OPEN Foundation

B. Jaso

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

Abstract

BACKGROUND:
Ketamine induces rapid and robust antidepressant effects, and many patients also describe dissociation, which is associated with antidepressant response. This follow-up study investigated whether antidepressant efficacy is uniquely related to dissociative symptom clusters.
METHODS:
Treatment-resistant patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) or bipolar disorder (BD) (n = 126) drawn from three studies received a single subanesthetic (0.5 mg/kg) ketamine infusion. Dissociative effects were measured using the Clinician-Administered Dissociative States Scale (CADSS). Antidepressant response was measured using the 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D). A confirmatory factor analysis established the validity of CADSS subscales (derealization, depersonalization, amnesia), and a general linear model with repeated measures was fitted to test whether subscale scores were associated with antidepressant response.
RESULTS:
Factor validity was supported, with a root mean square error of approximation of .06, a comparative fit index of .97, and a Tucker-Lewis index of .96. Across all studies and timepoints, the depersonalization subscale was positively related to HAM-D percent change. A significant effect of derealization on HAM-D percent change was observed at one timepoint (Day 7) in one study. The amnesia subscale was unrelated to HAM-D percent change.
LIMITATIONS:
Possible inadequate blinding; combined MDD/BD datasets might have underrepresented ketamine’s antidepressant efficacy; the possibility of Type I errors in secondary analyses.
CONCLUSIONS:
From a psychometric perspective, researchers may elect to administer only the CADSS depersonalization subscale, given that it was most closely related to antidepressant response. From a neurobiological perspective, mechanistic similarities may exist between ketamine-induced depersonalization and antidepressant response, although off-target effects cannot be excluded.
Niciu, M. J., Shovestul, B. J., Jaso, B. A., Farmer, C., Luckenbaugh, D. A., Brutsche, N. E., … & Zarate, C. A. (2018). Features of dissociation differentially predict antidepressant response to ketamine in treatment-resistant depression. Journal of affective disorders232, 310-315. 10.1016/j.jad.2018.02.049
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Associations between Specific Dissociative Symptoms and Symptom Subsets and Anti-Depressant Response to Ketamine

Abstract

Ketamine has been shown to produce rapid antidepressant effects in major depression and bipolar disorder. Due to ketamine’s glutamatergic properties, many patients report dissociative effects, which recent studies have shown to be associated with increased anti-depressant response. Thus we investigated the connection between distinct subscales of dissociation and differing treatment response.

Shovestul, B., Jaso, B., Luckenbaugh, D., Park, L., Niciu, M., & Zarate, C. (2017). 199-Associations between Specific Dissociative Symptoms and Symptom Subsets and Anti-Depressant Response to Ketamine. Biological Psychiatry, 81(10), S82-S83. 10.1016/j.biopsych.2017.02.212
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30 April - Q&A with Rick Strassman

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