Efficacy and Safety of Fixed-Dose Esketamine Nasal Spray Combined With a New Oral Antidepressant in Treatment-Resistant Depression: Results of a Randomized, Double-Blind, Active-Controlled Study (TRANSFORM-1)

Janssen (United States) · The University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center · +8 more institutions

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

About one-third of patients with depression fail to achieve remission despite treatment with multiple antidepressants and are considered to have treatment-resistant depression.

Methods

This Phase 3, double-blind, multicenter study enrolled adults with moderate-to-severe depression and nonresponse to ≥2 antidepressants in the current depression episode. Eligible patients (N = 346) were randomized (1:1:1) to twice-weekly nasal spray treatment (esketamine [56 or 84 mg] or placebo) plus a newly initiated, open-label, oral antidepressant taken daily for 4 weeks. The primary efficacy endpoint was change from baseline to day 28 in the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale total score, performed by blinded, remote raters. Based on the predefined statistical testing sequence, esketamine 84 mg/antidepressant had to be significant for esketamine 56 mg/antidepressant to be formally tested.

Citation impact

586
total citations
FWCI
63.80
Percentile
100%
References
33
Citations per year

Authors

18

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Antidepressant
  • Depression (economics)
  • Double blind
  • Medicine
  • Nasal spray
  • Treatment-resistant depression
  • Safety profile
  • Nasal administration
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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Funding