Plasma metabolomic profiling of a ketamine and placebo crossover trial of major depressive disorder and healthy control subjects.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to identify metabolic pathways, including the arginine pathway, that might explain ketamine's rapid antidepressant effects in treatment-resistant depression.
Results Summary
Ketamine treatment led to a significant increase in arginine bioavailability at 4 hours post-infusion, particularly in responders, suggesting a potential role for arginine in ketamine's antidepressant mechanism.
Population
Medication-free patients with treatment-resistant major depressive disorder (29 subjects) and healthy controls (25 subjects).
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Single infusion, effects measured at multiple time points (up to 4 hours post-infusion).
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
(R,S)-Ketamine | decrease | major depressive disorder | patients with major depressive disorder | - | produces rapid, robust, and sustained antidepressant effects | #1 |
(R,S)-Ketamine | decrease | treatment refractory depression | patients with treatment refractory depression | - | pharmacological efficacy | #2 |
Ketamine treatment | increase | circulating sphingomyelins | medication-free patients with treatment-resistant major depressive disorder and healthy controls | - | resulted in a general increase | #3 |
Ketamine response | increase | kynurenine pathway | responders to ketamine treatment | - | resulted in more pronounced effects | #4 |
Ketamine response | increase | arginine pathway | responders to ketamine treatment | - | resulted in more pronounced effects | #5 |
Ketamine response | decrease | circulating kynurenine levels | responders to ketamine treatment | - | larger decrease | #6 |
Ketamine response | increase | bioavailability of arginine | responders to ketamine treatment | - | larger increase | #7 |
(R,S)-Ketamine produces rapid, robust, and sustained antidepressant effects in major depressive disorder. Specifically, its pharmacological efficacy in treatment refractory depression is considered a major breakthrough in the field. However, the mechanism of action of ketamine's rapid effect remains to be determined. In order to identify pathways that are responsible for ketamine's effect, a targeted metabolomic approach was carried out using a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover design, with infusion order randomized with medication-free patients with treatment-resistant major depressive disorder (29 subjects) and healthy controls (25 subjects). The metabolomic profile of these subjects was characterized at multiple time points, and a comprehensive analysis was investigated between the following: MDD and healthy controls, treatment and placebo in both groups and the corresponding response to ketamine treatment. Ketamine treatment resulted in a general increase in circulating sphingomyelins, levels which were not correlated with response. Ketamine response resulted in more pronounced effects in the kynurenine pathway and the arginine pathway at 4 h post-infusion, where a larger decrease in circulating kynurenine levels and a larger increase in the bioavailability of arginine were observed in responders to ketamine treatment, suggesting possible mechanisms for response to ketamine treatment.