Bipolar DisorderDepressive DisordersMajor Depressive Disorder (MDD)Treatment-Resistant Depression (TRD)SchizophreniaSafety & Risk ManagementKetamine

Dissociative symptoms with intravenous ketamine in treatment-resistant depression exploratory observational study

In 49 inpatients with treatment‑resistant depression receiving eight 0.5 mg/kg IV ketamine infusions, dissociative symptoms showed significant transient increases (CADSS; P = .003) while psychomimetic symptoms (BPRS) did not significantly change, and both returned to “absent” within one hour and were not associated with treatment outcome. The results suggest a favourable acute safety profile for ketamine as an adjunct to standard pharmacotherapy, although the small, unblinded observational design limits power and causal inference.

Authors

  • Wiesław Cubała

Published

Medicine
individual Study

Abstract

There is evidence for ketamine use in treatment-resistant depression (TRD). Several safety and tolerability concerns arise regarding adverse drug reactions and specific subpopulations. This paper aims to investigate the relationship between dissociative and psychometric measures in course of intravenous ketamine treatment in TRD inpatients with major depressive disorder and bipolar disorder. This study result represents safety data in a population of 49 inpatients with major depressive disorder and bipolar disorder subjects receiving eight 0.5 mg/kg of ketamine intravenous infusions, with a duration of 40 min each, as an add-on treatment to standard-of-care pharmacotherapy, registered in the naturalistic observational protocol of the tertiary reference unit for mood disorders (NCT04226963). The safety psychometrics assessed dissociation and psychomimetic symptomatology with the Clinician-Administered Dissociative States Scale (CADSS) the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS). The significant differences in CADSS scores between measurements in course of the treatment were observed (P = .003). No significant differences between BPRS measurements were made after infusions. In each case, both BPRS and CADSS values dropped to the “absent” level within 1 hour from the infusion. Neither CADSS nor BPRS scores were associated with the treatment outcome. The study demonstrates a good safety profile of intravenous ketamine as an add-on intervention to current psychotropic medication in TRD. The abatement of dissociation was observed in time with no sequelae nor harm. The study provides no support for the association between dissociation and treatment outcome. This study may be underpowered due to the small sample size. The protocol was defined as a study on acute depressive symptomatology without blinding.

Available with Blossom Pro

Research Summary of 'Dissociative symptoms with intravenous ketamine in treatment-resistant depression exploratory observational study'

Introduction

Włodarczyk and colleagues situate their study within accumulating evidence that ketamine can produce rapid antidepressant effects in treatment-resistant depression (TRD) across major depressive disorder (MDD) and bipolar disorder (BP). The introduction highlights safety and tolerability concerns, particularly acute dissociative symptomatology and psychotomimetic effects, and notes that prior work linking dissociation to antidepressant response is limited and inconsistent. Standard instruments for acute dissociation and psychotic-like symptoms—the Clinician-Administered Dissociative States Scale (CADSS) and the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) positive-symptom subscale—are identified as appropriate measures for assessing these effects during ketamine treatment.

Expert Research Summaries

Go Pro to access AI-powered section-by-section summaries, editorial takes, and the full research toolkit.

Full Text PDF

Full Paper PDF

Create a free account to open full-text PDFs.

Study Details

References (8)

Papers cited by this study that are also in Blossom

Antidepressant effects of ketamine in depressed patients

Berman, R. M., Cappiello, A., Anand, A. et al. · Biological Psychiatry (2000)

Rapid infusion of esketamine for unipolar and bipolar depression: a retrospective chart review

Correia-Melo, F. S., Argolo, F. C., Araújo-de-Freitas, L. et al. · Neuropsychiatric Disease And Treatment (2017)

A Randomized Add-on Trial of an N-methyl-D-aspartate Antagonist in Treatment-Resistant Bipolar Depression

Diazgranados, N., Ibrahim, L., Brutsche, N. E. et al. · JAMA Psychiatry (2010)

943 cited
Investigation of medical effect of multiple ketamine infusions on patients with major depressive disorder

Zheng, W., Zhou, Y-L., Wang, C-Y. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2019)

Do the dissociative side effects of ketamine mediate its antidepressant effects?

Luckenbaugh, D. A., Niciu, M. J., Ionescu, D. F. et al. · Journal of Affective Disorders (2014)

Relationship of ketamine’s antidepressant and psychotomimetic effects in unipolar depression

Sos, P., Klirova, M., Novák, T. et al. · Neuropsychiatric Disease And Treatment (2013)

Features of dissociation differentially predict antidepressant response to ketamine in treatment-resistant depression

Niciu, M. J., Shovestul, B. J., Jaso, B. A. et al. · Journal of Affective Disorders (2018)

Cited By (1)

Papers in Blossom that reference this study

A transdiagnostic systematic review and meta-analysis of ketamine's anxiolytic effects

Hartland, H., Mahdavi, K., Jelen, L. A. et al. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2023)

18 cited

Your Personal Research Library

Go Pro to save papers, add notes, rate studies, and organize your research into custom shelves.