Safety of Ketamine Augmentation to Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors in Treatment-Resistant Depression: A Systematic Literature Review and Case Series.

Jolien K E Veraart, Sanne Y Smith-Apeldoorn, Mats Kutscher, Maurice Vischjager, Annemarie van der Meij, Jeanine Kamphuis, Robert A Schoevers
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Abstract

Objective: Ketamine is increasingly prescribed for treatment-resistant depression (TRD), often as add-on to regular antidepressants. Augmentation of ketamine to monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) is advised against, as this practice might increase blood pressure or cause serotonin syndrome. Despite the potential relevance for patients, little is known about actual side effects of combined use. We summarize literature on the safety and add results of our case series.

Evidence Review: PubMed and Embase were searched from inception to July 2021 for English-language articles describing concomitant use of ketamine and MAOIs. The search strategy included terms for "ketamine" AND "monoamine oxidase inhibitor" including generic and brand names. Additionally, we describe the safety of twice weekly oral esketamine administration over the course of 5 weeks to 9 months in 8 TRD patients using MAOIs.

Findings: After deduplication, we screened 138 articles and assessed 43 full texts. Twelve studies were included with a total of 39 patients receiving ketamine and MAOIs. Blood pressure and heart rate increased in multiple cases, though this was deemed clinically insignificant in all but 1 patient. No signs of hypertensive crisis or serotonin syndrome were observed. In our case series, we observed minor elevations in blood pressure and heart rate and no serious adverse events.

Conclusions and Relevance: The results suggest that combined use of MAOIs and esketamine is less prone to severe side effects than presumed. The investigated sample size was small, and prescribed doses of MAOIs were relatively low. Further research is required before definite conclusions about the safety of this combination can be drawn.

氯胺酮增强单胺氧化酶抑制剂治疗难治性抑郁症的安全性:系统文献综述和病例系列。
目的:氯胺酮越来越多地被用于治疗难治性抑郁症(TRD),通常作为常规抗抑郁药的补充。建议不要增加氯胺酮对单胺氧化酶抑制剂(MAOIs),因为这种做法可能会增加血压或引起血清素综合征。尽管对患者有潜在的相关性,但对联合使用的实际副作用知之甚少。我们总结了关于安全性的文献,并添加了我们的病例系列结果。证据回顾:PubMed和Embase检索了从成立到2021年7月描述氯胺酮和MAOIs同时使用的英文文章。搜索策略包括“氯胺酮”和“单胺氧化酶抑制剂”,包括通用名称和品牌名称。此外,我们描述了8例使用MAOIs的TRD患者在5周到9个月期间每周两次口服艾氯胺酮的安全性。结果:在重复数据删除后,我们筛选了138篇文章并评估了43篇全文。12项研究共纳入39例接受氯胺酮和MAOIs治疗的患者。多例患者血压和心率升高,但除1例患者外,其余患者的血压和心率均升高。没有观察到高血压危象或血清素综合征的迹象。在我们的病例系列中,我们观察到血压和心率轻微升高,没有严重的不良事件。结论和相关性:结果表明,MAOIs和艾氯胺酮联合使用较不容易出现严重的副作用。调查样本量较小,MAOIs的处方剂量相对较低。在得出这种组合的安全性的明确结论之前,还需要进一步的研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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