From www.practice.com
IMPORTANCE
The ELEKT-D: Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) vs Ketamine in
Patients With Treatment Resistant Depression (TRD) (ELEKT-D) trial demonstrated
noninferiority of intravenous ketamine vs ECT for nonpsychotic TRD. Clinical
features that can guide selection of ketamine vs ECT may inform shared
decision-making for patients with TRD.
OBJECTIVE
To evaluate whether selected clinical features were
associated with differential improvement with ketamine vs ECT.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS
This secondary analysis of an open-label noninferiority
randomized clinical trial was a multicenter study conducted at 5 US academic
medical centers from April 7, 2017, to November 11, 2022. Analyses for this
study, which were not prespecified in the trial protocol, were conducted from
May 10 to Oct 31, 2023. The study cohort included patients with TRD, aged 21 to
75 years, who were in a current nonpsychotic depressive episode of at least
moderate severity and were referred for ECT by their clinicians.
EXPOSURES
Eligible participants were randomized 1:1 to receive either
6 infusions of ketamine or 9 treatments with ECT over 3 weeks.
MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES
Association between baseline factors (including 16-item
Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology Self-Report [QIDS-SR16],
Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale [MADRS], premorbid intelligence,
cognitive function, history of attempted suicide, and inpatient vs outpatient
status) and treatment response were assessed with repeated measures
mixed-effects model analyses.
RESULTS
Among the 365 participants included in this study (mean [SD]
age, 46.0 [14.5] years; 191 [52.3%] female), 195 were randomized to the
ketamine group and 170 to the ECT group. In repeated measures mixed-effects
models using depression levels over 3 weeks and after false discovery rate
adjustment, participants with a baseline QIDS-SR16 score of 20 or less (-7.7 vs
-5.6 points) and those starting treatment as outpatients (-8.4 vs -6.2 points)
reported greater reduction in the QIDS-SR16 with ketamine vs ECT. Conversely,
those with a baseline QIDS-SR16 score of more than 20 (ie, very severe
depression) and starting treatment as inpatients reported greater reduction in
the QIDS-SR16 earlier in course of treatment (-8.4 vs -6.7 points) with ECT,
but scores were similar in both groups at the end-of-treatment visit (-9.0 vs
-9.9 points). In the ECT group only, participants with higher scores on
measures of premorbid intelligence (-14.0 vs -11.2 points) and with a comorbid
posttraumatic stress disorder diagnosis (-16.6 vs -12.0 points) reported
greater reduction in the MADRS score. Those with impaired memory recall had
greater reduction in MADRS during the second week of treatment (-13.4 vs -9.6
points), but the levels of MADRS were similar to those with unimpaired recall
at the end-of-treatment visit (-14.3 vs -12.2 points). Other results were not
significant after false discovery rate adjustment.
CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE
In this secondary analysis of the ELEKT-D randomized
clinical trial of ECT vs ketamine, greater improvement in depression was
observed with intravenous ketamine among outpatients with nonpsychotic TRD who
had moderately severe or severe depression, suggesting that these patients may
consider ketamine over ECT for TRD.
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