4.5 Review

Pharmacogenetic and drug interaction aspects on ketamine safety in its use as antidepressant - implications for precision dosing in a global perspective

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 88, Issue 12, Pages 5149-5165

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/bcp.15467

Keywords

adverse drug reaction; drug metabolism; drug safety; drug-drug interaction; esketamine; genetic polymorphism; ketamine; pharmacogenetics; pharmacokinetics

Funding

  1. European Union [668353]
  2. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation

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The long-term use of ketamine and esketamine as antidepressants requires further research to improve safety, dosing, and identification of individuals at risk of drug-drug interactions.
Ketamine and its enantiomer S-ketamine (esketamine) are known to produce rapid-onset antidepressant effects in major depression. Intranasal esketamine has recently come onto the market as an antidepressant. Besides experience from short-term use in anaesthesia and analgesia, the experience with ketamine as long-term medication is rather low. The use of ketamine and esketamine is limited due to potential neurotoxicity, psychotomimetic side effects, potential abuse and interindividual variability in treatment response including cessation of therapy. Therefore, taking a look at individual patient risks and potential underlying variability in pharmacokinetics may improve safety and dosing of these new antidepressant drugs in clinical practice. Differential drug metabolism due to polymorphic cytochrome P450 (CYP) enzymes and gene-drug interactions are known to influence the efficacy and safety of many drugs. Ketamine and esketamine are metabolized by polymorphic CYP enzymes including CYP2B6, CYP3A4, CYP2C9 and CYP2A6. In antidepressant drug therapy, usually multiple drugs are administered which are substrates of CYP enzymes, increasing the risk for drug-drug interactions. We reviewed the potential impact of polymorphic CYP variants and common drug-drug interactions in antidepressant drug therapy affecting ketamine pharmacokinetics, and the role for dose optimization. The use of ketamine or intranasal esketamine as antidepressants demands a better understanding of the factors that may impact its metabolism and efficacy in long-term use. In addition to other clinical and environmental confounders, prior information on the pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic determinants of response variability to ketamine and esketamine may inform on dose optimization and identification of individuals at risk of adverse drug reactions.

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