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UnknownNCT02037503

The Effect of Ketamine on Mechanises Underlying Suicidal Ideation and Drug-resistant Major Depression

Effects of Ketamine Treatment on Suicidal Ideation, Drug-resistant Major Depression, and Negative Emotional Experience. Clinical and fMRI Study

Status
Unknown
Phase
Phase 3
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
100 (estimated)
Sponsor
Tel-Aviv Sourasky Medical Center · Other Government
Sex
All
Age
18 Years – 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Suicide attempts are a serious concern worldwide. Currently, existing drugs take about three weeks to show effect on suicidal thoughts and drives. Recent evidence suggests that intravenous Ketamine exerts a rapid effect in suicidal patients, even after a single injection. We aim to examine whether oral Ketamine is a safe and effective treatment in suicidal patients. Following a suicide attempt, patients will be randomized into a group that will be given Ketamine for 21 days and one that will receive placebo, and assessed using questionnaires and brain scans. We expect early improvements in suicide scales in the Ketamine group. As a secondary goal, this study will use IV ketamine in order to access the extent to which the experience of the embodied self mediate different levels of "embodied emotion". A better understanding of these relations will assist in unveiling the cognitive mechanism underlying the therapeutic effect of ketamine

Detailed description

Suicide is a leading cause of death worldwide. Current strategies rely mostly on prevention, as there is no pharmacotherapy that seems to benefit patients in the acute phase of suicidal ideation. Conventional medications exert a beneficial effect only after three weeks. However, recent evidence suggests that intravenous Ketamine, an NMDA receptor antagonist, has a rapid and direct beneficial effect on suicidal ideation, even after a single dose. We hypothesize that daily oral administration of Ketamine in suicidal patients will prove a safe and effective outpatient treatment. In a double blind, placebo-controlled trial, patients admitted to the emergency department after a suicide attempt will be randomized into two groups: one will be given a daily sub-anesthetic dose of oral Ketamine, while the second group will receive a daily dose of placebo. Participants will be followed-up for 21 days. Some of the subjects will also undergo functional MRI scans before and after the first Ketamine intake. We expect significant early improvements in suicide and depression scales in the active treatment group. If daily oral Ketamine proves a safe, cost-effective, and beneficial treatment option for suicidal ideation, this will constitute a much needed new tool in preventing suicide ideation related morbidity and mortality. The secondary goal, delineating the relation between sense of embodied self and embodied emotion, will be approached by recruiting 40 healthy participants that underwent a romantic relationship break-up. Each participant will undergo two sessions: one under the placebo and the other under Ketamine. Each session will involve two main tasks: a virtual version of the rubber hand illusion and a task comparing mental and physical pain perception. The vRHI will involve four conditions that will be induced by two independent variables, synchronicity (synchronous-asynchronous) and pleasantness (high/low). The mental/physical pain task will include four conditions as well: Physical pain (high/low) and mental pain (high/low)

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
DRUGKetamine
DRUGSaline

Timeline

Start date
2014-01-01
Primary completion
2020-05-01
Completion
2020-05-01
First posted
2014-01-16
Last updated
2020-04-02

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Israel

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02037503. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.