4.5 Article

Relationship Between Dissociation and Antidepressant Effects of Esketamine Nasal Spray in Patients With Treatment-Resistant Depression

Journal

INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF NEUROPSYCHOPHARMACOLOGY
Volume 25, Issue 4, Pages 269-279

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ijnp/pyab084

Keywords

Antidepressant; dissociation; esketamine; treatment-resistant depression

Funding

  1. Janssen Research and Development
  2. Janssen Research & Development, LLC

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This post-hoc analysis study found no significant correlation between dissociation and antidepressant effects in the use of Esketamine nasal spray for treatment-resistant depression.
Background In this post-hoc analysis, data from 2 positive, pivotal, phase 3 trials of esketamine nasal spray (ESK) in treatment-resistant depression (TRD)-short-term study (TRANSFORM-2) and maintenance study (SUSTAIN-1)-were analyzed to evaluate the relationship between dissociation and antidepressant effects of ESK. Methods Analysis by responder status, correlation analysis, and mediation analysis were performed to assess the relationships between peak Clinician Administered Dissociative States Scale (CADSS) scores after first (day 1) and last (day 25) ESK dose and change in Montgomery-angstrom sberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) total scores at the first (day 2) and last assessments (day 28) in TRANSFORM-2 and peak CADSS after first maintenance ESK dose and time to relapse in SUSTAIN-1 (only for mediation analysis). Results In TRANSFORM-2, the percentage of responders (>50% reduction in MADRS) at day 2 and day 28 did not significantly differ between patients who did vs did not manifest significant dissociation (peak CADSS scores >4 or <= 4, respectively) following the first ESK dose. Spearman correlation coefficients between dissociation and depression improvement were nonsignificant and close to zero. CADSS scores did not significantly mediate the reduction in MADRS at day 2 or 28 in TRANSFORM-2 or the time to depression relapse in SUSTAIN-1. The mean difference in MADRS between ESK and active-control arms persisted beyond day 2 without significant change across time, although the mean peak CADSS scores significantly decreased across consecutive doses and fewer patients experienced significant dissociation after the last ESK dose compared with the first. Conclusion Within the dose range tested, the dissociative and antidepressant effects of ESK were not significantly correlated.

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