Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Antidepres­sant OK’d for suicidal patients

- CYNTHIA KOONS

Johnson & Johnson’s Spravato has been approved as the first antidepres­sant for actively suicidal people, as doctors are becoming increasing­ly concerned about covid-19’s effect on the mental health of Americans.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion approval means the quick-acting nasal spray will be available to people with suicidal thoughts and a plan to put them into action, said Michelle Kramer, vice president of Johnson & Johnson’s U.S. neuroscien­ce medical-affairs unit. That constitute­s 11% to 12% of as many as 17 million Americans who have major depressive disorder.

Spravato has been used by about 6,000 people for treatment-resistant depression since its approval in March 2019, Kramer said. Johnson & Johnson’s decision to study it in depressed people actively contemplat­ing suicide bucks a trend among drugmakers who routinely exclude such patients from trials.

Spravato’s ability to act quickly could mean it works differentl­y than older antidepres­sants that can take weeks to kick in, Kramer said. In its studies, Johnson & Johnson found those who got the drug had a rapid reduction in the severity of their thinking, although the results didn’t differ in a statistica­lly significan­t way from patients given a placebo.

The data from studies of the drug shows it “may offer clinicians a new way to provide support to patients quickly in the midst of an urgent depressive episode and help set them on the path to remission,” said Gerard Sanacora, director of Yale’s Depression Research Program and a trial investigat­or.

America has been in the throes of a suicide crisis even before the pandemic, with the rate rising 30% from 1999 to 2016. Covid-19 closures limited the number of people given the spray as a depression treatment in-person at specified centers.

Ultimately, though, the numbers improved as patients and centers adapted and concerns grew within the mental health community that physical distancing and social isolation of quarantine may exacerbate people’s existing problems or introduce new ones.

“Relatively rapidly within a few weeks we saw the numbers stabilize, which was pretty interestin­g for us and validating in the sense that clinic and patients alike were continuing to make this available,” Kramer said. “We certainly see more and more sites sign on and more and more patients are treated.”

Spravato is a close chemical cousin of the anesthetic ketamine, which differs from existing antidepres­sants because it acts on the glutamate system in the brain rather than on seratonin or norepineph­erine. Scientists have been working to better understand how the drug helps patients and why it works so quickly.

The drug’s approval last year marked the first major breakthrou­gh for depression since 1987. President Donald Trump has since touted the drug as having the potential to curb veteran suicides, but a Veterans Affairs medical panel only approved the drug’s use on a limited basis.

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