Department of Anesthesiology, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, 63110, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Washington University in St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, 63110, USA.
F1000Res. 2022 May 11;11:510. doi: 10.12688/f1000research.121529.1. eCollection 2022.
Postoperative depressive symptoms are associated with pain, readmissions, death, and other undesirable outcomes. Ketamine produces rapid but transient antidepressant effects in the perioperative setting. Longer infusions confer lasting antidepressant activity in patients with treatment-resistant depression, but it is unknown whether a similar approach may produce a lasting antidepressant effect after surgery. This protocol describes a pilot study that will assess the feasibility of conducting a larger scale randomized clinical trial addressing this knowledge gap. This single-center, double-blind, placebo-controlled pilot trial involves the enrollment of 32 patients aged 18 years or older with a history of depression scheduled for surgery with planned intensive care unit admission. On the first day following surgery and extubation, participants will be randomized to an intravenous eight-hour infusion of either ketamine (0.5 mg kg over 10 minutes followed by a continuous rate of 0.3 mg kg h ) or an equal volume of normal saline. Depressive symptoms will be quantified using the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale preoperatively and serially up to 14 days after the infusion. To detect ketamine-induced changes on overnight sleep architecture, a wireless headband will be used to record electroencephalograms preoperatively, during the study infusion, and after infusion. The primary feasibility endpoints will include the fraction of patients approached who enroll, the fraction of randomized patients who complete the study infusion, and the fraction of randomized patients who complete outcome data collection. This pilot study will evaluate the feasibility of a future large comparative effectiveness trial of ketamine to reduce depressive symptoms in postsurgical patients. K-PASS is registered on ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT05233566; registered February 10, 2022.
术后抑郁症状与疼痛、再入院、死亡和其他不良后果有关。氯胺酮在围手术期产生快速但短暂的抗抑郁作用。较长时间的输注可在治疗抵抗性抑郁症患者中产生持久的抗抑郁活性,但尚不清楚类似的方法是否会在手术后产生持久的抗抑郁作用。本方案描述了一项试点研究,该研究将评估开展一项更大规模的随机临床试验以解决这一知识空白的可行性。这项单中心、双盲、安慰剂对照的试点试验纳入了 32 名年龄在 18 岁或以上、有抑郁病史、计划接受手术且需入住重症监护病房的患者。在手术后和拔管后的第一天,参与者将被随机分配到静脉输注 8 小时的氯胺酮(0.5mg/kg,持续 10 分钟,然后持续输注 0.3mg/kg/h)或等量的生理盐水。在术前和输注后 14 天内,使用蒙哥马利-阿斯伯格抑郁评定量表(Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale)定量评估抑郁症状。为了检测氯胺酮对夜间睡眠结构的影响,将使用无线头戴式设备在术前、研究输注期间和输注后记录脑电图。主要可行性终点将包括:受邀患者中入组的比例、随机分组的患者中完成研究输注的比例,以及随机分组的患者中完成结局数据收集的比例。这项试点研究将评估未来在接受手术的患者中使用氯胺酮减轻抑郁症状的大型比较有效性试验的可行性。K-PASS 已在 ClinicalTrials.gov 注册:NCT05233566;于 2022 年 2 月 10 日注册。