氯胺酮麻醉对电休克治疗的疗效、耐受性、癫痫发作反应和神经认知结果的影响

N. Ainsworth, Amir Ali Sepehry, F. Vila-Rodriguez
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引用次数: 10

摘要

补充的数字内容可在文本中找到。电痉挛疗法(ECT)仍然是治疗重度抑郁症最有效的方法。氯胺酮是一种麻醉剂,因其快速的抗抑郁作用而受到关注。大量的随机对照试验研究了氯胺酮麻醉在ECT中对各种临床结果的影响。以前的系统评价没有发现对抑郁症的整体反应有好处,尽管有些人在电痉挛疗法的早期阶段发现了有益的证据。对于其他结果,特别是仅使用高质量研究的数据时,尚未建立明确的定量结论。我们的目的是通过荟萃分析检查氯胺酮与其他麻醉剂的双盲随机对照试验的所有数据,为ECT的实践和未来的研究提出建议。提取抑郁症状、癫痫发作持续时间和电剂量、神经心理表现和不良反应的数据。效应量使用Hedge’s g和比值比计算。18项研究(n = 915)被纳入meta分析。无论是在电痉挛疗法的早期还是在研究结束时,氯胺酮都没有被发现能改善抑郁症状。氯胺酮对总的癫痫发作时间(Hedge’s g = 0.71, P = 0.038)、氯胺酮与其他麻醉剂联合使用的亚组(Hedge’s g = 0.78, P < 0.01)和减少电剂量(Hedge’s g = 1.98, P = 0.039)都有很大的影响。氯胺酮对任何个体神经心理领域均无显著影响。除了接受氯胺酮单药治疗的高血压患者外,氯胺酮与不良反应增加无关。许多结果存在显著的异质性,敏感性分析表明在大多数情况下与方法差异有关。本研究支持氯胺酮不增强ECT的抗抑郁作用,包括早期改善,但提供了大量证据,增加癫痫发作持续时间和减少电剂量。在神经认知结果方面没有发现明显的益处,但由于样本量小和异质性高,分析受到限制。氯胺酮在ECT中通常是安全的,尤其是作为共麻醉剂。我们的研究结果为ECT临床指南中关于在癫痫发作不理想的情况下使用氯胺酮辅助治疗的建议提供了荟萃分析支持。鼓励针对神经认知结果的进一步研究。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Effects of Ketamine Anesthesia on Efficacy, Tolerability, Seizure Response, and Neurocognitive Outcomes in Electroconvulsive Therapy
Supplemental digital content is available in the text. Abstract Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) remains the most effective treatment for major depressive disorder. Ketamine is an anesthetic gaining attention for its rapid antidepressant effect. Numerous randomized controlled trials have investigated the effect of ketamine anesthesia in ECT on various clinical outcomes. Previous systematic reviews have not found benefit for overall depression response, although some have found evidence of benefit early in the ECT course. Clear quantitative conclusions have not been established regarding other outcomes, particularly while only using data from high-quality studies. We aimed to examine all data from double-blind randomized controlled trials comparing ketamine to other anesthetics via meta-analysis, to make recommendations regarding ECT practice and future research. Data were extracted for depressive symptoms, seizure duration and electrical dose, neuropsychological performance, and adverse effects. Effect sizes were calculated using Hedge's g and odds ratios. Eighteen studies (n = 915) were included in the meta-analysis. Ketamine was not found to enhance improvement of depressive symptoms, either early in ECT course or at end of study. Ketamine had a large effect on increasing seizure duration both overall (Hedge's g = 0.71, P = 0.038) and in the subgroup receiving ketamine in combination with another anesthetic (Hedge's g = 0.78, P < 0.01), and on decreasing electrical dose (Hedge's g = 1.98, P = 0.039). There was no significant effect of ketamine on any individual neuropsychological domain. Ketamine was not associated with increased adverse effects, except for hypertension in patients receiving ketamine monotherapy. Significant heterogeneity was present for many outcomes, and sensitivity analyses suggested a relation to methodological variation in most cases. This study supports the finding that ketamine does not enhance ECT's antidepressant effect, including on early improvement, but provides substantial evidence for enhancing seizure duration and reducing electrical dose. No significant benefit was found on neurocognitive outcomes, but analysis was limited by small sample sizes and high heterogeneity. Ketamine is generally safe in ECT, particularly as a coanesthetic. Our findings provide meta-analytic support to the recommendations in ECT clinical guidelines for use of coadjuvant ketamine in ECT where seizures are suboptimal. Further studies targeting neurocognitive outcomes are encouraged.
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