Ketamine/esketamine: Putative mechanisms of action

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Ketamine/esketamine: Putative mechanisms of action

Since the FDA approved intranasal esketamine, there has understandably been significant dialogue, debate, and discussion about the possible mechanisms of action of its antidepressant effects. Ketamine, the racemate of esketamine and arketamine, has been used off-label since the late 1990s. The first study of IV ketamine’s rapid antidepressant activity was published in 2000.1 In that study, 7 patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) were treated in a double-blind/placebo-controlled manner with IV ketamine or placebo. Researchers found a significant antidepressant effect within 72 hours with the administration of IV ketamine.

There is a tremendous number of publications related to ketamine, which creates a large reservoir of information to review in an attempt to piece together what we currently know about the mechanisms of action of ketamine/esketamine (K/ESK). A search of PubMed using the search word “ketamine” (October 8, 2019; www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed) produced a list of 4,869 articles just in the last 5 years; and the search words “ketamine and depression” produced a list of 1,221 publications over the same time period.

The FDA approval of intranasal esketamine in March 2019 was based on 5 phase III clinical studies (albeit not all were positive studies) and >9 years of intensive preclinical and clinical research on the efficacy and safety of intranasal esketamine in treatment-resistant depression (TRD). At the time the FDA approved it, esketamine had been studied in 1,700 patients with TRD, with 1-year safety data on approximately 800 patients. Despite this established data portfolio, critics of K/ESK continue to opine that we do not have enough long-term experience with these drugs, and some key opinion leaders continue to voice caution about the clinical use of K/ESK until we obtain more information and experience.

An article in the September 2019 issue Currrent Psychiatryby Epstein and Farrell2 exemplifies my concern regarding the misrepresentation of significant details about what we know about the mechanism of action of K/ESK. Both K/ESK are certainly not “miracle cures,” and although I understand the use of this term in the article’s title, the continued use of this term to describe K/ESK in the article is detrimental. The authors caution about “miracle cures” ultimately proving to be harmful, and suggest that K/ESK could end up in the trash heap with Freud’s 1884 positive description of cocaine for depression and inducing insulin comas to treat patients with schizophrenia, a treatment used until 1960. These rogue treatments were used in the infancy of psychiatry, at a time when there was a paucity of treatments available in psychiatry, and only a primitive understanding of the brain.

Of greater concern to me is the authors’ simplistic and flawed description of the mechanism of action of ketamine. They state “based on available research, ketamine’s long-lasting effects seem to come from 2 mechanisms… activation of endogenous opioid receptors… [and] blockade of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors.” In the spirit of scientific inquiry, I would like to explore the current evidence base of the putative mechanisms of action of K/ESK.

Ketamine: A plethora of studies

An impressive body of literature is attempting to piece together the complex and multidimensional neurophysiological mechanisms that result in ketamine’s rapid-acting antidepressant (RAAD) effect, which occurs as soon as 4 hours post-dose. A plethora of pre-clinical and clinical studies, including functional connectivity MRI scans in individuals with MDD, have provided a rough outline, albeit incomplete, of ketamine’s mechanisms of action. Ketamine was discovered in 1962 by chemist Calvin L. Stevens, who was experimenting with novel molecular structures to find a replacement for phencyclidine as a safer dissociative anesthetic. After successful experiments in human prisoners in 1964, ketamine was further studied and became FDA-approved in 1970 as a dissociative anesthetic. Lacking respiratory depression and hypotension, which were common adverse effects of other anesthetics, ketamine became commonly used on the battlefield in the Vietnam War, and continues to be used as a dissociative anesthetic.

Following the publication of the Berman article1 in 2000 that demonstrated apparent RAAD activity of IV ketamine, interest in ketamine’s use for TRD—a huge unmet need in psychiatry—skyrocketed. Since the FDA approval of iproniazid (a monoamine oxidase inhibitor) as the first medication approved to treat major depression in 1958, and the FDA approval of imipramine in 1959, all subsequent FDA-approved antidepressants have shared iproniazid/imipramine’s properties of modulating the monoamines serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine. The infamous Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) trial concluded that only 37% of patients with a major depressive episode achieve remission with their first antidepressant trial, and only 49% respond (50% improvement in symptoms).3 Ketamine/esketamine offered a novel mechanism of action, presumed to be related to the glutamate system, that demonstrated a clinical improvement in depressive symptoms in as few as 4 hours, with benefits that lasted up to 1 week after a single dose.

Continue to: A model of how ketamine works

 

 

A model of how ketamine works

Numerous publications from preclinical and clinical research collectively have woven a putative model of how K/ESK may rapidly improve depression by ultimately increasing synaptogenesis in the human prefrontal cortex—a part of the brain known to atrophy in states of chronic stress and depression.4 What is well established is the noncompetitive antagonism of K/ESK at the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptor, but this pharmacodynamic property may or may not be responsible, or even required, for the ultimate antidepressant effect 4 hours after administration. It has been shown that unlike anesthetic doses of K/ESK that inhibit glutamate, subanesthetic doses activate neuronal glutamate transmission in the prefrontal cortex.5

A significant body of evidence supports agonism of the glutamate alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptor as an important step in the cascade of events that ultimately increases levels of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), which unleashes protein synthesis in synapses facilitating synaptogenesis. Pretreatment with AMPA receptor antagonists blocks the downstream effect of synaptogenesis.6,7 In support of this putative mechanism, hydroxynorketamine, a metabolite of racemic ketamine that has also demonstrated RAAD activity in a ketamine-like manner, is dependent upon AMPA glutamate receptor upregulation and activation, while not requiring activity at the NMDA-glutamate receptor.8,9

A comprehensive model on the putative molecular cascade of events contributing to the antidepressant effect of ketamine has recently been published10 and mirrors the excellent previous review by Abdallah et al.11 Hirota and Lambert10 propose that antagonism of interneuronal NMDA-glutamate receptors on GABAergic interneurons may result in a prefrontal cortex surge of glutamate, which increases agonism of the AMPA-glutamate receptor. This AMPA-glutamate receptor agonism has been shown to increase expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF),12 both of which converge on increasing levels of mTOR, and the subsequent activation of mTOR, which putatively plays a role in increased production of scaffolding proteins and increased synaptogenesis, especially in the prefrontal cortex. In support of this model, during infusion and at 24 hours after a single ketamine infusion in individuals with MDD, functional connectivity MRI demonstrated an increase in global brain connectivity in the prefrontal cortex.13,14 The demonstration of increased global connectivity in the prefrontal cortex of patients with MDD, both during ketamine infusion and at 24 hours post-infusion, supports the clinical observations in clinics treating patients with K/ESK.

 

Opioid receptors and ketamine

During the past year, there has been significant discussion in psychiatry about the possible role of the mu opioid receptor and opioid system activation in ketamine’s RAAD effect. Remarkably, the literature supporting this hypothesis in humans is based on a single study by Williams et al.15 The authors’ claim: “We now present the first evidence in humans that opioid receptors are necessary for ketamine’s acute antidepressant effect.” In fact, in my opinion, this single study, which has not been replicated, is highly flawed. It included 30 adults with TRD, but only 12 of the 14 participants who qualified for the planned interim analysis completed the double-blind crossover. The population studied was quite treatment-refractory; the average duration of MDD was 24.1 years, the average age at onset was 17.3 years, and the duration of the current depressive episode at the time of the study was 8.6 years. Most significant to me was the reason the study was terminated: “At the interim analysis, given the finding that the combination of ketamine and naltrexone was not only ineffective but also noxious for many participants, we decided to stop enrolling patients in the study.” A distinct possibility is that the noxious adverse effects from the naltrexone impacted the participants’ experience in a negative manner, dampening down any antidepressant effect from ketamine.

In the August 2019 issue of Molecular Psychiatry, these same authors published a second article16 with conclusions based solely on “a secondary analysis of” the data from the same 12 participants in their first publication. Williams et al16 concluded that naltrexone also decreases the anti-suicidality effects of ketamine. Without any additional data or clinical research, these same authors extrapolated their hypothesized opioid receptor activity of ketamine to include it being responsible for ketamine’s established anti-suicidal effects.

Continue to: Mathew and Rivas-Grajales...

 

 

Mathew and Rivas-Grajales17 recently published a thoughtful critique and analysis of the study design and conclusions of the original Williams paper.15 They concluded that insufficient evidence exists to answer the question of how ketamine may interface with the opioid system, and they encourage further research into this important topic.

Two additional recent publications18,19 reported that naltrexone pretreatment did not attenuate the antidepressant effects of ketamine in their participants. Additionally, a recent publication in the anesthesiology literature20 concluded that esketamine reversed respiratory depression that was induced by remifentanil. From a clinical perspective, the most compelling argument against a direct mu opioid receptor mechanism for K/ESK is the lack of any craving, tolerance, or withdrawal in patients with TRD treated with K/ESK in numerous clinical publications comparing K/ESK with placebo. In the case of esketamine, during the 5 phase III clinical trials—including both short- and long-term studies—there was no signal for an opioid-like pharmacology. Significantly, both K/ESK are rapidly metabolized by the human body, and the typical dosing is 2 doses/week for the first month, then 1 dose/week for the next month, then 1 dose every week or less for the remainder of treatment.

Curiously, in the May 2019 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry, Schatzberg21 (one of the co-authors of the prior 2 studies opining that ketamine has direct opioid system activation) wrote a “Reviews and Overviews” article in which he misrepresents the conclusions of an elegant study by Abdallah et al22 published in December 2018.

Abdallah et al22 added rapamycin, an immunosuppressant and a known inhibitor of mTOR, as a pretreatment to patients in a major depressive episode prior to infusion with IV ketamine. Their hypothesis was to see if the rapamycin decreased ketamine’s rapid antidepressant response—putatively by inhibiting the effect of mTOR. Rather than decreasing ketamine’s antidepressant effect, and in contrast to the placebo pretreatment group, at 2 weeks post IV ketamine infusion, patients treated with rapamycin-ketamine had a longer duration/greater improvement in their depressive symptoms compared with the patients receiving placebo-ketamine (improvement of 41% vs 13%, respectively, P = .04). Abdallah et al22 hypothesized that the pretreatment with rapamycin provides anti-inflammatory benefits to the synaptogenesis resulting from ketamine, which protects the newly formed synapses and prolongs ketamine’s antidepressant effect. Schatzberg21 came to a different conclusion than Abdallah et al,22 opining that because the rapamycin “failed to decrease ketamine response,” this result debunks the role of mTOR as a mediator in the antidepressant effect of ketamine through synaptogenesis.

Much more to learn

We still have a great deal to learn about the mechanism of action of K/ESK. However, clinics that are augmenting antidepressants with K/ESK in patients with TRD report significant and rapid symptom improvement in some patients (personal communications). We still do not understand the actual mechanisms of action of antidepressants and antipsychotics, but this does not curtail their use and clinical benefits to our patients. Ketamine has been extensively studied. In the current appropriate climate of concern about the pervasive and lethal opioid epidemic in the United States, we must remain on solid scientific ground before attributing an opioid mechanism to a novel treatment that has already benefitted many of our most depressed and refractory patients.

Continue to: Looking at the extensive...

 

 

Looking at the extensive published data over the past 20 years, a consistent model has emerged whereby glutamate agonism of the AMPA-glutamate receptor, both with and without antagonism of the NMDA-glutamate receptor, appears to set in motion a molecular cascade involving BDNF and VEGF, and ultimately increasing the activity of mTOR, with resulting synaptogenicity that increases global brain connectivity in the human prefrontal cortex. As we continue to understand the complexities and additional circuitries that are involved in the RAAD effect of K/ESK, the hope is that novel molecular targets for future drug development will emerge.

Bottom Line

Extensive published data over the past 20 years has produced a consistent model to explain the putative mechanisms of action for the rapid antidepressant effects of ketamine and esketamine. We must remain on solid scientific ground before attributing an opioid mechanism to a novel treatment that has already benefitted many of our patients with treatment-resistant depression.

Related Resources

Drug Brand Names

Esketamine nasal spray • Spravato
Imipramine • Tofranil
Ketamine • Ketalar
Naltrexone • Vivitrol, ReVia
Rapamycin • Rapamune
Remifentanil • Ultiva

References

1. Berman RM, Cappiello A, Anand A, et al. Antidepressant effects of ketamine in depressed patients. Biol Psychiatry. 2000;47:351-354.
2. Epstein K, Farrell HM. ‘Miracle cures’ in psychiatry? Current Psychiatry. 2019;18(9):13-16.
3. Valenstein M. Keeping our eyes on STAR*D. Am J Psychiatry. 2006;163:1484-1486.
4. Abdallah CG, Sanacora G, Duman RS, et al. The neurobiology of depression, ketamine and rapid-acting antidepressants: is it glutamate inhibition or activation? Pharmacol Ther. 2018;190:148-158.
5. Moghaddam B, Adams B, Verma A, et al. Activation of glutamatergic neurotransmission by ketamine: a novel step in the pathway from NMDA receptor blockade to dopaminergic and cognitive disruptions associated with the prefrontal cortex. J Neurosci. 1997;17(8):2921-2927.
6. Li N, Lee B, Liu RJ, et al. mTOR-dependent synapse formation underlies the rapid antidepressant effects of NMDA antagonists. Science. 2010;329(5994):959-964.
7. Hoeffer CA, Klann E. mTOR signaling: at the crossroads of plasticity, memory, and disease. Trends Neurosci. 2010;33(2):67-75.
8. Zanos P, Moaddel R, Morris PJ, et al. NMDA inhibition-independent antidepressant actions of ketamine metabolites. Nature. 2016;533(7604):481-486.
9. Collo G, Cavalleri L, Chiamulera C, et al. (2R,6R)-Hydroxynorketamine promotes dendrite outgrowth in human inducible pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons through AMPA receptor with timing and exposure compatible with ketamine infusion pharmacokinetics in humans. Neuroreport. 2018;29(16):1425-1430.
10. Hirota K, Lambert DG. Ketamine and depression. Br J Anaesth. 2018;121(6):1198-1202.
11. Abdallah CG, Adams TG, Kelmendi B, et al. Ketamine’s mechanism of action: a path to rapid-acting antidepressants. Depress Anxiety. 2016;33(8):689-697.
12. Deyama S, Bang E, Wohleb ES, et al. Role of neuronal VEGF signaling in the prefrontal cortex in the rapid antidepressant effects of ketamine. Am J Psychiatry. 2019;176(5):388-400.
13. Abdallah CG, Dutta A, Averill CL, et al. Ketamine, but not the NMDAR antagonist lanicemine, increases prefrontal global connectivity in depressed patients. Chronic Stress (Thousand Oaks). 2018;2. doi: 10.1177/2470547018796102.
14. Abdallah CG, Averill LA, Collins KA, et al. Ketamine treatment and global brain connectivity in major depression. Neuropsychopharmacology. 2017;42(6):1210-1219.
15. Williams NR, Heifets BD, Blasey C, et al. Attenuation of antidepressant effects of ketamine by opioid receptor antagonism. Am J Psychiatry. 2018;175:1205-1215.
16. Williams NR, Heifets BD, Bentzley BS, et al. Attenuation of antidepressant and antisuicidal effects of ketamine by opioid receptor antagonism. Mol Psychiatry. 2019;24(12):1779-1786.
17. Mathew SJ, Rivas-Grajales AM. “Does the opioid system block or enhance the antidepressant effects of ketamine?” Chronic Stress. (Thousand Oaks). 2019;3. doi: 10.1177/2470547019852073.
18. Yoon G, Petrakis IL, Krystal JH. Association of combined naltrexone and ketamine with depressive symptoms in a case series of patients with depression and alcohol use disorder. JAMA Psychiatry. 2019;76:337-338.
19. Marton T, Barnes DE, Wallace A, et al. Concurrent use of buprenorphine, methadone, or naltrexone does not inhibit ketamine’s antidepressant activity. Biol Psychiatry. 2019;85(12):e75-e76.
20. Jonkman K, van Rijnsoever E, Olofsen E, et al. Esketamine counters opioid-induced respiratory depression. Br J Anaesth. 2018;120(5):1117-1127.
21. Schatzberg AF. Scientific issues relevant to improving the diagnosis, risk assessment, and treatment of major depression. Am J Psychiatry. 2019;176(5):342-347.
22. Abdallah C, Averill LA, Gueorgueiva R, et al. Rapamycin, an immunosuppressant and mTORC1 inhibitor, triples the antidepressant response rate of ketamine at 2 weeks following treatment: a double blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over, randomized clinical trial. bioRxiv. December 19, 2018. https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/500959v1. Accessed December 5, 2019.

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Insight Meditation Society
Barre, Massachusetts

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Dr. Miller is a consultant to Janssen and Sunovion, and a speaker for Allergan, Janssen, Neurocrine, Otsuka, Sunovion, and Teva.

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Exeter, New Hampshire
Consulting Psychiatrist
Insight Meditation Society
Barre, Massachusetts

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Dr. Miller is a consultant to Janssen and Sunovion, and a speaker for Allergan, Janssen, Neurocrine, Otsuka, Sunovion, and Teva.

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John J. Miller, MD
Medical Director, Brain Health
Editor-in-Chief, Psychiatric Times
Staff Psychiatrist, Seacoast Mental Health Center
Consulting Psychiatrist, Exeter Hospital
Exeter, New Hampshire
Consulting Psychiatrist
Insight Meditation Society
Barre, Massachusetts

Disclosure
Dr. Miller is a consultant to Janssen and Sunovion, and a speaker for Allergan, Janssen, Neurocrine, Otsuka, Sunovion, and Teva.

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Article PDF

Since the FDA approved intranasal esketamine, there has understandably been significant dialogue, debate, and discussion about the possible mechanisms of action of its antidepressant effects. Ketamine, the racemate of esketamine and arketamine, has been used off-label since the late 1990s. The first study of IV ketamine’s rapid antidepressant activity was published in 2000.1 In that study, 7 patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) were treated in a double-blind/placebo-controlled manner with IV ketamine or placebo. Researchers found a significant antidepressant effect within 72 hours with the administration of IV ketamine.

There is a tremendous number of publications related to ketamine, which creates a large reservoir of information to review in an attempt to piece together what we currently know about the mechanisms of action of ketamine/esketamine (K/ESK). A search of PubMed using the search word “ketamine” (October 8, 2019; www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed) produced a list of 4,869 articles just in the last 5 years; and the search words “ketamine and depression” produced a list of 1,221 publications over the same time period.

The FDA approval of intranasal esketamine in March 2019 was based on 5 phase III clinical studies (albeit not all were positive studies) and >9 years of intensive preclinical and clinical research on the efficacy and safety of intranasal esketamine in treatment-resistant depression (TRD). At the time the FDA approved it, esketamine had been studied in 1,700 patients with TRD, with 1-year safety data on approximately 800 patients. Despite this established data portfolio, critics of K/ESK continue to opine that we do not have enough long-term experience with these drugs, and some key opinion leaders continue to voice caution about the clinical use of K/ESK until we obtain more information and experience.

An article in the September 2019 issue Currrent Psychiatryby Epstein and Farrell2 exemplifies my concern regarding the misrepresentation of significant details about what we know about the mechanism of action of K/ESK. Both K/ESK are certainly not “miracle cures,” and although I understand the use of this term in the article’s title, the continued use of this term to describe K/ESK in the article is detrimental. The authors caution about “miracle cures” ultimately proving to be harmful, and suggest that K/ESK could end up in the trash heap with Freud’s 1884 positive description of cocaine for depression and inducing insulin comas to treat patients with schizophrenia, a treatment used until 1960. These rogue treatments were used in the infancy of psychiatry, at a time when there was a paucity of treatments available in psychiatry, and only a primitive understanding of the brain.

Of greater concern to me is the authors’ simplistic and flawed description of the mechanism of action of ketamine. They state “based on available research, ketamine’s long-lasting effects seem to come from 2 mechanisms… activation of endogenous opioid receptors… [and] blockade of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors.” In the spirit of scientific inquiry, I would like to explore the current evidence base of the putative mechanisms of action of K/ESK.

Ketamine: A plethora of studies

An impressive body of literature is attempting to piece together the complex and multidimensional neurophysiological mechanisms that result in ketamine’s rapid-acting antidepressant (RAAD) effect, which occurs as soon as 4 hours post-dose. A plethora of pre-clinical and clinical studies, including functional connectivity MRI scans in individuals with MDD, have provided a rough outline, albeit incomplete, of ketamine’s mechanisms of action. Ketamine was discovered in 1962 by chemist Calvin L. Stevens, who was experimenting with novel molecular structures to find a replacement for phencyclidine as a safer dissociative anesthetic. After successful experiments in human prisoners in 1964, ketamine was further studied and became FDA-approved in 1970 as a dissociative anesthetic. Lacking respiratory depression and hypotension, which were common adverse effects of other anesthetics, ketamine became commonly used on the battlefield in the Vietnam War, and continues to be used as a dissociative anesthetic.

Following the publication of the Berman article1 in 2000 that demonstrated apparent RAAD activity of IV ketamine, interest in ketamine’s use for TRD—a huge unmet need in psychiatry—skyrocketed. Since the FDA approval of iproniazid (a monoamine oxidase inhibitor) as the first medication approved to treat major depression in 1958, and the FDA approval of imipramine in 1959, all subsequent FDA-approved antidepressants have shared iproniazid/imipramine’s properties of modulating the monoamines serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine. The infamous Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) trial concluded that only 37% of patients with a major depressive episode achieve remission with their first antidepressant trial, and only 49% respond (50% improvement in symptoms).3 Ketamine/esketamine offered a novel mechanism of action, presumed to be related to the glutamate system, that demonstrated a clinical improvement in depressive symptoms in as few as 4 hours, with benefits that lasted up to 1 week after a single dose.

Continue to: A model of how ketamine works

 

 

A model of how ketamine works

Numerous publications from preclinical and clinical research collectively have woven a putative model of how K/ESK may rapidly improve depression by ultimately increasing synaptogenesis in the human prefrontal cortex—a part of the brain known to atrophy in states of chronic stress and depression.4 What is well established is the noncompetitive antagonism of K/ESK at the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptor, but this pharmacodynamic property may or may not be responsible, or even required, for the ultimate antidepressant effect 4 hours after administration. It has been shown that unlike anesthetic doses of K/ESK that inhibit glutamate, subanesthetic doses activate neuronal glutamate transmission in the prefrontal cortex.5

A significant body of evidence supports agonism of the glutamate alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptor as an important step in the cascade of events that ultimately increases levels of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), which unleashes protein synthesis in synapses facilitating synaptogenesis. Pretreatment with AMPA receptor antagonists blocks the downstream effect of synaptogenesis.6,7 In support of this putative mechanism, hydroxynorketamine, a metabolite of racemic ketamine that has also demonstrated RAAD activity in a ketamine-like manner, is dependent upon AMPA glutamate receptor upregulation and activation, while not requiring activity at the NMDA-glutamate receptor.8,9

A comprehensive model on the putative molecular cascade of events contributing to the antidepressant effect of ketamine has recently been published10 and mirrors the excellent previous review by Abdallah et al.11 Hirota and Lambert10 propose that antagonism of interneuronal NMDA-glutamate receptors on GABAergic interneurons may result in a prefrontal cortex surge of glutamate, which increases agonism of the AMPA-glutamate receptor. This AMPA-glutamate receptor agonism has been shown to increase expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF),12 both of which converge on increasing levels of mTOR, and the subsequent activation of mTOR, which putatively plays a role in increased production of scaffolding proteins and increased synaptogenesis, especially in the prefrontal cortex. In support of this model, during infusion and at 24 hours after a single ketamine infusion in individuals with MDD, functional connectivity MRI demonstrated an increase in global brain connectivity in the prefrontal cortex.13,14 The demonstration of increased global connectivity in the prefrontal cortex of patients with MDD, both during ketamine infusion and at 24 hours post-infusion, supports the clinical observations in clinics treating patients with K/ESK.

 

Opioid receptors and ketamine

During the past year, there has been significant discussion in psychiatry about the possible role of the mu opioid receptor and opioid system activation in ketamine’s RAAD effect. Remarkably, the literature supporting this hypothesis in humans is based on a single study by Williams et al.15 The authors’ claim: “We now present the first evidence in humans that opioid receptors are necessary for ketamine’s acute antidepressant effect.” In fact, in my opinion, this single study, which has not been replicated, is highly flawed. It included 30 adults with TRD, but only 12 of the 14 participants who qualified for the planned interim analysis completed the double-blind crossover. The population studied was quite treatment-refractory; the average duration of MDD was 24.1 years, the average age at onset was 17.3 years, and the duration of the current depressive episode at the time of the study was 8.6 years. Most significant to me was the reason the study was terminated: “At the interim analysis, given the finding that the combination of ketamine and naltrexone was not only ineffective but also noxious for many participants, we decided to stop enrolling patients in the study.” A distinct possibility is that the noxious adverse effects from the naltrexone impacted the participants’ experience in a negative manner, dampening down any antidepressant effect from ketamine.

In the August 2019 issue of Molecular Psychiatry, these same authors published a second article16 with conclusions based solely on “a secondary analysis of” the data from the same 12 participants in their first publication. Williams et al16 concluded that naltrexone also decreases the anti-suicidality effects of ketamine. Without any additional data or clinical research, these same authors extrapolated their hypothesized opioid receptor activity of ketamine to include it being responsible for ketamine’s established anti-suicidal effects.

Continue to: Mathew and Rivas-Grajales...

 

 

Mathew and Rivas-Grajales17 recently published a thoughtful critique and analysis of the study design and conclusions of the original Williams paper.15 They concluded that insufficient evidence exists to answer the question of how ketamine may interface with the opioid system, and they encourage further research into this important topic.

Two additional recent publications18,19 reported that naltrexone pretreatment did not attenuate the antidepressant effects of ketamine in their participants. Additionally, a recent publication in the anesthesiology literature20 concluded that esketamine reversed respiratory depression that was induced by remifentanil. From a clinical perspective, the most compelling argument against a direct mu opioid receptor mechanism for K/ESK is the lack of any craving, tolerance, or withdrawal in patients with TRD treated with K/ESK in numerous clinical publications comparing K/ESK with placebo. In the case of esketamine, during the 5 phase III clinical trials—including both short- and long-term studies—there was no signal for an opioid-like pharmacology. Significantly, both K/ESK are rapidly metabolized by the human body, and the typical dosing is 2 doses/week for the first month, then 1 dose/week for the next month, then 1 dose every week or less for the remainder of treatment.

Curiously, in the May 2019 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry, Schatzberg21 (one of the co-authors of the prior 2 studies opining that ketamine has direct opioid system activation) wrote a “Reviews and Overviews” article in which he misrepresents the conclusions of an elegant study by Abdallah et al22 published in December 2018.

Abdallah et al22 added rapamycin, an immunosuppressant and a known inhibitor of mTOR, as a pretreatment to patients in a major depressive episode prior to infusion with IV ketamine. Their hypothesis was to see if the rapamycin decreased ketamine’s rapid antidepressant response—putatively by inhibiting the effect of mTOR. Rather than decreasing ketamine’s antidepressant effect, and in contrast to the placebo pretreatment group, at 2 weeks post IV ketamine infusion, patients treated with rapamycin-ketamine had a longer duration/greater improvement in their depressive symptoms compared with the patients receiving placebo-ketamine (improvement of 41% vs 13%, respectively, P = .04). Abdallah et al22 hypothesized that the pretreatment with rapamycin provides anti-inflammatory benefits to the synaptogenesis resulting from ketamine, which protects the newly formed synapses and prolongs ketamine’s antidepressant effect. Schatzberg21 came to a different conclusion than Abdallah et al,22 opining that because the rapamycin “failed to decrease ketamine response,” this result debunks the role of mTOR as a mediator in the antidepressant effect of ketamine through synaptogenesis.

Much more to learn

We still have a great deal to learn about the mechanism of action of K/ESK. However, clinics that are augmenting antidepressants with K/ESK in patients with TRD report significant and rapid symptom improvement in some patients (personal communications). We still do not understand the actual mechanisms of action of antidepressants and antipsychotics, but this does not curtail their use and clinical benefits to our patients. Ketamine has been extensively studied. In the current appropriate climate of concern about the pervasive and lethal opioid epidemic in the United States, we must remain on solid scientific ground before attributing an opioid mechanism to a novel treatment that has already benefitted many of our most depressed and refractory patients.

Continue to: Looking at the extensive...

 

 

Looking at the extensive published data over the past 20 years, a consistent model has emerged whereby glutamate agonism of the AMPA-glutamate receptor, both with and without antagonism of the NMDA-glutamate receptor, appears to set in motion a molecular cascade involving BDNF and VEGF, and ultimately increasing the activity of mTOR, with resulting synaptogenicity that increases global brain connectivity in the human prefrontal cortex. As we continue to understand the complexities and additional circuitries that are involved in the RAAD effect of K/ESK, the hope is that novel molecular targets for future drug development will emerge.

Bottom Line

Extensive published data over the past 20 years has produced a consistent model to explain the putative mechanisms of action for the rapid antidepressant effects of ketamine and esketamine. We must remain on solid scientific ground before attributing an opioid mechanism to a novel treatment that has already benefitted many of our patients with treatment-resistant depression.

Related Resources

Drug Brand Names

Esketamine nasal spray • Spravato
Imipramine • Tofranil
Ketamine • Ketalar
Naltrexone • Vivitrol, ReVia
Rapamycin • Rapamune
Remifentanil • Ultiva

Since the FDA approved intranasal esketamine, there has understandably been significant dialogue, debate, and discussion about the possible mechanisms of action of its antidepressant effects. Ketamine, the racemate of esketamine and arketamine, has been used off-label since the late 1990s. The first study of IV ketamine’s rapid antidepressant activity was published in 2000.1 In that study, 7 patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) were treated in a double-blind/placebo-controlled manner with IV ketamine or placebo. Researchers found a significant antidepressant effect within 72 hours with the administration of IV ketamine.

There is a tremendous number of publications related to ketamine, which creates a large reservoir of information to review in an attempt to piece together what we currently know about the mechanisms of action of ketamine/esketamine (K/ESK). A search of PubMed using the search word “ketamine” (October 8, 2019; www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed) produced a list of 4,869 articles just in the last 5 years; and the search words “ketamine and depression” produced a list of 1,221 publications over the same time period.

The FDA approval of intranasal esketamine in March 2019 was based on 5 phase III clinical studies (albeit not all were positive studies) and >9 years of intensive preclinical and clinical research on the efficacy and safety of intranasal esketamine in treatment-resistant depression (TRD). At the time the FDA approved it, esketamine had been studied in 1,700 patients with TRD, with 1-year safety data on approximately 800 patients. Despite this established data portfolio, critics of K/ESK continue to opine that we do not have enough long-term experience with these drugs, and some key opinion leaders continue to voice caution about the clinical use of K/ESK until we obtain more information and experience.

An article in the September 2019 issue Currrent Psychiatryby Epstein and Farrell2 exemplifies my concern regarding the misrepresentation of significant details about what we know about the mechanism of action of K/ESK. Both K/ESK are certainly not “miracle cures,” and although I understand the use of this term in the article’s title, the continued use of this term to describe K/ESK in the article is detrimental. The authors caution about “miracle cures” ultimately proving to be harmful, and suggest that K/ESK could end up in the trash heap with Freud’s 1884 positive description of cocaine for depression and inducing insulin comas to treat patients with schizophrenia, a treatment used until 1960. These rogue treatments were used in the infancy of psychiatry, at a time when there was a paucity of treatments available in psychiatry, and only a primitive understanding of the brain.

Of greater concern to me is the authors’ simplistic and flawed description of the mechanism of action of ketamine. They state “based on available research, ketamine’s long-lasting effects seem to come from 2 mechanisms… activation of endogenous opioid receptors… [and] blockade of N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors.” In the spirit of scientific inquiry, I would like to explore the current evidence base of the putative mechanisms of action of K/ESK.

Ketamine: A plethora of studies

An impressive body of literature is attempting to piece together the complex and multidimensional neurophysiological mechanisms that result in ketamine’s rapid-acting antidepressant (RAAD) effect, which occurs as soon as 4 hours post-dose. A plethora of pre-clinical and clinical studies, including functional connectivity MRI scans in individuals with MDD, have provided a rough outline, albeit incomplete, of ketamine’s mechanisms of action. Ketamine was discovered in 1962 by chemist Calvin L. Stevens, who was experimenting with novel molecular structures to find a replacement for phencyclidine as a safer dissociative anesthetic. After successful experiments in human prisoners in 1964, ketamine was further studied and became FDA-approved in 1970 as a dissociative anesthetic. Lacking respiratory depression and hypotension, which were common adverse effects of other anesthetics, ketamine became commonly used on the battlefield in the Vietnam War, and continues to be used as a dissociative anesthetic.

Following the publication of the Berman article1 in 2000 that demonstrated apparent RAAD activity of IV ketamine, interest in ketamine’s use for TRD—a huge unmet need in psychiatry—skyrocketed. Since the FDA approval of iproniazid (a monoamine oxidase inhibitor) as the first medication approved to treat major depression in 1958, and the FDA approval of imipramine in 1959, all subsequent FDA-approved antidepressants have shared iproniazid/imipramine’s properties of modulating the monoamines serotonin, dopamine, and norepinephrine. The infamous Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression (STAR*D) trial concluded that only 37% of patients with a major depressive episode achieve remission with their first antidepressant trial, and only 49% respond (50% improvement in symptoms).3 Ketamine/esketamine offered a novel mechanism of action, presumed to be related to the glutamate system, that demonstrated a clinical improvement in depressive symptoms in as few as 4 hours, with benefits that lasted up to 1 week after a single dose.

Continue to: A model of how ketamine works

 

 

A model of how ketamine works

Numerous publications from preclinical and clinical research collectively have woven a putative model of how K/ESK may rapidly improve depression by ultimately increasing synaptogenesis in the human prefrontal cortex—a part of the brain known to atrophy in states of chronic stress and depression.4 What is well established is the noncompetitive antagonism of K/ESK at the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) glutamate receptor, but this pharmacodynamic property may or may not be responsible, or even required, for the ultimate antidepressant effect 4 hours after administration. It has been shown that unlike anesthetic doses of K/ESK that inhibit glutamate, subanesthetic doses activate neuronal glutamate transmission in the prefrontal cortex.5

A significant body of evidence supports agonism of the glutamate alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptor as an important step in the cascade of events that ultimately increases levels of the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR), which unleashes protein synthesis in synapses facilitating synaptogenesis. Pretreatment with AMPA receptor antagonists blocks the downstream effect of synaptogenesis.6,7 In support of this putative mechanism, hydroxynorketamine, a metabolite of racemic ketamine that has also demonstrated RAAD activity in a ketamine-like manner, is dependent upon AMPA glutamate receptor upregulation and activation, while not requiring activity at the NMDA-glutamate receptor.8,9

A comprehensive model on the putative molecular cascade of events contributing to the antidepressant effect of ketamine has recently been published10 and mirrors the excellent previous review by Abdallah et al.11 Hirota and Lambert10 propose that antagonism of interneuronal NMDA-glutamate receptors on GABAergic interneurons may result in a prefrontal cortex surge of glutamate, which increases agonism of the AMPA-glutamate receptor. This AMPA-glutamate receptor agonism has been shown to increase expression of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) and vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF),12 both of which converge on increasing levels of mTOR, and the subsequent activation of mTOR, which putatively plays a role in increased production of scaffolding proteins and increased synaptogenesis, especially in the prefrontal cortex. In support of this model, during infusion and at 24 hours after a single ketamine infusion in individuals with MDD, functional connectivity MRI demonstrated an increase in global brain connectivity in the prefrontal cortex.13,14 The demonstration of increased global connectivity in the prefrontal cortex of patients with MDD, both during ketamine infusion and at 24 hours post-infusion, supports the clinical observations in clinics treating patients with K/ESK.

 

Opioid receptors and ketamine

During the past year, there has been significant discussion in psychiatry about the possible role of the mu opioid receptor and opioid system activation in ketamine’s RAAD effect. Remarkably, the literature supporting this hypothesis in humans is based on a single study by Williams et al.15 The authors’ claim: “We now present the first evidence in humans that opioid receptors are necessary for ketamine’s acute antidepressant effect.” In fact, in my opinion, this single study, which has not been replicated, is highly flawed. It included 30 adults with TRD, but only 12 of the 14 participants who qualified for the planned interim analysis completed the double-blind crossover. The population studied was quite treatment-refractory; the average duration of MDD was 24.1 years, the average age at onset was 17.3 years, and the duration of the current depressive episode at the time of the study was 8.6 years. Most significant to me was the reason the study was terminated: “At the interim analysis, given the finding that the combination of ketamine and naltrexone was not only ineffective but also noxious for many participants, we decided to stop enrolling patients in the study.” A distinct possibility is that the noxious adverse effects from the naltrexone impacted the participants’ experience in a negative manner, dampening down any antidepressant effect from ketamine.

In the August 2019 issue of Molecular Psychiatry, these same authors published a second article16 with conclusions based solely on “a secondary analysis of” the data from the same 12 participants in their first publication. Williams et al16 concluded that naltrexone also decreases the anti-suicidality effects of ketamine. Without any additional data or clinical research, these same authors extrapolated their hypothesized opioid receptor activity of ketamine to include it being responsible for ketamine’s established anti-suicidal effects.

Continue to: Mathew and Rivas-Grajales...

 

 

Mathew and Rivas-Grajales17 recently published a thoughtful critique and analysis of the study design and conclusions of the original Williams paper.15 They concluded that insufficient evidence exists to answer the question of how ketamine may interface with the opioid system, and they encourage further research into this important topic.

Two additional recent publications18,19 reported that naltrexone pretreatment did not attenuate the antidepressant effects of ketamine in their participants. Additionally, a recent publication in the anesthesiology literature20 concluded that esketamine reversed respiratory depression that was induced by remifentanil. From a clinical perspective, the most compelling argument against a direct mu opioid receptor mechanism for K/ESK is the lack of any craving, tolerance, or withdrawal in patients with TRD treated with K/ESK in numerous clinical publications comparing K/ESK with placebo. In the case of esketamine, during the 5 phase III clinical trials—including both short- and long-term studies—there was no signal for an opioid-like pharmacology. Significantly, both K/ESK are rapidly metabolized by the human body, and the typical dosing is 2 doses/week for the first month, then 1 dose/week for the next month, then 1 dose every week or less for the remainder of treatment.

Curiously, in the May 2019 issue of the American Journal of Psychiatry, Schatzberg21 (one of the co-authors of the prior 2 studies opining that ketamine has direct opioid system activation) wrote a “Reviews and Overviews” article in which he misrepresents the conclusions of an elegant study by Abdallah et al22 published in December 2018.

Abdallah et al22 added rapamycin, an immunosuppressant and a known inhibitor of mTOR, as a pretreatment to patients in a major depressive episode prior to infusion with IV ketamine. Their hypothesis was to see if the rapamycin decreased ketamine’s rapid antidepressant response—putatively by inhibiting the effect of mTOR. Rather than decreasing ketamine’s antidepressant effect, and in contrast to the placebo pretreatment group, at 2 weeks post IV ketamine infusion, patients treated with rapamycin-ketamine had a longer duration/greater improvement in their depressive symptoms compared with the patients receiving placebo-ketamine (improvement of 41% vs 13%, respectively, P = .04). Abdallah et al22 hypothesized that the pretreatment with rapamycin provides anti-inflammatory benefits to the synaptogenesis resulting from ketamine, which protects the newly formed synapses and prolongs ketamine’s antidepressant effect. Schatzberg21 came to a different conclusion than Abdallah et al,22 opining that because the rapamycin “failed to decrease ketamine response,” this result debunks the role of mTOR as a mediator in the antidepressant effect of ketamine through synaptogenesis.

Much more to learn

We still have a great deal to learn about the mechanism of action of K/ESK. However, clinics that are augmenting antidepressants with K/ESK in patients with TRD report significant and rapid symptom improvement in some patients (personal communications). We still do not understand the actual mechanisms of action of antidepressants and antipsychotics, but this does not curtail their use and clinical benefits to our patients. Ketamine has been extensively studied. In the current appropriate climate of concern about the pervasive and lethal opioid epidemic in the United States, we must remain on solid scientific ground before attributing an opioid mechanism to a novel treatment that has already benefitted many of our most depressed and refractory patients.

Continue to: Looking at the extensive...

 

 

Looking at the extensive published data over the past 20 years, a consistent model has emerged whereby glutamate agonism of the AMPA-glutamate receptor, both with and without antagonism of the NMDA-glutamate receptor, appears to set in motion a molecular cascade involving BDNF and VEGF, and ultimately increasing the activity of mTOR, with resulting synaptogenicity that increases global brain connectivity in the human prefrontal cortex. As we continue to understand the complexities and additional circuitries that are involved in the RAAD effect of K/ESK, the hope is that novel molecular targets for future drug development will emerge.

Bottom Line

Extensive published data over the past 20 years has produced a consistent model to explain the putative mechanisms of action for the rapid antidepressant effects of ketamine and esketamine. We must remain on solid scientific ground before attributing an opioid mechanism to a novel treatment that has already benefitted many of our patients with treatment-resistant depression.

Related Resources

Drug Brand Names

Esketamine nasal spray • Spravato
Imipramine • Tofranil
Ketamine • Ketalar
Naltrexone • Vivitrol, ReVia
Rapamycin • Rapamune
Remifentanil • Ultiva

References

1. Berman RM, Cappiello A, Anand A, et al. Antidepressant effects of ketamine in depressed patients. Biol Psychiatry. 2000;47:351-354.
2. Epstein K, Farrell HM. ‘Miracle cures’ in psychiatry? Current Psychiatry. 2019;18(9):13-16.
3. Valenstein M. Keeping our eyes on STAR*D. Am J Psychiatry. 2006;163:1484-1486.
4. Abdallah CG, Sanacora G, Duman RS, et al. The neurobiology of depression, ketamine and rapid-acting antidepressants: is it glutamate inhibition or activation? Pharmacol Ther. 2018;190:148-158.
5. Moghaddam B, Adams B, Verma A, et al. Activation of glutamatergic neurotransmission by ketamine: a novel step in the pathway from NMDA receptor blockade to dopaminergic and cognitive disruptions associated with the prefrontal cortex. J Neurosci. 1997;17(8):2921-2927.
6. Li N, Lee B, Liu RJ, et al. mTOR-dependent synapse formation underlies the rapid antidepressant effects of NMDA antagonists. Science. 2010;329(5994):959-964.
7. Hoeffer CA, Klann E. mTOR signaling: at the crossroads of plasticity, memory, and disease. Trends Neurosci. 2010;33(2):67-75.
8. Zanos P, Moaddel R, Morris PJ, et al. NMDA inhibition-independent antidepressant actions of ketamine metabolites. Nature. 2016;533(7604):481-486.
9. Collo G, Cavalleri L, Chiamulera C, et al. (2R,6R)-Hydroxynorketamine promotes dendrite outgrowth in human inducible pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons through AMPA receptor with timing and exposure compatible with ketamine infusion pharmacokinetics in humans. Neuroreport. 2018;29(16):1425-1430.
10. Hirota K, Lambert DG. Ketamine and depression. Br J Anaesth. 2018;121(6):1198-1202.
11. Abdallah CG, Adams TG, Kelmendi B, et al. Ketamine’s mechanism of action: a path to rapid-acting antidepressants. Depress Anxiety. 2016;33(8):689-697.
12. Deyama S, Bang E, Wohleb ES, et al. Role of neuronal VEGF signaling in the prefrontal cortex in the rapid antidepressant effects of ketamine. Am J Psychiatry. 2019;176(5):388-400.
13. Abdallah CG, Dutta A, Averill CL, et al. Ketamine, but not the NMDAR antagonist lanicemine, increases prefrontal global connectivity in depressed patients. Chronic Stress (Thousand Oaks). 2018;2. doi: 10.1177/2470547018796102.
14. Abdallah CG, Averill LA, Collins KA, et al. Ketamine treatment and global brain connectivity in major depression. Neuropsychopharmacology. 2017;42(6):1210-1219.
15. Williams NR, Heifets BD, Blasey C, et al. Attenuation of antidepressant effects of ketamine by opioid receptor antagonism. Am J Psychiatry. 2018;175:1205-1215.
16. Williams NR, Heifets BD, Bentzley BS, et al. Attenuation of antidepressant and antisuicidal effects of ketamine by opioid receptor antagonism. Mol Psychiatry. 2019;24(12):1779-1786.
17. Mathew SJ, Rivas-Grajales AM. “Does the opioid system block or enhance the antidepressant effects of ketamine?” Chronic Stress. (Thousand Oaks). 2019;3. doi: 10.1177/2470547019852073.
18. Yoon G, Petrakis IL, Krystal JH. Association of combined naltrexone and ketamine with depressive symptoms in a case series of patients with depression and alcohol use disorder. JAMA Psychiatry. 2019;76:337-338.
19. Marton T, Barnes DE, Wallace A, et al. Concurrent use of buprenorphine, methadone, or naltrexone does not inhibit ketamine’s antidepressant activity. Biol Psychiatry. 2019;85(12):e75-e76.
20. Jonkman K, van Rijnsoever E, Olofsen E, et al. Esketamine counters opioid-induced respiratory depression. Br J Anaesth. 2018;120(5):1117-1127.
21. Schatzberg AF. Scientific issues relevant to improving the diagnosis, risk assessment, and treatment of major depression. Am J Psychiatry. 2019;176(5):342-347.
22. Abdallah C, Averill LA, Gueorgueiva R, et al. Rapamycin, an immunosuppressant and mTORC1 inhibitor, triples the antidepressant response rate of ketamine at 2 weeks following treatment: a double blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over, randomized clinical trial. bioRxiv. December 19, 2018. https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/500959v1. Accessed December 5, 2019.

References

1. Berman RM, Cappiello A, Anand A, et al. Antidepressant effects of ketamine in depressed patients. Biol Psychiatry. 2000;47:351-354.
2. Epstein K, Farrell HM. ‘Miracle cures’ in psychiatry? Current Psychiatry. 2019;18(9):13-16.
3. Valenstein M. Keeping our eyes on STAR*D. Am J Psychiatry. 2006;163:1484-1486.
4. Abdallah CG, Sanacora G, Duman RS, et al. The neurobiology of depression, ketamine and rapid-acting antidepressants: is it glutamate inhibition or activation? Pharmacol Ther. 2018;190:148-158.
5. Moghaddam B, Adams B, Verma A, et al. Activation of glutamatergic neurotransmission by ketamine: a novel step in the pathway from NMDA receptor blockade to dopaminergic and cognitive disruptions associated with the prefrontal cortex. J Neurosci. 1997;17(8):2921-2927.
6. Li N, Lee B, Liu RJ, et al. mTOR-dependent synapse formation underlies the rapid antidepressant effects of NMDA antagonists. Science. 2010;329(5994):959-964.
7. Hoeffer CA, Klann E. mTOR signaling: at the crossroads of plasticity, memory, and disease. Trends Neurosci. 2010;33(2):67-75.
8. Zanos P, Moaddel R, Morris PJ, et al. NMDA inhibition-independent antidepressant actions of ketamine metabolites. Nature. 2016;533(7604):481-486.
9. Collo G, Cavalleri L, Chiamulera C, et al. (2R,6R)-Hydroxynorketamine promotes dendrite outgrowth in human inducible pluripotent stem cell-derived neurons through AMPA receptor with timing and exposure compatible with ketamine infusion pharmacokinetics in humans. Neuroreport. 2018;29(16):1425-1430.
10. Hirota K, Lambert DG. Ketamine and depression. Br J Anaesth. 2018;121(6):1198-1202.
11. Abdallah CG, Adams TG, Kelmendi B, et al. Ketamine’s mechanism of action: a path to rapid-acting antidepressants. Depress Anxiety. 2016;33(8):689-697.
12. Deyama S, Bang E, Wohleb ES, et al. Role of neuronal VEGF signaling in the prefrontal cortex in the rapid antidepressant effects of ketamine. Am J Psychiatry. 2019;176(5):388-400.
13. Abdallah CG, Dutta A, Averill CL, et al. Ketamine, but not the NMDAR antagonist lanicemine, increases prefrontal global connectivity in depressed patients. Chronic Stress (Thousand Oaks). 2018;2. doi: 10.1177/2470547018796102.
14. Abdallah CG, Averill LA, Collins KA, et al. Ketamine treatment and global brain connectivity in major depression. Neuropsychopharmacology. 2017;42(6):1210-1219.
15. Williams NR, Heifets BD, Blasey C, et al. Attenuation of antidepressant effects of ketamine by opioid receptor antagonism. Am J Psychiatry. 2018;175:1205-1215.
16. Williams NR, Heifets BD, Bentzley BS, et al. Attenuation of antidepressant and antisuicidal effects of ketamine by opioid receptor antagonism. Mol Psychiatry. 2019;24(12):1779-1786.
17. Mathew SJ, Rivas-Grajales AM. “Does the opioid system block or enhance the antidepressant effects of ketamine?” Chronic Stress. (Thousand Oaks). 2019;3. doi: 10.1177/2470547019852073.
18. Yoon G, Petrakis IL, Krystal JH. Association of combined naltrexone and ketamine with depressive symptoms in a case series of patients with depression and alcohol use disorder. JAMA Psychiatry. 2019;76:337-338.
19. Marton T, Barnes DE, Wallace A, et al. Concurrent use of buprenorphine, methadone, or naltrexone does not inhibit ketamine’s antidepressant activity. Biol Psychiatry. 2019;85(12):e75-e76.
20. Jonkman K, van Rijnsoever E, Olofsen E, et al. Esketamine counters opioid-induced respiratory depression. Br J Anaesth. 2018;120(5):1117-1127.
21. Schatzberg AF. Scientific issues relevant to improving the diagnosis, risk assessment, and treatment of major depression. Am J Psychiatry. 2019;176(5):342-347.
22. Abdallah C, Averill LA, Gueorgueiva R, et al. Rapamycin, an immunosuppressant and mTORC1 inhibitor, triples the antidepressant response rate of ketamine at 2 weeks following treatment: a double blind, placebo-controlled, cross-over, randomized clinical trial. bioRxiv. December 19, 2018. https://www.biorxiv.org/content/10.1101/500959v1. Accessed December 5, 2019.

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How you can aid your patient’s claim for long-term disability

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How you can aid your patient’s claim for long-term disability

Neuropsychiatric disorders are associated with high rates of impaired work capacity despite the best efforts of treating clinicians to help their patients stay employed or resume working after symptoms improve.1

In the past, a note from the psychiatrist stating that the patient was unable to work because of a neuropsychiatric condition often was sufficient to approve a disability claim. This is no longer the case in today’s more restrictive climate, and what constitutes prima facie evidence of a patient’s inability to sustain competitive employment secondary to neuropsychiatric illness has significantly changed.

The following practices can help facilitate approval of your patient’s disability claim.

Document as you go. Progress notes should include the type, frequency, context, duration, and severity of symptoms supporting ≥1 psychiatric diagnoses which prevent your patient from holding a job. It also is important to document the parameters of treatment and the patient’s response, including compliance with treatment recommendations. Preferably, progress notes should include quantitative ratings over time that pertain to everyday functioning, highlighting how your patient is coping with the psychosocial, cognitive, and executive functioning demands of his (her) job.

When documented over time, ratings based on the Global Assessment of Functioning scale or a comparable scale are useful in quantifying the nature and degree of impaired functioning related to work capacity. Consider administering rating scales at periodic intervals to show changes over time. When feasible, scales should be based on a patient’s and informant’s report of symptomatic status and everyday functioning, and could include use of instruments such as the World Health Organization’s Disability Assessment Schedule.2,3

Include documentation specific to work capacity. Disability claims often are denied, in part, because the treating psychiatrist’s judgment regarding work capacity seems to “come out of the blue,” appears premature, or lacks discussion of the functional implications of the patient’s clinical status in regards to recent or current job expectations. Therefore, progress notes should include reference to long-standing, emerging, or worsening behaviors or symptoms that have clear implications for your patient’s ability to work.

Outline the functional implications of the patient’s preserved and impaired abilities and skills as they relate to work capacity, vocational history, and recent or current job situation. For example, work requirements that are highly dependent on interaction with the public, supervisors, or coworkers would be significantly affected by recurrent or persistent psychosis, even if the patient adheres to treatment and symptoms are relatively mild. Problems with working memory or anterograde memory could impair work that routinely involves learning and retention of new instructions and procedures.

 

 

Provide psychoeducation and support. Educate your patient and their family about the disability claims process, including the high rate that claims are initially denied. Consider retaining an advocate—clinical case manager, family member, or non-family third party—to assist your patient in navigating the disability application process, such as help completing paperwork, setting up appointments, and providing transportation.

Remain responsive to inquiries from disability examiners. Return forms and phone calls from disability examiners, psychiatrists, and other health care professionals reviewing your patient’s claim for long-term disability in a timely manner. Failure to do so can be used to support denial of the claim.

Consider referral for consultations and diagnostics to support the claim of impaired work capacity. Depending on the nature of the case, this could involve additional medical workup (including neuroimaging), a consultation from a vocational rehabilitation specialist, or referral for psychological or neuropsychological testing.

Psychometric assessment is becoming the preferred method for garnering support for impaired work capacity caused by neuropsychiatric factors. Findings from psychometric assessment hold up to scrutiny better if the evaluation includes symptom validity testing to rule out factitious disorder, malingering, or somatization, and results from self-report and informant-based measures of adaptive behavior and functioning.4

References

1. Gold LH, Shuman DW. Evaluating mental health disability in the workplace: models, process and analysis. New York, NY: Springer; 2009.
2. Traxler J. Mental health disability: a resident’s perspective of problems and solutions. Psychiatric Times. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/residents-corner/mental-health-disability-residents-perspective-problems-and-solutions. Published November 26, 2014. Accessed August 31, 2016.
3. Zimmerman M. The importance of measuring outcomes in clinical practice. Psychiatric Times. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/uspc2014/importance-measuring-outcomes-clinical-practice. Published October 1, 2014. Accessed August 31, 2016.
4. Schwarz L, Roskos PT, Grossberg GT. Answers to 7 questions about using neuropsychological testing in your practice. Current Psychiatry. 2014;13(3):34-39.

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Dr. Pollak is a Clinical Neuropsychologist, Seacoast Mental Health Center, Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Dr. Miller is Medical Director, Brain Health, Exeter, New Hampshire, Staff Psychiatrist, Seacoast Mental Health Center, Exeter, New Hampshire, and Consulting Psychiatrist, Exeter Hospital, Exeter, New Hampshire.

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Dr. Pollak is a Clinical Neuropsychologist, Seacoast Mental Health Center, Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Dr. Miller is Medical Director, Brain Health, Exeter, New Hampshire, Staff Psychiatrist, Seacoast Mental Health Center, Exeter, New Hampshire, and Consulting Psychiatrist, Exeter Hospital, Exeter, New Hampshire.

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The authors report no financial relationships with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products.

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Dr. Pollak is a Clinical Neuropsychologist, Seacoast Mental Health Center, Portsmouth, New Hampshire. Dr. Miller is Medical Director, Brain Health, Exeter, New Hampshire, Staff Psychiatrist, Seacoast Mental Health Center, Exeter, New Hampshire, and Consulting Psychiatrist, Exeter Hospital, Exeter, New Hampshire.

Disclosures

The authors report no financial relationships with any company whose products are mentioned in this article or with manufacturers of competing products.

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Article PDF

Neuropsychiatric disorders are associated with high rates of impaired work capacity despite the best efforts of treating clinicians to help their patients stay employed or resume working after symptoms improve.1

In the past, a note from the psychiatrist stating that the patient was unable to work because of a neuropsychiatric condition often was sufficient to approve a disability claim. This is no longer the case in today’s more restrictive climate, and what constitutes prima facie evidence of a patient’s inability to sustain competitive employment secondary to neuropsychiatric illness has significantly changed.

The following practices can help facilitate approval of your patient’s disability claim.

Document as you go. Progress notes should include the type, frequency, context, duration, and severity of symptoms supporting ≥1 psychiatric diagnoses which prevent your patient from holding a job. It also is important to document the parameters of treatment and the patient’s response, including compliance with treatment recommendations. Preferably, progress notes should include quantitative ratings over time that pertain to everyday functioning, highlighting how your patient is coping with the psychosocial, cognitive, and executive functioning demands of his (her) job.

When documented over time, ratings based on the Global Assessment of Functioning scale or a comparable scale are useful in quantifying the nature and degree of impaired functioning related to work capacity. Consider administering rating scales at periodic intervals to show changes over time. When feasible, scales should be based on a patient’s and informant’s report of symptomatic status and everyday functioning, and could include use of instruments such as the World Health Organization’s Disability Assessment Schedule.2,3

Include documentation specific to work capacity. Disability claims often are denied, in part, because the treating psychiatrist’s judgment regarding work capacity seems to “come out of the blue,” appears premature, or lacks discussion of the functional implications of the patient’s clinical status in regards to recent or current job expectations. Therefore, progress notes should include reference to long-standing, emerging, or worsening behaviors or symptoms that have clear implications for your patient’s ability to work.

Outline the functional implications of the patient’s preserved and impaired abilities and skills as they relate to work capacity, vocational history, and recent or current job situation. For example, work requirements that are highly dependent on interaction with the public, supervisors, or coworkers would be significantly affected by recurrent or persistent psychosis, even if the patient adheres to treatment and symptoms are relatively mild. Problems with working memory or anterograde memory could impair work that routinely involves learning and retention of new instructions and procedures.

 

 

Provide psychoeducation and support. Educate your patient and their family about the disability claims process, including the high rate that claims are initially denied. Consider retaining an advocate—clinical case manager, family member, or non-family third party—to assist your patient in navigating the disability application process, such as help completing paperwork, setting up appointments, and providing transportation.

Remain responsive to inquiries from disability examiners. Return forms and phone calls from disability examiners, psychiatrists, and other health care professionals reviewing your patient’s claim for long-term disability in a timely manner. Failure to do so can be used to support denial of the claim.

Consider referral for consultations and diagnostics to support the claim of impaired work capacity. Depending on the nature of the case, this could involve additional medical workup (including neuroimaging), a consultation from a vocational rehabilitation specialist, or referral for psychological or neuropsychological testing.

Psychometric assessment is becoming the preferred method for garnering support for impaired work capacity caused by neuropsychiatric factors. Findings from psychometric assessment hold up to scrutiny better if the evaluation includes symptom validity testing to rule out factitious disorder, malingering, or somatization, and results from self-report and informant-based measures of adaptive behavior and functioning.4

Neuropsychiatric disorders are associated with high rates of impaired work capacity despite the best efforts of treating clinicians to help their patients stay employed or resume working after symptoms improve.1

In the past, a note from the psychiatrist stating that the patient was unable to work because of a neuropsychiatric condition often was sufficient to approve a disability claim. This is no longer the case in today’s more restrictive climate, and what constitutes prima facie evidence of a patient’s inability to sustain competitive employment secondary to neuropsychiatric illness has significantly changed.

The following practices can help facilitate approval of your patient’s disability claim.

Document as you go. Progress notes should include the type, frequency, context, duration, and severity of symptoms supporting ≥1 psychiatric diagnoses which prevent your patient from holding a job. It also is important to document the parameters of treatment and the patient’s response, including compliance with treatment recommendations. Preferably, progress notes should include quantitative ratings over time that pertain to everyday functioning, highlighting how your patient is coping with the psychosocial, cognitive, and executive functioning demands of his (her) job.

When documented over time, ratings based on the Global Assessment of Functioning scale or a comparable scale are useful in quantifying the nature and degree of impaired functioning related to work capacity. Consider administering rating scales at periodic intervals to show changes over time. When feasible, scales should be based on a patient’s and informant’s report of symptomatic status and everyday functioning, and could include use of instruments such as the World Health Organization’s Disability Assessment Schedule.2,3

Include documentation specific to work capacity. Disability claims often are denied, in part, because the treating psychiatrist’s judgment regarding work capacity seems to “come out of the blue,” appears premature, or lacks discussion of the functional implications of the patient’s clinical status in regards to recent or current job expectations. Therefore, progress notes should include reference to long-standing, emerging, or worsening behaviors or symptoms that have clear implications for your patient’s ability to work.

Outline the functional implications of the patient’s preserved and impaired abilities and skills as they relate to work capacity, vocational history, and recent or current job situation. For example, work requirements that are highly dependent on interaction with the public, supervisors, or coworkers would be significantly affected by recurrent or persistent psychosis, even if the patient adheres to treatment and symptoms are relatively mild. Problems with working memory or anterograde memory could impair work that routinely involves learning and retention of new instructions and procedures.

 

 

Provide psychoeducation and support. Educate your patient and their family about the disability claims process, including the high rate that claims are initially denied. Consider retaining an advocate—clinical case manager, family member, or non-family third party—to assist your patient in navigating the disability application process, such as help completing paperwork, setting up appointments, and providing transportation.

Remain responsive to inquiries from disability examiners. Return forms and phone calls from disability examiners, psychiatrists, and other health care professionals reviewing your patient’s claim for long-term disability in a timely manner. Failure to do so can be used to support denial of the claim.

Consider referral for consultations and diagnostics to support the claim of impaired work capacity. Depending on the nature of the case, this could involve additional medical workup (including neuroimaging), a consultation from a vocational rehabilitation specialist, or referral for psychological or neuropsychological testing.

Psychometric assessment is becoming the preferred method for garnering support for impaired work capacity caused by neuropsychiatric factors. Findings from psychometric assessment hold up to scrutiny better if the evaluation includes symptom validity testing to rule out factitious disorder, malingering, or somatization, and results from self-report and informant-based measures of adaptive behavior and functioning.4

References

1. Gold LH, Shuman DW. Evaluating mental health disability in the workplace: models, process and analysis. New York, NY: Springer; 2009.
2. Traxler J. Mental health disability: a resident’s perspective of problems and solutions. Psychiatric Times. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/residents-corner/mental-health-disability-residents-perspective-problems-and-solutions. Published November 26, 2014. Accessed August 31, 2016.
3. Zimmerman M. The importance of measuring outcomes in clinical practice. Psychiatric Times. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/uspc2014/importance-measuring-outcomes-clinical-practice. Published October 1, 2014. Accessed August 31, 2016.
4. Schwarz L, Roskos PT, Grossberg GT. Answers to 7 questions about using neuropsychological testing in your practice. Current Psychiatry. 2014;13(3):34-39.

References

1. Gold LH, Shuman DW. Evaluating mental health disability in the workplace: models, process and analysis. New York, NY: Springer; 2009.
2. Traxler J. Mental health disability: a resident’s perspective of problems and solutions. Psychiatric Times. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/residents-corner/mental-health-disability-residents-perspective-problems-and-solutions. Published November 26, 2014. Accessed August 31, 2016.
3. Zimmerman M. The importance of measuring outcomes in clinical practice. Psychiatric Times. http://www.psychiatrictimes.com/uspc2014/importance-measuring-outcomes-clinical-practice. Published October 1, 2014. Accessed August 31, 2016.
4. Schwarz L, Roskos PT, Grossberg GT. Answers to 7 questions about using neuropsychological testing in your practice. Current Psychiatry. 2014;13(3):34-39.

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