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Acute Dissociation and Ketamine's Antidepressant and Anti-Suicidal Ideation Effects in a Midazolam-controlled Trial.
International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology 2024 April 4
OBJECTIVE: Explore relationships of acute dissociative effects of intravenous ketamine with change in depression and suicidal ideation and with plasma metabolite levels in a randomized, midazolam-controlled trial.
METHOD: Data from a completed trial in suicidal, depressed participants (N=40) randomized to ketamine was used to examine relationships between ketamine treatment-emergent dissociative and psychotomimetic symptoms with pre/post-infusion changes in suicidal ideation and depression severity. Non-parametric correlational statistics were used. These methods were also used to explore associations between dissociative or psychotomimetic symptoms and blood levels of ketamine and metabolites in a subset (N=28) who provided blood samples immediately post-infusion.
RESULTS: Neither acute dissociative nor psychotomimetic effects of ketamine were associated with changes in suicidal ideation or depressive symptoms from pre- to post-infusion. Norketamine had a trend-level, moderate inverse correlation with dissociative symptoms on Day 1 post-injection (p = .064; p = .013 removing one outlier). Dehydronorketamine correlated with CADSS scores at 40 minutes (p = .034), 230 minutes (p = .014), and Day 1 (p=.012).
CONCLUSION: We did not find evidence that ketamine's acute, transient dissociative or psychotomimetic effects are associated with its antidepressant or anti-suicidal ideation actions. The correlation of higher plasma norketamine with lower dissociative symptoms on Day 1 post-treatment suggests dissociation may be more an effect of the parent drug.
METHOD: Data from a completed trial in suicidal, depressed participants (N=40) randomized to ketamine was used to examine relationships between ketamine treatment-emergent dissociative and psychotomimetic symptoms with pre/post-infusion changes in suicidal ideation and depression severity. Non-parametric correlational statistics were used. These methods were also used to explore associations between dissociative or psychotomimetic symptoms and blood levels of ketamine and metabolites in a subset (N=28) who provided blood samples immediately post-infusion.
RESULTS: Neither acute dissociative nor psychotomimetic effects of ketamine were associated with changes in suicidal ideation or depressive symptoms from pre- to post-infusion. Norketamine had a trend-level, moderate inverse correlation with dissociative symptoms on Day 1 post-injection (p = .064; p = .013 removing one outlier). Dehydronorketamine correlated with CADSS scores at 40 minutes (p = .034), 230 minutes (p = .014), and Day 1 (p=.012).
CONCLUSION: We did not find evidence that ketamine's acute, transient dissociative or psychotomimetic effects are associated with its antidepressant or anti-suicidal ideation actions. The correlation of higher plasma norketamine with lower dissociative symptoms on Day 1 post-treatment suggests dissociation may be more an effect of the parent drug.
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