Deccan Chronicle

First big depression drug since Prozac set to get nod

- CYNTHIA KOONS & ANNA EDNEY

Pulses imports during the first three quarters of the current fiscal tumbled 65 per cent onyear to 1.8 million tonnes as government puts various curbs to discourage inward shipment amid bumper domestic output. Last year, during AprilDecem­ber, the pulses imports stood at 5.07 million tonnes, commerce ministry said. India is the largest producer, importer and consumer of pulses and imported record 6.6 million tonnes of pulses during 2016-17 which fell to 5.61 mt in 2017-18.—TNS The US Food and Drug Administra­tion is on the brink of approving a breakthrou­gh drug that could upend the way severe depression is treated.

Johnson & Johnson’s esketamine, a close chemical cousin of the anesthetic ketamine, cleared a major hurdle on Tuesday when a panel of outside experts recommende­d that the FDA approve the treatment. The fast-acting antidepres­sant, administer­ed via a nasal spray, is being tested in major depressive disorder and suicidal thinking. If approved, it would be the first major therapeuti­c advance for depression since the introducti­on of Prozac in 1987.

Prozac and other currently available antidepres­sants take weeks to work and don’t help all patients, so esketamine could mark a significan­t shift in depression therapy.

The panel voted 14-2 with one abstention that the benefits of the drug and a safety program proposed by the company to keep it from being misused outweigh the risks of abuse.

“I believe esketamine has the potential to be a game-changer in the treatment of depression,” Walter Dunn, a panel member and a psychiatri­st at the West Los Angeles Veterans Administra­tion Medical Center, said after the vote. “The rates of response in this treatment-resistant population are better than we’ve seen. The rapid timeline of response is better. There’s nothing approved that gets patients better this fast.”

Amid the opioid addiction and overdose epidemic in the US, the panel of experts weighed the abuse potential of ketamine, which at much higher doses is a party drug and can put users into a “k hole” in which they’re unable to interact with the world around them. In a report ahead of the meeting, agency staff called ketamine abuse “relatively uncommon,” with just 1.3 per cent of people over age 12 abusing the drug, lower than the abuse rates for other hallucinog­ens like ecstasy and LSD.

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