| Literature DB >> 36232748 |
Dominika Psiuk1,2, Emilia Magdalena Nowak1, Natalia Dycha2, Urszula Łopuszańska3, Jacek Kurzepa4, Marzena Samardakiewicz3.
Abstract
This publication discusses two compounds belonging to the psychoactive substances group which are studied in the context of depression treatment-psilocybin and esketamine. The former is a naturally occurring psychedelic. The latter was invented in the laboratory exactly 60 years ago. Although the substances were controversial in the past, recent studies indicate the potential of those substances as novel antidepressant agents. The PubMed/MEDLINE database was used to identify articles for systematic review, using the following search terms: (depression) AND (psilocybin) OR (ketamine). From 617 items, only 12 articles were obtained in the final analyses. Three articles were devoted to psilocybin in depression treatment and nine to esketamine. In most studies, esketamine showed a significant reduction in both depressive symptoms and suicidal ideation shortly after intake and after a month of treatment compared to baseline and to standard-of-care antidepressant agents. Psilocybin's antidepressive effects occurred one day after intake and after 6-7 weeks of treatment and were maintained for up to 6 or 8 months of follow-up. One study indicated that psilocybin's effects are comparable with and may be superior to escitalopram treatment. Both esketamine and psilocybin demonstrated rapid and long-term effects in reducing depression symptoms and, after overcoming some limitations, may be considered as novel antidepressant agents in future.Entities:
Keywords: depression; esketamine; psilocybin; psychedelics
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36232748 PMCID: PMC9570062 DOI: 10.3390/ijms231911450
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 6.208
Figure 1Flowchart presenting article selection process.
Recent randomized, placebo-controlled studies concerning psilocybin and esketamine in depression.
| Author, Year | Substance | Phase | No. Part. | Condition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Griffiths, R. 2016 [ | Psilocybin | Phase 2 | 51 | Depression and/or anxiety |
| Ross, S. 2016 [ | Psilocybin | Early Phase 1 | 29 | Depression and/or anxiety |
| Carhart-Harris, R. 2021 [ | Psilocybin | Phase 2 | 59 | Moderate-to-severe Major Depressive Disorder |
| Daly, E.J. 2018 [ | Esketamine | Phase 2 | 57 | Treatment Resistant depression |
| Canuso, C.M. 2018 [ | Esketamine | Phase 2 | 68 | Treatment Resistant Depression with Suicide Ideation |
| Fedgchin, M. 2019 [ | Esketamine | Phase 3 | 346 | Treatment Resistant Depression |
| Popova, V. 2019 [ | Esketamine | Phase 3 | 227 | Treatment Resistant depression |
| Daly, E.J. 2019 [ | Esketamine | Phase 3 | 297 | Treatment Resistant depression |
| Fu, D-J. 2020 [ | Esketamine | Phase 3 | 226 | Treatment Resistant Depression with Suicide Ideation |
| Ochs-Ross, R. 2020 [ | Esketamine | Phase 3 | 51 | Treatment Resistant Depression |
| Takahashi, N. 2021 [ | Esketamine | Phase 3b | 202 | Treatment Resistant Depression |
| Ionescu, D.F. 2021 [ | Esketamine | Phase 3 | 230 | Treatment Resistant Depression with Suicide Ideation |
Esketamine rapid onset. Change in MADRS score at 2–4 h and 24 h after esketamine intake.
| Change in MADRS after: | LS and MD from Baseline and AD + Placebo | Author, Year | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daly, E.J. 2018 [ | Canuso, C.M. 2018 [ | Fedgchin, M. 2019 [ | Popova, V. 2019 [ | Fu, D.-J. 2020 [ | Ionescu, D.F. 2021 [ | ||||
| 2–4 h postdose | MD from baseline | −14.3 [a1] | −17.6 * [a2] | −13.4 * | - | - | - | - | - |
| LS MD from AD + placebo | −4.6 [a1] | −7.9 * [a2] | −5.3 * | - | - | - | - | −4.2 * | |
| 24 h | MD from baseline | −15.7 * [a1] | −16.4 * [a2] | - | - | - | - | −16.4 * | −15.7 * |
| LS MD from AD + placebo | −10.0 * [a1] | −10.7 * [a2] | −7.2 * | −3.0 ** [a1] | −2.2 ** [a2] | −3.3 | −3.8 * | −3.9 * | |
Abbreviations: AD—(standard-of-care) antidepressant; LS—least square; MD—mean difference. [a]—results for 56 mg [a1] and 84 mg [a2], respectively. [b]—results for 84 mg. [c]—flexible doses, ranging from 56 mg to 84 mg. * statistically significant. ** statistical significance was not assessed as the primary endpoint was not met.
Change in MADRS score at 25th-28th day of esketamine treatment.
| Author, Year | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canuso, C.M. 2018 [ | Fedgchin, M. 2019 [ | Popova, V. 2019 [ | Ochs-Ross, R. 2020 [ | Takahashi, N. 2021 [ | Ionescu, D.F. 2021 [ | ||||
| Day 25.–28. | MD from baseline | - | −19.0 ** | −18.8 ** | −21.4 * | −10.0 | −14.5 [b1] | −15.1 [b2] | - |
| LS mean difference from AD + placebo | −4.5 | −4.1 ** [b1] | −3.2 ** [b2] | −4.0 * | −3.6 | 0.6 [b1] | −0.9 [b2] | −3.7* | |
Abbreviations: AD—(standard-of-care) antidepressant; LS—least square; MD—mean difference. [a]—results for 84 mg. [b]—results for 56 [b1] and 84 [b2] mg, respectively. [c]—flexible doses, ranging from 56 to 84 mg. * statistically significant. ** statistical significance was not assessed as the primary endpoint was not met.
Response and remission rates compiled at 4–7-week follow-up (time frames vary over different studies).
| Author, Year | Substance | Scale | Response Rate | Remission Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Griffiths, R. 2016 [ | Psilocybin | GRID-HAMD-17 | 92% (vs. 32%) | 60% (vs. 16%) |
| Ross, S. 2016 [ | Psilocybin | BDI | ~80% (vs. ~15%) | ~80% (vs. ~15%) |
| HADS Depression | ~70% (vs. ~40%) | ~70% (vs. ~40%) | ||
| Carhart-Harris, R. 2021 [ | Psilocybin | QIDS-SR-16 | 70% (vs. 48%) [a] | 57% (vs. 28%) [a] |
| Daly, E.J. 2018 [ | Esketamine | MADRS | 56% [b] | 42% [b] |
| Fedgchin, M. 2019 [ | Esketamine | MADRS | 54.1% and 53.1% (vs. 38.9%) [c] | 36.0% and 38.8% (vs. 30.6%) [c] |
| Popova, V. 2019 [ | Esketamine | MADRS | 69.3% (vs. 52.0%) | 52.5% (vs. 31.0%) |
| Ochs-Ross, R. 2020 [ | Esketamine | MADRS | 27.0% (vs. 13.3%) | 17.5% (vs. 6.7%) |
| Ionescu, D.F. 2021 [ | Esketamine | MADRS | 59% (vs. 48.0%) | 43.0% (vs. 27.0%) |
Clinical response was defined as ≥50% decrease in measure relative to baseline; symptom remission was defined as ≥50% decrease in measure relative to baseline and a score of ≤7 on GRID-HAMD-17, HADS D ≤ 7, BDI ≤ 12, or MADRS ≤ 10. [a] Control group was administered escitalopram instead of psilocybin. [b] After open label phase, where all participants received esketamine. [c] Results for esketamine 56, 84 mg, and placebo, respectively.
Antidepressant effects of psilocybin.
| Author, Year | Dose | Time Frame | Primary Outcome Measure | Results | Secondary Outcome Measure | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Griffiths, R. 2016 [ | 22 or 30 mg/70 kg | 5 weeks after the 1st session | GRID-HAMD-17 | Significant difference between the Psilocybin-1st(Placebo-2nd) and Placebo-1st(Psilocybin-2nd) groups | BDI, HADS | Decrease, significant difference between the Psilocybin-1st(Placebo-2nd) and Placebo-1st(Psilocybin-2nd) groups |
| 5 weeks after the 2nd session = crossover | No significant difference between the Psilocybin-1st(Placebo-2nd) and Placebo-1st(Psilocybin-2nd) groups * | Decrease, no significant difference between the Psilocybin-1st(Placebo-2nd) and Placebo-1st(Psilocybin-2nd) groups * | ||||
| 6-months’ follow-up | Significant difference from baseline | Decrease, significant difference between baseline and 6-months’ follow-up | ||||
| Ross, S. 2016 [ | 0.3 mg/kg | 6 weeks after the 1st session | HADS D, BDI | Significant difference from baseline in the Psilocybin-1st(Placebo-2nd) group. Significant difference between the Psilocybin-1st(Placebo-2nd) and Placebo-1st(Psilocybin-2nd) groups. | - | - |
| 6 weeks after the 2nd session = crossover | Significant difference from baseline in the Psilocybin-1st(Placebo-2nd) group. Significant difference from baseline in the Placebo-1st(Psilocybin-2nd) group in BDI, but not in HADS; No significant difference between groups in BDI, but not HADS * | |||||
| 26-week follow-up | Significant difference from baseline in both Psilocybin-1st(Placebo-2nd) and Placebo-1st(Psilocybin-2nd) groups; No significant difference between groups * | |||||
| Carhart-Harris, R. 2021 [ | 25 mg | 6 weeks | QIDS-SR-16 | No significant difference between the psilocybin and escitalopram groups | HAMD-D-17, MADRS, BDI | As the primary endpoint was not met, the secondary outcomes’ significance was not adjusted, but in general the differences between groups favored psilocybin over escitalopram |
Only depression-related outcomes were included in this table. * After the 2nd session, both groups received psilocybin. No difference means that score decreased in Placebo-1st (Psilocybin-2nd) group, while score in Psilocybin-1st (Placebo-2nd) group was sustained.
The most common adverse effects during esketamine treatment.
| Author, Year | No. of Assessed Patients | Dissociation [%] | Headaches [%] | Dizziness [%] | Vertigo [%] | Nausea [%] | Dysgeusia [%] | Elevation in BP [%] |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Canuso, C.M. 2018 [ | 35 (DB), 27 (FU) | 31.4 (DB), 0 (FU) | 31.4 (DB), 7.4 (FU) | 34.3 (DB), 3.7 (FU) | 11.4 (DB), 0 (FU) | 37.1 (DB), 0 (FU) | 31.4 (DB), 3.7 (FU) | N/A |
| Daly, E.J. 2018 [ | 56 (DB), 57 (OL) | 20 (DB) | 21 (DB), 14 (OL) | 36 (DB), 39 (OL) | 7 (DB) | 18 (DB), 16 (OL) | 18 (DB), 23 (OL) | Hypertension-5 (DB) |
| Fedgchin, M. 2019 [ | 231 | 26.8 | 20.3 | 25.1 | 20.8 | 29.4 | 16.0 | 8.2 |
| Popova, V. 2019 [ | 116 | 26.1 | 20.0 | 20.9 | 26.1 | 26.1 | 24.3 | 9.6 |
| Daly, E.J. 2019 [ | 152 | 23.0 | 17.8 | 20.4 | 25.0 | 16.4 | 27.0 | 6.6 |
| Fu, D-J. 2020 [ | 113 | 29.2 | 18.6 | 35.4 | 6.2 | 20.4 | 14.2 | 16.8 |
| Ochs-Ross, R. 2020 [ | 72 | 12.5 | 12.5 | 20.8 | 11.1 | 18.1 | 5.6 | 12.5 |
| Takahashi, N. 2021 [ | 122 | 37.7 | 12.3 | 36.1 | 15.6 | 18.0 | N/A | 41.0 |
| Ionescu, D.F. 2021 [ | 114 | 38.6 | 21.9 | 41.2 | 6.1 | 33.3 | 25.4 | 6.1 |
Abbreviation: N/A—not applicable; DB—double-blind; FU—follow-up; OL—open label.
Adverse effects by type occurred in more than 5% of patients during psilocybin treatment.
| Author, Year | Number of Assessed Patients | Dose | Psychiatric | Neurological | Cardiovascular | Gastroenterological | General |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Griffiths, R. 2016 [ | 50 cross-over | (high dose 22 or 30 mg/70 kg), (low dose 1 or 3 mg/70 kg) | psychological discomfort: 32 (high dose), 12 (low dose); transient anxiety: 26 (high dose), 15 (low dose) | - | elevation in SBP: 34 (high dose), 17 (low dose); DBP: 12 (high dose), 2 (low dose) | nausea/vomiting: 15 (high dose session), 0 (low dose) | physical discomfort: 21 (high dose session), 8 (low dose session) |
| Ross, S. 2016 [ | 28 cross-over | 0.3 mg/kg | transient anxiety: 17; transient psychotic-like symptoms: 7 | headaches/migraine: 28 | elevation in BP and HR: 76 | nausea: 14 | - |
| Carhart-Harris, R. 2021 [ | 30 (6-week trial period), 30 (dosing-day 1) | 25 mg | feeling jittery: 7 (6-week trial), 0 (dosing-day 1) | headaches: 67 (6-week trial), 43 (dosing-day 1); migraine: 10 (6-week trial), 0 (dosing-day 1); dizziness: 7 (6-week trial) | - | nausea: 27 (6-week trial), 13 (dosing-day 1); vomiting: 7 (6-week trial), 0 (dosing-day 1 | fatigue: 7 (6-week trial), 0 (dosing-day 1) |
Summary of psilocybin and esketamine features.
| Substance | Psilocybin | Esketamine |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanisms of action | Activates the 5-HT2A receptors | Blocks subsets of NMDA receptors on GABA interneurons |
| Conjunction | In conjunction with psychotherapy | In conjunction with SSRI, SNRI |
| Depression tupe | Under research in Major Depressive Disorder and Depression Related to Life-Threatening Diseases | Treatment-Resistant Depression, Major Depressive Disorder with Suicidal Thoughts or Behaviors |
| Influence on cognitive functions | Mind-altering effects, “hallucinations” | Dissociation |
| Influence on suicidal thoughts | Likely reducing | Reducing |
| Advantages | Neither addictive nor hepatotoxic, and not toxic to tissues; | Route of administration: nasal; |
| Limitations | Mind-altering side-effects, misuse potential (must be administered under monitored conditions) | Mind-altering side effects (administration must take place in a clinic and be closely monitored) |
| Adverse Events | Minor side effects: transient increase in blood pressure, body tremors, fear and sadness, mild to moderate transient headache | Can produce serious adverse events (e.g., suicidal ideation, suicidal attempt, lacunar stroke, seizures) |