Effect of ketamine on anxiety: findings from the Ketamine for Adult Depression Study
Version 2 2025-01-23, 04:46Version 2 2025-01-23, 04:46
Version 1 2025-01-21, 05:00Version 1 2025-01-21, 05:00
journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-23, 04:46authored byNatalie T Mills, Stevan Nikolin, Nick Glozier, David Barton, Bernhard T Baune, Paul B Fitzgerald, Paul Glue, Shanthi Sarma, Anthony Rodgers, Dusan Hadzi-Pavlovic, Angelo Alonzo, Vanessa Dong, Donel Martin, Philip B Mitchell, Michael BerkMichael Berk, Gregory Carter, Maree L Hackett, Andrew A Somogyi, Cathy MihalopoulosCathy Mihalopoulos, Mary Lou Chatterton, Sean Hood, Colleen K Loo
Background
Anxiety disorders and treatment-resistant major depressive disorder (TRD) are often comorbid. Studies suggest ketamine has anxiolytic and antidepressant properties.
Aims
To investigate if subcutaneous racemic ketamine, delivered twice weekly for 4 weeks, reduces anxiety in people with TRD.
Method
The Ketamine for Adult Depression Study was a multisite 4-week randomised, double-blind, active (midazolam)-controlled trial. The study initially used fixed low dose ketamine (0.5 mg/kg, cohort 1), before protocol revision to flexible, response-guided dosing (0.5–0.9 mg/kg, cohort 2). This secondary analysis assessed anxiety using the Hamilton Anxiety (HAM-A) scale (primary measure) and ‘inner tension’ item 3 of the Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS), at baseline, 4 weeks (end treatment) and 4 weeks after treatment end. Analyses of change in anxiety between ketamine and midazolam groups included all participants who received at least one treatment (n = 174), with a mixed effects repeated measures model used to assess the primary anxiety measure. The trial was registered at www.anzctr.org.au (ACTRN12616001096448).
Results
In cohort 1 (n = 68) the reduction in HAM-A score was not statistically significant: −1.4 (95% CI [−8.6, 3.2], P = 0.37), whereas a significant reduction was seen for cohort 2 (n = 106) of −4.0 (95% CI [−10.6, −1.9], P = 0.0058), favouring ketamine over midazolam. These effects were mediated by total MADRS and were not maintained at 4 weeks after treatment end. MADRS item 3 was also significantly reduced in cohort 2 (P = 0.026) but not cohort 1 (P = 0.96).
Conclusion
Ketamine reduces anxiety in people with TRD when administered subcutaneously in adequate doses.