Feature

Time for a national ketamine registry, experts say


 

Off-label use of ketamine, the anesthetic-turned-potential treatment for resistant depression, is soaring in the United States and has many experts in the psychiatric community concerned.

The number of ketamine clinics has risen dramatically, with little to no oversight. Prescriptions are being written by providers who lack training in safe ketamine use and online startups are selling the drug for at-home use, taking advantage of a temporary federal regulation that makes it easier to prescribe controlled substances without an in-person patient assessment.

All of this comes at a time when recreational use of ketamine, known on the street as “Special K,” is rising, and reports to poison control centers and drug seizures by the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) are climbing.

In a scenario where enthusiasm for the drug is larger than the body of evidence supporting its clinical use, support is growing for the creation of a ketamine registry to collect data on dosage, treatment frequency, adverse events, and long-term outcomes in patients receiving the therapy for depression and other mental health conditions.

“In the past, there was this question of whether a registry was even needed,” said Gerard Sanacora, MD, PhD, a professor of psychiatry at Yale University, New Haven, Conn., who has pushed for a registry for more than 5 years.

“Now, not only are people being treated with this in large numbers, but it’s also started to push the envelope with at-home dosing,” Dr. Sanacora said in an interview. “It’s come to the point that everybody agrees we do need some way to track it.”

An idea whose time has come

Interest in ketamine’s antidepressant effects has grown since 2000, when a small study suggested the drug rapidly improved depressive symptoms. Research now suggests ketamine reduces symptoms in patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD).

Studies linking ketamine to relief of depressive symptoms are small and mostly retrospective, and none has offered longitudinal information on long-term outcomes, including side effects and the risk of addiction.

Still, clinicians desperate to help the one-third of patients with major depression who fail to respond to first-line treatments often prescribe the drug anyway.

In 2017, Dr. Sanacora, who also is director of the Yale Depression Research Program at the Yale School of Medicine, was the lead author of a consensus statement that sought to help physicians administer ketamine safely and appropriately in patients with severe depression and other mood disorders.

In that paper, Dr. Sanacora and his coauthors advocated for the creation of a ketamine registry. Such a database, they argued, would provide much-needed data for large, long-term studies, which could be used to develop treatment guidelines, certification programs, and possibly even accreditation standards for providers. Meanwhile, researchers and clinicians in the United Kingdom were also calling for a ketamine registry.

While there seemed to be wide consensus that such a registry was needed, there was no clear path to creating one and no clear line to an agency that would take responsibility for maintaining it.

Because the registry wouldn’t be tied to a drug indication, Dr. Sanacora was told the U.S. Food and Drug Administration wouldn’t take it on. The project also fell outside the purview of the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH), and the DEA.

“I haven’t met anybody who has said this is a terrible idea, but nobody seems to have a clear mechanism of doing it, and it doesn’t seem to fall directly under anybody’s jurisdiction,” Dr. Sanacora said.

Dr. Sanacora and other ketamine registry advocates were met with an endless stream of questions. Who would pay for it? How would they get providers to participate? Who would run it and how would the data be shared? The barriers to implementation seemed insurmountable.

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