4.7 Article

A retrospective analysis of ketamine intravenous therapy for depression in real-world care settings

Journal

JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
Volume 301, Issue -, Pages 486-495

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.12.097

Keywords

Ketamine; Intravenous; Induction; Maintenance; Major depression; Real-world

Funding

  1. National Center For Advancing Translational Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [UL1TR003142]

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This study examined the treatment response of depression patients receiving KIT in community practices. The results showed that more than half of the patients exhibited a treatment response after induction, and approximately one-third achieved remission. KIT has a significant antidepressant effect, but a small percentage of patients experienced worsening symptoms.
Background: Outcomes of ketamine intravenous therapy (KIT) for depression in real-world care settings have been minimally evaluated. We set out to quantify treatment response to KIT in a large sample of patients from community-based practices. Methods: We retrospectively analyzed 9016 depression patients who received KIT between 2016 and 2020 at one of 178 community practices across the United States. Depression symptoms were evaluated using the Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9). The induction phase of KIT was defined to be a series of 4-8 infusions administered over 7 to 28 days. Results: Among the 537 patients who underwent induction and had sufficient data, 53.6% of patients showed a response (>= 50% reduction in PHQ-9 score) at 14-31 days post-induction and 28.9% remitted (PHQ-9 score drop to < 5). The effect size was d = 1.5. Among patients with baseline suicidal ideation (SI), 73.0% exhibited a reduction in SI. A subset (8.4%) of patients experienced an increase in depressive symptoms after induction while 6.0% of patients reported increased SI. The response rate was uniform across 4 levels of baseline depression severity. However, more severe illness was weakly correlated with a greater drop in scores while remission status was weakly inversely correlated with depression severity. Kaplan-Meier analyses showed that a patient who responds to KIT induction has approximately 80% probability of sustaining response at 4 weeks and approximately 60% probability at 8 weeks, even without maintenance infusions. Conclusion: KIT can elicit a robust antidepressant response in community clinics; however, a small percentage of patients worsened.

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