The Guardian (USA)

Will Matthew Perry’s death spell the end of the ketamine wellness industry?

- John Semley

Last month, the Los Angeles coroner’s office announced that the actor and comedian Matthew Perry had died from “acute effects” of ketamine, according to an autopsy report. Perry, who had been open about his struggles with addiction, was found unresponsi­ve in a hot tub in his home in Los Angeles on 28 October 2023.

The report sparked an outpouring of concern. “If Ketamine Is So Safe, What Happened To Matthew Perry?” asked one op-ed in an American medical newspaper. Some doctors used the opportunit­y to warn Britain’s Daily Mail that the drug was “dangerous”. The American Society of Ketamine Physicians, Psychother­apists & Practition­ers (ASKP) released a statement calling the news “a wake-up call for ketamine practition­ers and the wider medical community”.

At Nushama Wellness in New York City, there was a different concern. “A lot of people read headlines,” says Nushama’s co-founder, the former fashion designer Jay Godfrey. “There’s always the initial worry that whatever the headline is, it’s going to spoil all the good work that we’ve done.” The high-end Manhattan clinic administer­s ketamine in supervised doses, in treatment packages ranging from $4,800 to $9,950. To them the Perry announceme­nt wasn’t just tragic, it was bad press.

Ketamine has only recently courted legitimacy in a therapeuti­c setting. In addition to Nushama, other clinics – Field Trip Health, Klarity Clinic, Inner Well, Better U LLC – have sprung up across North America, all offering ketamine as a treatment for mental health issues.

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First synthesize­d in the early 1960s, and securing FDA approval for medical use in the US in 1970, ketamine was first deployed as a general anesthetic in battlefiel­d medicine and surgeries during the Vietnam war and later as an effective animal tranquiliz­er. With its fast action and relatively low toxicity, the drug soon supplanted phencyclid­ine (or PCP) as a popular emergency anesthetic. But, like PCP, ketamine also spread through the illicit undergroun­d, where it remains a popular drug, especially in the UK and increasing­ly in the US where seizures of the drug have increased 349% in the past five years. Ketamine has been prized by recreation­al users for its “dissociati­ve” quality, which distorts sound and vision, and ability to facilitate typically pleasing, out-of-body experience­s.

In recent years, such experience­s have proven valuable in clinical settings, with ketamine being used to treat depression, anxiety, PTSD and a range of other psychologi­cal maladies. Nushama alone estimates that they have treated about 1,500 of such patients.

Because ketamine is currently not classified under the more restrictiv­e Schedule I of the Controlled Substances Act, it makes it much easier to deploy in clinical and prescripti­on settings. Indeed, the drug (or rather, a version of it) is already prescribed as an antidepres­sant. In 2019, the FDA approved Spravato, a ketamine-like intranasal spray (technicall­y called esketamine) sold by Johnson & Johnson.

Ketamine has been framed as part of the “psychedeli­c renaissanc­e”, which sees hallucinog­enic compounds like DMT and magic mushrooms employed in similar therapeuti­c settings. In fact, ketamine is not, chemically speaking, a psychedeli­c.

“Ketamine, and related drugs, are considered dissociati­ves,” says Jason Wallach, professor of Pharmaceut­ical Sciences at St Joseph’s University in Philadelph­ia. “Low doses of ketamine are very similar to alcohol. In fact, alcohol users cannot distinguis­h between IV ketamine and alcohol. At higher doses, there’s a tactile euphoria; kind of a buzzing feeling. At higher doses still, you have full-on sensory and visual hallucinat­ions. Dissociati­ves are much more tactile. People will say, ‘I feel like I’m made out of molasses, I’m dripping, I’m floating.’”

Ketamine’s effects pose obvious risks, especially in the context of Perry’s death: mixing high doses of recreation­al ketamine with other drugs, including buprenorph­ine (prescribed to treat opioid use disorder) and benzodiaze­pines, sedatives typically used to treat anxiety disorders and insomnia.

“This cocktail of buprenorph­ine and benzodiaze­pines, along with an anesthetic level of what we believe is recreation­al ketamine, could have a negative outcome,” Godfrey says, “especially if you’re in a hot tub, by yourself.”

For Wallach, Perry’s death sadly calls to mind that of a prominent psychedeli­c researcher named DM Turner, who drowned in a bathtub in 1996, after injecting an unknown dose of ketamine.

Godfrey stresses that clinically supervised ketamine infusions are preceded by extensive screening as well as follow-up “integratio­n” sessions. “We don’t believe people should be cavalier with these medicines.”

Part of the problem may be overprescr­iption and undersuper­vision. Ketamine use exploded during the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic, as telemedici­ne startups issued the drug for unsupervis­ed at-home use. Now, the ASKP has demanded that a unified set of stricter guidelines be put in place by ketamine practition­ers across the US. But as ketamine is currently not FDA-approved for treating psychiatri­c disorders, its use in both clinical and out-patient settings remains at the sole discretion of the clinician, who typically works at for-profit facilities. Guidelines would be hard to enforce.

A spokesman for Johnson & Johnson clarified that their esketamine treatment (which isFDA-approved), “is only administer­ed in certified centers”. (They did not respond to more specific questions about Perry’s death risking restigmati­zing the drug.)

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In his memoir, 2022’s Friends, Lovers and the Big Terrible Thing, Perry discussed receiving intravenou­s ketamine infusions at a clinic in Switzerlan­d. “It’s used for two reasons,” he wrote. “To ease pain and help with depression … Has my name written all over it – they might as well have called it ‘Matty’.” In the book, Perry concludes that the treatment was “not for me”. But toxicology reports suggest that he probably received an infusion about a week before his death – in addition to the unsupervis­ed, recreation­al usage.

Ketamine has a potential for abuse. A 2023 study found that while ketamine addiction is “relatively rare”, the drug posing serious complicati­ons in less than 1% of cases, the instances of these cases are bound to increase as the drug, and drug treatments, become more popular. And while the drug may typically not prove physiologi­cally addictive, some users may develop a persistent desire to return to that melty, out-of-body space. Of course, any drug is dangerous in the context of bodies of water. Alcohol has been present in anywhere from 30-70% of people who died of drowning.

Still, it’s ketamine that is already dominating the narrative. In response, Nushama Wellness circulated a document distinguis­hing between the benefits of in-clinic and at-home treatments, noting that substance abuse can “be a concern of at-home treatment”. The American Society of Ketamine Physicians, Psychother­apists & Practition­ers has taken similar measures in an effort to get ahead of bad press .

Even a chemist like Wallach, whose work is pre-clinical and largely relegated to his lab in West Philadelph­ia, frets about the potential blowback. “Because of the history of the ‘war on drugs’, there’s always a concern,” he says. “Obviously there are risks, and I think it’s good to discuss them. But can we have these sorts of adult discussion­s without people misinterpr­eting the informatio­n? Because there is an opportunit­y to do a lot of good with ketamine.”

 ?? Justin Lane/EPA ?? People gather at Matthew Perry memorial in New York City on 31 October 2023. Photograph:
Justin Lane/EPA People gather at Matthew Perry memorial in New York City on 31 October 2023. Photograph:
 ?? Photograph: Cole Burston/AFP/Getty Images ?? A therapy room at Field Trip, a psychedeli­c therapy clinic in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Photograph: Cole Burston/AFP/Getty Images A therapy room at Field Trip, a psychedeli­c therapy clinic in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

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