TY - JOUR
T1 - Intravenous Ketamine for Late-Life Treatment-Resistant Depression
T2 - A Pilot Study of Tolerability, Safety, Clinical Benefits, and Effect on Cognition
AU - Oughli, Hanadi Ajam
AU - Gebara, Marie Anne
AU - Ciarleglio, Adam
AU - Lavretsky, Helen
AU - Brown, Patrick J.
AU - Flint, Alastair J.
AU - Farber, Nuri B.
AU - Karp, Jordan F.
AU - Mulsant, Benoit H.
AU - Reynolds, Charles F.
AU - Roose, Steven P.
AU - Yang, Lei
AU - Butters, Meryl A.
AU - Lenze, Eric J.
N1 - Funding Information:
Dr. Farber has patents on the use of clonidine to decrease the side effects of NMDA antagonists Dr. Flint has received grant support from the U.S. National Institutes of Health, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, Canadian Institutes of Health Research, Brain Canada, Ontario Brain Institute, Alzheimer's Association, AGE-WELL, Canadian Foundation for Healthcare Improvement, and University of Toronto. Dr. Gebara receives support from the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Department of Human Services and has received compensation from Otsuka for developing and presenting a disease-state webinar. Dr. Karp has received compensation for development and presentation of a (disease-state, not product-focused) webinar for Otsuka. He has served as consultant (paid) to NightWare and (with potential for equity) to AifredHealth. He receives compensation from Journal of Clinical Psychiatry and American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry for editorial board service. Dr. Reynolds receives royalty income as co-inventor of the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index and a stipend as editor of the AJGP. Dr. Lavretsky receives support from K24 AT009198. Dr. Lenze receives research support from Janssen and MagStim, has consulted for Prodeo, IngenioRx, Boehringer-Ingelheim, and Pritikin ICR, and has applied for a patent for the use of fluvoxamine in the treatment of COVID-19. Dr. Mulsant holds and receives support from the Labatt Family Chair in Biology of Depression in Late-Life Adults at the University of Toronto. He currently receives research support from Brain Canada, the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, the CAMH Foundation, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (PCORI), the U.S. National Institute of Health (NIH), Capital Solution Design LLC (software used in a study founded by CAMH Foundation), and HAPPYneuron (software used in a study founded by Brain Canada). He has been an unpaid consultant to Myriad Neuroscience. Dr. Ciarleglio is supported by the NIMH K01 MH113850.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Association for Geriatric Psychiatry
PY - 2023/3
Y1 - 2023/3
N2 - Objective: Evidence-based treatment options for late-life treatment-resistant depression (TRD) are limited. Ketamine is a promising treatment for TRD; however, there is a paucity of data on its safety and efficacy in older adults. Methods: In this pilot clinical trial, 25 adults aged ≥60 years with TRD received IV ketamine openly twice a week for 4 weeks; partial responders at the end of this acute phase were eligible to receive weekly infusions for 4 more weeks in a continuation phase. Acceptability, tolerability, and safety, including adverse and serious adverse events (AEs and SAEs), blood pressure changes, dissociation, craving, in addition to rates of depression response and remission were evaluated. The NIH Toolbox Cognitive Battery was used to assess specific measures of executive function (EF) and overall fluid cognition. Results: Completion rates were 88% for the acute phase and 100% for the continuation phase. No AEs resulted in participant discontinuation, and there were no SAEs. Treatment-emergent elevation of blood pressure, dissociation, and craving were transient and did not result in any participant discontinuation. Depressive symptoms improved significantly and 48% of participants responded. During the acute phase, the EF measures and the fluid cognition composite score improved (Cohen's d = 0.61), and these improvements were sustained in the continuation phase. Conclusion: This pilot study suggests that repeated IV ketamine infusions are well-tolerated and are associated with improvement in depression and EF in older adults with TRD. These promising findings need to be confirmed and extended in a larger randomized controlled trial.
AB - Objective: Evidence-based treatment options for late-life treatment-resistant depression (TRD) are limited. Ketamine is a promising treatment for TRD; however, there is a paucity of data on its safety and efficacy in older adults. Methods: In this pilot clinical trial, 25 adults aged ≥60 years with TRD received IV ketamine openly twice a week for 4 weeks; partial responders at the end of this acute phase were eligible to receive weekly infusions for 4 more weeks in a continuation phase. Acceptability, tolerability, and safety, including adverse and serious adverse events (AEs and SAEs), blood pressure changes, dissociation, craving, in addition to rates of depression response and remission were evaluated. The NIH Toolbox Cognitive Battery was used to assess specific measures of executive function (EF) and overall fluid cognition. Results: Completion rates were 88% for the acute phase and 100% for the continuation phase. No AEs resulted in participant discontinuation, and there were no SAEs. Treatment-emergent elevation of blood pressure, dissociation, and craving were transient and did not result in any participant discontinuation. Depressive symptoms improved significantly and 48% of participants responded. During the acute phase, the EF measures and the fluid cognition composite score improved (Cohen's d = 0.61), and these improvements were sustained in the continuation phase. Conclusion: This pilot study suggests that repeated IV ketamine infusions are well-tolerated and are associated with improvement in depression and EF in older adults with TRD. These promising findings need to be confirmed and extended in a larger randomized controlled trial.
KW - cognition
KW - geriatric
KW - intravenous ketamine
KW - Treatment-resistant depression
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U2 - 10.1016/j.jagp.2022.11.013
DO - 10.1016/j.jagp.2022.11.013
M3 - Article
C2 - 36529623
AN - SCOPUS:85144450244
SN - 1064-7481
VL - 31
SP - 210
EP - 221
JO - American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry
JF - American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry
IS - 3
ER -