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Approximately 20% of Canadian adolescents experience thoughts of suicide, or suicidal ideation (SI), and suicide is the second leading cause of death among Canadians aged 15-19 years. The emergency department at CHEO sees approximately four patients per day with SI. Even though this is a medical emergency, there are no fast-acting treatments available.
Ketamine is a medication that is commonly used to safely sedate children who require painful procedures in the emergency department. For nearly ten years, intravenous ketamine has also been shown to rapidly reduce SI in adults. However, ketamine as a treatment for SI has never been studied in adolescents. The primary study objective is to pilot a clinical trial that investigates intravenous ketamine to emergently treat SI in adolescents.
If intravenous ketamine can relieve symptoms of SI for youth, this would have tremendous effects on patients and would dramatically change how physicians treat adolescent mental health emergencies. If ketamine is effective for several weeks, as it is in adults, it will help temporize patients until they receive more long-term psychiatric care. At the system level, it has the potential to reduce emergency visits and lengthy admissions. The investigators feel that the results of this study will be generalizable to pediatric centres across Canada and beyond.
Full description
Suicidal ideation (SI) is a common and often severe cause of morbidity in adolescents. Patients frequently present to the emergency department (ED) with severe and distressing thoughts of self-harm or suicide, and yet, there is currently no acute therapeutic intervention to offer them. The standard of care for patients who do not require admission is to discharge them home with resources for websites, apps, or telephone help lines. These interactions fail to address the underlying suicidal thoughts and leave patients, families and providers feeling very dissatisfied. Medications are nearly never initiated in the ED and patients who are already taking anti-depressants experience a very slow therapeutic onset, and often with unfavourable side effects that make medication compliance difficult and sometimes impossible.
For nearly ten years, intravenous ketamine has been shown to be an efficacious acute therapy in adult patients with suicidal ideation. A single dose of intravenous (IV) ketamine can rapidly reduce the severity of suicidal ideation by moderate to large effect sizes (Cohen's d = 0.5-0.8) during an ED visit, in an adult population. However, it has never been studied in a pediatric population. The study primary objective is to determine the feasibility of conducting a trial that investigates the efficacy of IV ketamine to reduce suicidal ideation in adolescents in the pediatric emergency department.
If intravenous ketamine can rapidly alleviate the severity of SI for adolescents, this would have tremendous effects on patients and families and dramatically change how ED physicians treat pediatric mental health emergencies. It would increase patient safety, reduce patient distress, morbidity, possibly mortality and alleviate family stress. If the therapeutic effect of ketamine is maintained for several days, as it is in adults, it will help temporize patient symptoms while they are connected with more long-term psychiatric care. At the system level, it may reduce rates of ED visits and, often lengthy, admissions to hospital. The investigators feel that the results of this study will be generalizable to pediatric centres across Ontario, Canada and beyond.
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Inclusion and exclusion criteria
Inclusion Criteria
Exclusion Criteria
Acute intoxication
Previously enrolled in the current study or another clinical trial
History of intellectual disability or autism spectrum disorder by patient/parent report
Active, or history of, psychosis or psychotic disorder
History of non-psychiatric neurologic disorder (e.g., epilepsy)
Any of the following contraindications to ketamine based on the drug monograph:
On a Form 1
Requires physical or chemical restraint
History of violence while in hospital
Assessment by a mental health practitioner during the current ED visit prior to study enrollment
Pregnant or breastfeeding
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
20 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Central trial contact
Maala Bhatt, MD, Msc; Michael Schlegelmilch, MD, MPH
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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