There have long been anecdotal reports of rapid
antidepressant effect from ketamine, but everyone has proceeded very cautiously
because of its nasty side-effect profile in all forms. The variant settled on for treatment is Esketamine.
It has gradually come into use for treatment-resistant depression, but I had
never had one of my patients on it until now.
I am very impressed with the result for this one person. She carries
diagnoses of both Bipolar Depression and Borderline Personality*, which is not
that unusual but does create difficulties of sorting out exactly where any
symptom comes from. She had been tried on numerous antidepressants with limited
relief. ECT’s were effective at first but have become less so and the worsening memory
loss was eventually intolerable.
She has been in both DBT and CBT therapy and has a lot of physical
interventions such as breathing and grounding techniques for her dissociation.
This is a very capable woman who was working full-time despite serious
suicidality with two near-lethal attempts.
When last I covered here, I was part
of the decision to have her civilly committed, as she was still evasive about
her thoughts while occasionally tying a sheet around her neck at night
between checks. She has been here since early March (I happened to be covering
and did the admission), with in-hospital suicide attempts. Our hospital and
most insurance companies do not have esketamine on formulary, and we were going
through the steps to get her approved . She started with a nasal administration
on 6/3, with a second on 6/7. I came in to cover on 6/10 and we are planning to
discharge her tomorrow, 6/12. If we hadn't had to clear with with an administrative risk committee, we might have sent her 6/10 after her third treatment. The person writing out coverage notes for me Friday 6/7 did not even hint that discharge might be possible. The patient still has
thoughts of suicide but greatly diminished, with no impulses to act on
them. She laughed during discussion
today, which I have never heard from her, over two years of admissions. This is unprecedented, even faster
than ECT’s. The treatment will not
affect the personality disorder (that we know of), but reducing the depression
should help greatly on that. This is similar to the feeling that I had when
Clozapine came on the market decades ago, and patients with schizophrenia who I had
long known as very sick showed remarkable improvement and were discharged. Then,
as now, it’s going to be all about the side effects going forward.
*For clinicians scoring at home, she carries Bipolar II
depressed type vs MDD refractory, PTSD, BPD.
2 comments:
This is encouraging, though I note the "result for this one person".
Yes, there have been encouraging studies and we are starting to har about these others, but it is still quite new.
Apparently there are good numbers pairing it with sertraline as well.
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