Experts want special
clinics to prescribe ketamine as antidepressant
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[April 06, 2017] By
Kate Kelland
LONDON (Reuters) - The party drug ketamine
can have powerful beneficial effects on severely depressed patients who
have struggled for years to recover, and the drug should be developed
responsibly as a psychiatric medicine, British experts said on Thursday.
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In a study published in the Lancet Psychiatry journal, specialists
from Oxford University said there is an urgent need for ethical and
innovative action by doctors to prescribe the drug under controlled
conditions.
"We think patients' treatment should be in specialist centers and
formally tracked in national or international registries," said
Rupert McShane, a consultant psychiatrist and researcher at Oxford
who has led a series of ketamine studies.
Ketamine is a licensed medical drug, widely used as an anesthetic
and to relieve pain. But it is also used as a recreational drug -
sometimes known as Special K - and can lead some people into
addiction and drug abuse.
Several research teams around the world have been trialling ketamine
use in chronic and recurring depression, since many patients with
the psychiatric condition fail to respond to currently available
antidepressants such as Prozac and Seroxat.
"I have seen ketamine work where nothing has helped before," McShane
said at a briefing in London.
The U.S. pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson is developing an
intranasal form of the drug, called esketamine. Its results so far
have been promising enough for Food and Drug Administration
officials to award esketamine "breakthrough" status to speed its
progress through regulatory hurdles.
McShane and his co-researcher Ilina Singh, a psychiatry professor at
Oxford University, told the briefing there had been a worrying sharp
rise in the past year in the number of private ketamine clinics in
the United States.
There are wide variations in the clinical checks before a patient
receives treatment, they said, and there is a need for clear
guidelines and registries to track how patients respond.
Last month, the American Psychiatric Association issued a consensus
statement on ketamine in a bid to guide safe, appropriate
prescribing of the drug for severe patients who do not respond to
regular antidepressants.
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McShane stressed that the ketamine doses used in the Oxford
depression treatment trials are given in controlled conditions and
are very different from those taken by street or club users.
On the street, users often take several grams a day and can suffer
severe bladder problems and impaired brain function. The doses used
in medical trials are a fraction of that - around 80 milligrams -
and given once a week in a monitored setting.
Singh said ketamine has such great potential to help a small group
of very ill patients that it would be wrong not to find a way of
allowing them to benefit from it: "This drug is available, it's out
there, and if we can help patients get treatment responsibly, it's
our duty to do so," she said.
Treating patients in specialist centers should help doctors spot
potential problems early, she said, as well as picking up any abuse
problems with longer term use and narrowing down what dose,
frequency, route and duration of treatment works best.
(Editing by Janet Lawrence)
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