT01558063 and NCT01441505) and alternative routes of administration (NCT01304147).

Third, and perhaps the most clinically important unknown, is whether it will be possible to maintain the ketamine-induced antidepressant response for a sustained period. A recent study found that a single sub-anesthetic dose of ketamine provides a moderate antidepressant effect over a 28-day follow-up period and that 27% of ketamine responders maintain improvement for 4 weeks fol-lowing a single ketamine infusion, The average time to relapse was approximately 2 weeks, however.21 This result has prompted a search for novel ways of extending the antidepressant response. A few preliminary studies that attempted to extend the response with oral medication strategies have not yet shown success, but results of a study of 6 open-label ketamine infusions over 12 days suggest that the effect can be safely extended with a limited number of repeated doses.22 Other studies investigating the value of repeated ketamine dosing in sustaining the antidepressant response are now under way (NCT01582945 and NCT00548964).

The use of repeated dosing underscores the potential safety concerns of ketamine. Ketamine has been used in hundreds of thousands of patients worldwide for surgical anesthesia and emergency medical procedures since 1965, and it is considered to have a “high degree of safety” when used for procedural sedation.23 However, there remain safety concerns surrounding the drug’s acute and chronic physiological and psychological effects, its abuse liability, its effects on the kidneys and liver, and also its potential neurotoxicity.

NMDA receptor antagonists

The adverse effects of long-term treatment need to be carefully considered when evaluating the risk to benefit ratio associated with ketamine. Would other NMDA antagonists provide a similar benefit without the same level of potential risks? Memantine(Drug information on memantine), a relatively weak NMDA receptor antagonist did not show efficacy superior to that of placebo in several small proof-of-concept studies in MDD, bipolar disorder, and late-life depression.24-26 However, the full dose range of the drug had not been tested in the studies and final results from several ongoing studies have not been reported yet.

A large, phase 2, multisite clinical trial (NCT00781742) of another nonselective NMDA antagonist—AZD6765—that enrolled 152 participants was recently completed. The results of this study that examined the safety and efficacy of 2 drug doses administered multiple times over a 3-week period and results of 2 smaller studies (NCT00491686 and NCT00986479) that examined the safety and efficacy of a single infusion of AZD6765 should be available soon. A second, larger, phase 2, repeated-dosing study (NCT01482221) with this drug is currently under way. Its aim is to recruit more than 280 participants internationally.

Other studies have begun to investigate the effects of more selective NMDA receptor drugs. A positive study was reported with traxoprodil (CP-101,606), an NMDA receptor antagonist with relative selectivity for the NR2B-containing subset of NMDA receptors. The study of 30 patients who had not responded to a prospective, 6-week, open-label trial of paroxetine(Drug information on paroxetine) showed a 60% response rate at day 5 compared with a 20% response rate for placebo. The data suggest that the antidepressant effects are not limited to some unique properties of ketamine.27 However, not all doses used in this study were free of psychotomimetic effects. A small proof-of-concept study (NCT00472576) that examined the effects of orally administered MK-0657, another selective NR2B NMDA antagonist, was also recently completed and the results should be available shortly.

Following on the exciting findings in fear extinction and phobia treatment, there are a number of studies on the effects of D-cycloserine—the same partial agonist at the NMDA receptor-glycine site reported on by Crane in the 1950s—in a variety of neuropsychiatric disorders, including depressive symptoms.28 A phase 2 study (NCT01234558) currently enrolling 80 participants to investigate the safety and efficacy of single-dose administration of a novel NMDA receptor glycine(Drug information on glycine)-site functional partial agonist, GLYX-13, should be completed in the near future.

FIGURE 2

Glutamatergic neurotransmitter system

In addition to studies specifically examining the potential antidepressant efficacy of drugs that target the NMDA receptor, there are several ongoing early-phase clinical trials evaluating the efficacy of drugs that target other components of the glutamatergic neurotransmitter system. (Figure 2 illustrates some of these pharmacological targets.)

Interest in the novel glutamatergic drug riluzole(Drug information on riluzole), which appears to modulate both glutamate release and clearance and is currently FDA-approved for the treatment of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, was fueled by evidence of its antidepressant-like and neuroprotective properties in humans and rodent models. Several small open-label studies have reported positive results in a variety of mood and anxiety disorders.29 The first large, multisite, placebo-controlled, randomized clinical trial in treatment-resistant MDD (NCT01204918) is under way and actively recruiting. A second, smaller, randomized clinical trial in bipolar depression (NCT00376220) has been completed recently, and results should be available shortly. Other studies that are evaluating riluzole’s effects in a variety of disorders as well as in the pediatric population are also currently under way.

Based on preclinical evidence that demonstrates that mGluR5 antagonists possess antidepressant and anxiolytic effects, a phase 2 clinical trial (NCT00809562) with a novel mGluR5 antagonist, RO4917523, examined safety and efficacy in a population of patients with treatment-resistant MDD. The trial was recently completed, but the results are not yet available. Similarly, a study (NCT01457677) evaluating the antidepressant properties of an mGluR2/3 antagonist, RO4995819, was recently initiated on the basis of strong evidence that suggests that this class of drugs has potent antidepressant effects in rodent models. A second drug, BCI-838, that acts as an mGluR2/3 antagonist is currently in phase 1 studies (NCT01548703).

Finally, there is growing interest in the effects of N-acetylcysteine (NAC) on glutamate neurotransmission and in NAC as treatment of a variety of neuropsychiatric disorders. In addition to its function as a glutathione precursor, NAC modulates glial glutamate release through its actions on the glutamate/cystine antiporter and can modulate extracellular levels in specific brain regions. Preliminary studies suggest that NAC may be an effective augmentation strategy for the treatment of bipolar depression, but follow-up studies are needed.30

Summary

There is rapidly escalating interest in drugs that target the glutamatergic neurotransmitter system, especially NMDA receptor modulators. The hope is that they will fill the large unmet need for rapid-acting antidepressant medications with efficacy in treatment-resistant patients.31 While early-phase clinical studies provide strong evidence that this novel class of drugs may advance our ability to treat mood disorders, the treatments remain in the realm of experimental therapeutics. Several important questions still need to be answered related to dosage, efficacy compared with a truly blinded placebo, and duration of effect of these drugs.

There are several known potential risks associated with ketamine administration, including physiological and psychological effects, substance abuse liability, cystitis, and hepatotoxicity, that should be seriously considered before initiating a trial of ketamine for the treatment of a mood disorder. At the present time, consideration of ketamine or similar drugs should be limited to patients with well-documented treatment-resistant depressive episodes.

Whenever possible, it is prudent to consider enrolling a patient in one of the multiple ongoing clinical trials that are available in many locations around the country. Scrutiny of the study protocols by institutional review boards before trial initiation helps ensure patient safety in these clinical trials. In addition, it is important to remember that patient participation in these well-controlled and well-documented clinical trials is required to ultimately provide answers to the many questions regarding the ultimate safety and efficacy of this novel class of medications.

Clinicaltrials.gov is a valuable resource to guide clinicians and patients to local clinical trials or studies allowing for longer-term inpatient stays, and should serve as a primary reference for clinicians considering these novel treatments for patients.

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by ann quinn phyfer | August 24, 2012 6:48 AM EDT

I'm wondering if ketamine would be effective in the depression associated with alzheimer's. Ann Phyfer Wingate

by mark holscher | August 22, 2012 7:39 AM EDT

after reading about one clinical trial using N acetyl cystiene at a dose of 1000mg bid in 2010 and its effective response on trd i checked with a pharmD and others about the safety of a trial of this drug/supplement in some of my most difficult patients. i have used a smaller dose to start 600mg once daily then up to 600mg bid in two weeks. i havent promised anything to the two patients one of whom is on parnate/ depakote and has had trd and bp2 for 40 years.
the response so far in onw month has been amazing. he says he has a sense of calm and clearer thinking with less hypersensitivity than he can remember with no obvious side effects. if this continues i plan to initiate treatment of other patients with the same trial and see what happens. i try not to prime the pump by telling then exactly what the supplement does so they can report to me in their own words any obvous benefit. it will be interesting to see if the effects continue without needing to increase the dose.
it will be great is a supplement that costs 14.00 a month could have true benefit in this group of patients who suffer so much with this disabiling disease. thanks for your time.

by Chandan Nayak | August 15, 2012 2:07 PM EDT

great article. I wish I read this 10 years ago. the elusive non-serotonin antidepressant is likely out there somewhere, but doesnt have enough data to justify its use. The current FDA-approved NMDA meds are really not helpful clinically - I wish they were. NAC has some merit now, apparently in cannabis abuse. I agree with everything in the article, but I am suspicious of any cited articles that are looking for meds for "bipolar depression" (I find that most researchers dont diagnose this properly and often dont screen for personality disorders and addiction). That being said, I look forward to the day when we can have more NMDA meds in our arsenal.

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Ketamine-Induced Optimism: New Hope for the Development of Rapid-Acting Antidepressants

New Medication Strategies for Non-responsive Depressed Patients

Ketamine, Cum Grano Salis

New Claims and Findings for Ketamine in Severe Depression





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