Rotorua Daily Post

Ketamine being trialled in the Bay to fight depression

- Leah Tebbutt

A “first-class” antidepres­sant using a slow release of ketamine is now being trialled in Rotorua and Tauranga.

Ketamine is mainly used for starting and maintainin­g anaesthesi­a but can be used for pain. It was developed in 2016 as an antidepres­sant. Clinical trials started the following year.

New Zealand company Douglas Pharmaceut­icals enlisted Dr Mike Williams to lead the trials in Tauranga and Rotorua.

The Lakeland Clinical Trials director of Rotorua will work with Dr Caleb Armstrong, director of Anteris Clinical Research in Tauranga.

“Some people might be on an antidepres­sant but they are still getting significan­t symptoms. They might have had a couple of tries of medication­s, and sometimes it’s hard to find the right fit, the right medicine for the right person,” Williams told NZME.

“This clinical trial has been another option for their treatment.”

He said intravenou­s or a nasal spray were options, but a slowreleas­e tablet made the most “clinical sense”.

Williams has been involved in clinical research for 20 years and has helped develop medicines for diabetes, cholestero­l and osteoarthr­itis.

Working in mental health and with a New Zealand company is new for him.

“Usually we work with people in the United States. And it’s quite cool to have a New Zealand company. We’ve visited them and have a really close relationsh­ip.”

Williams said the New Zealand partnershi­p, fitting the “support local” movement, was only possible because of Covid19.

“It has affected a lot of medication developmen­t, as companies have been busy fighting the Covid response.

“It’s good to actually be in New Zealand, where we have patients that are relatively free to move in the community, and able to see us easily.”

Williams said the trial would keep him and his team busy until the end of next year.

Three sites in Auckland, Dunedin and Christchur­ch have been trialling the drug since 2017, Douglas Pharmaceut­icals chief scientific officer Dr Peter Surman said. However because of Covid-19, regional sites are now a focus.

“Our sites in Australia and Asia are slowed by movement restrictio­ns because of Covid-19. It makes a lot of sense to open additional sites in New Zealand where, thankfully, tially virus-free.”

The drug, named R107, would be a rapidly acting antidepres­sant for patients suffering treatment-resistant depression, which occurs in about 30 per cent of patients, Surman said, or at least 50,000 people in New Zealand.

“So far, we have treated around 120 patients with R107 and within one week of daily open-label treatment [informatio­n is not withheld from trial participan­ts] about 75 per cent have become well.

“This is a higher rate than we expected to see based on previous ketamine studies. The response appears to be durable with most patients electing to enter a six-month maintenanc­e phase where they are treated with R107 for a further six months.”

If studies continue to be positive, Surman hoped the treatment would be in the market from 2024.

“Side effects are being monitored and reviewed as part of the clinical programme by an independen­t drug safety monitoring board.

“Some patients experience some dissociati­on, feeling spaced out the first time but this generally resolves on repeated dosing.”

Registered clinical psychologi­st Jacquie Maguire said new medication trials were never a bad thing.

“I think as an industry, whether that be pharmaceut­ical or the psychologi­cal community, it’s really important we continue to investigat­e. Because there is a portion of the population that are really struggling and they hope that new products will come out, they might make a difference.”

Endogenous pervasive depression, or “biological depression” not caused by stress and trauma, lead to many needing medication­s, she said.

She said if someone suffered from diabetes and did not take insulin, it would be “dire”. It was exactly the same with mental illness, she said.

“If you have a genetic predisposi­tion, if you have a biological component to your mental illness, there is no shame or stigma in having pharmacolo­gical support.

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How to get involved

If you are between 18 and 81, have major depressive disorder and have not responded to at least two prescribed antidepres­sants you may qualify. Contact either Lakeland Clinical Trials or Douglas Pharmaceut­icals.

 ?? PHOTO/ BEN FRASER ?? Ashleigh Williams, from Lakeland Clinical Trials, where some of the trials will be taking place.
PHOTO/ BEN FRASER Ashleigh Williams, from Lakeland Clinical Trials, where some of the trials will be taking place.
 ?? PHOTO/ SUPPLIED ?? Dr Mike Williams from Lakeland Clinical Trials.
PHOTO/ SUPPLIED Dr Mike Williams from Lakeland Clinical Trials.

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