Ketamine Helped Many Severely Depressed Veterans, Study Shows

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02/01/2024

Ketamine has received a lot of attention as a potential treatment for depression, but few studies have revealed how well it works in real world settings, especially in patients with complex mental health needs. 

Now, a new study of data from veterans who had tried many depression treatments but still had severe symptoms suggests a series of intravenous doses of ketamine gave many at least partial relief. For a minority, it led to full remission. 

Nearly half of 215 veterans with treatment resistant depression who received IV ketamine at Veterans Affairs hospitals saw a meaningful drop in depression scores by the end of six weeks of infusions. 

About one quarter responded so much that their depression score dropped by half in six weeks. And about 15% experienced so much improvement after six weeks that they were officially in remission.

Almost all the patients continued with infusions every few weeks for months, according to the analysis by a team at the University of Michigan and VA Ann Arbor Healthcare System (VAAAHS) published in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry.

This suggests that even those whose depression scores didn’t fall significantly may have felt other beneficial effects that kept them returning. 

Before trying ketamine, veterans in the study had tried multiple depression treatments without success and scored at high levels on a depression symptom scale. Most also had other mental health conditions including post-traumatic stress disorder, anxiety or a history of drug or alcohol use disorders.

Real world findings from patients nationwide

The study could help guide protocols for the use of IV ketamine in VA hospitals and beyond, the researchers say. It provides much needed data about the impacts of IV ketamine in current clinical use. The drug has received widespread attention for its potential to rapidly improve depression but does not have major studies backing longer term use. 

Availability of IV ketamine treatment in VA hospitals nationwide is limited, though growing. Under the direction of a psychiatrist, hospital staff provide a series of infusions to veterans who haven’t responded fully to multiple attempts of standard treatments like antidepressants or talk therapy. 

Paul Pfeiffer, M.D., M.S., led the study along with Avinash Hosanagar, M.D. Both are U-M Medical School Department of Psychiatry faculty who treat patients at VAAAHS’s Mental Health Service, at the Lieutenant Colonel Charles S. Kettles VA Medical Center.

“These findings ratchet down the hype about ketamine a bit, because we don’t see dramatic improvement after just one infusion, or strong response in most patients,” said Pfeiffer.

 “It’s not a silver bullet. But when we see these patients in our clinic, who have been through every treatment available and nothing has worked, to have even a quarter achieve a significant measurable response is very good. We routinely get thanked for making a difference in their lives.” 

The researchers used data drawn from the VA’s national patient record system, which includes dates and locations of ketamine infusions, patients’ scores on standardized depression questionnaires, and details about patients’ diagnoses and other mental health care. 

The veterans in the study started receiving ketamine infusions in 2019 or the first nine months of 2020, and the researchers analyzed data from the next 12 months after each one’s first infusion. On average, patients received 18 infusions over the course of months, starting with about two a week at the start and then gradually spacing further apart.

Though the veterans were treated at 19 different VA hospitals, only seven of those hospitals had more than 10 qualifying patients during this time, and two hospitals accounted for half the patients in the study. 

Complex patient population

Hosanagar notes that the impact of IV ketamine is especially significant given that treatment resistant depression was not the only mental health condition the veterans were grappling with. 

In addition to depression that had resisted treatment, 70% also had a diagnosis of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), 50% also had an anxiety disorder, 27% had a diagnosis of alcohol use disorder and 27% had a substance use disorder diagnosis. 

“The chronic nature of their conditions is not something ketamine will magically reverse, but when they do respond and feel better, and don’t have to wait as long to see an impact as they do with a traditional antidepressant, it instills a sense of hope,” he said.  

The patients came to the VA ketamine clinics after trying many other forms of treatment, including dozens of outpatient mental health appointments in the past year. Most had tried to get relief from at least two different antidepressant medications in the last year and on average had taken six different antidepressants over the course of their lives.

It’s not a silver bullet. But when we see these patients in our clinic, who have been through every treatment available and nothing has worked, to have even a quarter achieve a significant measurable response is very good."

--Paul Pfeiffer, M.D., M.S.

About 1 in 5 of the veterans had been admitted to the hospital for psychiatric care in the past year, and slightly smaller percentages had received ECT or rTMS, which deliver electrical or magnetic pulses to targeted parts of the brain, respectively. 

Although the researchers looked at whether any of these characteristics was associated with more or less chance of responding to IV ketamine, none was. The only predictor of response was having multiple infusions over multiple months.

Current and future clinical use

Before being seen as a potential depression treatment, ketamine has been used as an anesthetic since the first clinical trials at U-M in the 1960s showed it was safe and effective for that use. It is also a controlled substance requiring special oversight because it has been used illicitly. 

The new study uses data from the time period just after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved a patented nasal spray form of ketamine called esketamine. However, the researchers did not look at esketamine, which is being evaluated separately within the VA. 

Hosanagar notes that the VAAAHS offers clinic based esketamine treatment for patients who have responded to IV ketamine and require ongoing treatments to prevent recurrence, but that VAAAHS is one of the very few VA hospitals that offer both forms. 

Starting with an IV regimen with multiple closely spaced treatments every two to three days, delivered in a hospital based outpatient clinic, is advised for those with especially severe treatment resistant depression and other mental health concerns. After a multi-infusion regimen, if symptoms return in the month between infusions, the nasal form which is FDA approved may be a good option, he said. These treatments, along with rTMS and ECT, are available at VAAAHS for veterans with treatment resistant depression.

Because drugs and alcohol can interact in dangerous ways with ketamine, VAAAHS patients with a history of substance use issues must be in a stable recovery, and all patients take urine tests before every ketamine infusion to make sure they are abstaining from use. 

SEE ALSO: When pills and talk therapy aren’t enough, these options may help

The researchers now hope to analyze newer data from more patients that might allow them to compare outcomes from the treatment protocols used at different hospitals and look for risks and characteristics of patients who cease ketamine treatment early on.

Meanwhile, faculty in the Neuromodulation Program at Michigan Medicine, U-M’s academic medical center, are also studying the use of ketamine, which they offer alongside ECT and rTMS.

“It’s important to remember that ketamine is relatively new as a treatment, and there are multiple ways it can be delivered,” said Pfeiffer. “I think we’re in for an interesting decade of a changing landscape for care of treatment resistant depression.”

Pfeiffer is a member of the VA Center for Clinical Management Research, U-M’s Eisenberg Family Depression Center and the U-M Institute for Healthcare Policy and Innovation.

Additional authors: In addition to Pfeiffer and Hosanagar, the study’s authors are Jamarie Geller, M.D. of U-M and VAAAHS, and colleagues from VA hospitals and academic medical centers in New Mexico, Massachusetts, California, Illinois and Connecticut. 

Funding: The study was funded by a Quality Enhancement Research Initiative grant (QUE 20-025) from the Veterans Health Administration.

Citation: Clinical Outcomes of Intravenous Ketamine Treatment for Depression in the VA Health System, J Clin Psychiatry 2024;85(1):23m14984, DOI:10.4088/JCP.23m14984  https://www.psychiatrist.com/jcp/clinical-outcomes-intravenous-ketamine-for-depression-va-health-system/

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