Study of IV Ketamine for Emergency Department Treatment of Adolescent Suicidal Ideation

Sponsor
University of Ottawa (Other)
Overall Status
Not yet recruiting
CT.gov ID
NCT05468840
Collaborator
(none)
50
2
19

Study Details

Study Description

Brief Summary

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.

Condition or Disease Intervention/Treatment Phase
  • Drug: Ketamine Hydrochloride
  • Drug: Normal saline
Phase 4

Detailed 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.

Study Design

Study Type:
Interventional
Anticipated Enrollment :
50 participants
Allocation:
Randomized
Intervention Model:
Parallel Assignment
Masking:
Quadruple (Participant, Care Provider, Investigator, Outcomes Assessor)
Primary Purpose:
Treatment
Official Title:
A Double Blinded, Randomized, Placebo Controlled, Parallel Arm Pilot Trial of Intravenous Ketamine for Emergency Department Treatment of Suicidal Ideation in a Pediatric Population
Anticipated Study Start Date :
Dec 1, 2022
Anticipated Primary Completion Date :
Dec 1, 2023
Anticipated Study Completion Date :
Jul 1, 2024

Arms and Interventions

Arm Intervention/Treatment
Experimental: Intravenous ketamine infusion

Participants in the intervention group will receive 0.5mg/kg of 1mg/mL intravenous ketamine (50 mg maximum) over 40 minutes.

Drug: Ketamine Hydrochloride
see study arm description
Other Names:
  • ketamine
  • Placebo Comparator: Intravenous normal saline infusion

    Participants in the control group will receive 0.5mL/kg intravenous normal saline (50 ml maximum) over 40 minutes.

    Drug: Normal saline
    see study arm description

    Outcome Measures

    Primary Outcome Measures

    1. Feasibility of the study as measured by the percentage of eligible of patients able to complete the study protocol. [Baseline]

      Data analysis for feasibility will be descriptive in nature and there will be no formal hypothesis testing. The percentage of eligible patients who complete the study will be reported.

    Secondary Outcome Measures

    1. Baseline distribution of responses to the first 5 questions of Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation (SSI5) [Baseline]

      Estimates of central tendency (mean) and variance (standard deviation) from participant responses to the SSI5 at baseline will be measured and reported. These parameters will aid with sample size estimates for the larger definitive trial. The first 5 questions of Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation (SSI5) is a five item questionnaire scored from 0 to 10, with higher scores indicating more severe suicidal ideation.

    2. Baseline distribution of responses to the suicide item (#10) from the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MARDS10) [Baseline]

      Estimates of central tendency (mean) and variance (standard deviation) from participant responses to the MADRS10 at baseline will be measured and reported. These parameters will aid with sample size estimates for the larger definitive trial. The MADRS is a 10 item, 6-point, depression scale. Item 10 rates suicidal ideation from 0 (Enjoys life or takes it as it comes), to 6 (Explicit plans for suicide when there is an opportunity. Active preparations for suicide) with higher scores indicating more severe suicidal ideation.

    3. Baseline distribution of responses to the suicide item (#9) from the Beck Depression Index (BDI9). [Baseline]

      Estimates of central tendency (mean) and variance (standard deviation) from participant responses to the BDI9 at baseline will be measured and reported. These parameters will aid with sample size estimates for the larger definitive trial. The Beck Depression Inventory is a 21 item depression questionnaire. Item 9 rates suicidal ideation from 0 (I don't have thoughts of killing myself) to 3 (I would kill myself if I had the chance) with higher scores indicating more severe suicidal ideation.

    4. Baseline pragmatic assessment of the first 5 questions of the Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation (SSI5), the suicide item (#10) from the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS10), and the suicide item (#9) from the Beck Depression Index (BDI9). [Baseline]

      Pragmatic assessment of the tool validity by asking each participant, which of the three tools best captures how they are feeling at baseline.

    5. Blinding assessment [Baseline]

      Blinding adequacy will be measured by asking each participant which intervention they think they received at the end of the 40 minute study drug infusion.

    6. Treatment efficacy measured by the Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation (SSI5) [40 minutes post treatment start]

      Suicidal ideation severity at the end of the 40-minute medication infusion will be measured using SSI5. The first 5 questions of Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation (SSI5) is a five item questionnaire scored from 0 to 10, with higher scores indicating more severe suicidal ideation.

    7. Treatment efficacy measured by the suicide item (#10) from the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MARDS10) [40 minutes post treatment start]

      Suicidal ideation severity at the end of the 40-minute medication infusion will be measured using MADRS10. The MADRS is a 10 item, 6-point, depression scale. Item 10 rates suicidal ideation from 0 (Enjoys life or takes it as it comes), to 6 (Explicit plans for suicide when there is an opportunity. Active preparations for suicide) with higher scores indicating more severe suicidal ideation.

    8. Treatment efficacy measured by the suicide item (#9) from the Beck Depression Index (BDI9) [40 minutes post treatment start]

      Suicidal ideation severity at the end of the 40-minute medication infusion will be measured using BDI9. The Beck Depression Inventory is a 21 item depression questionnaire. Item 9 rates suicidal ideation from 0 (I don't have thoughts of killing myself) to 3 (I would kill myself if I had the chance) with higher scores indicating more severe suicidal ideation.

    9. Treatment durability measured by the Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation (SSI5) [80 minutes, 120 minutes, 24 hours, and seven days post treatment start]

      The durability of a treatment effect on suicidal ideation will be measured by SSI5 at 80 minutes, 120 minutes, 24 hours, and seven days post treatment start. The first 5 questions of Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation (SSI5) is a five item questionnaire scored from 0 to 10, with higher scores indicating more severe suicidal ideation.

    10. Treatment durability measured by the suicide item (#10) from the Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MARDS10) [80 minutes, 120 minutes, 24 hours, and seven days post treatment start]

      The durability of a treatment effect on suicidal ideation will be measured by MADRS10 at 80 minutes, 120 minutes, 24 hours, and seven days post treatment start. The MADRS is a 10 item, 6-point, depression scale. Item 10 rates suicidal ideation from 0 (Enjoys life or takes it as it comes), to 6 (Explicit plans for suicide when there is an opportunity. Active preparations for suicide) with higher scores indicating more severe suicidal ideation.

    11. Treatment efficacy measured by the suicide item (#9) from the Beck Depression Index (BDI9) [80 minutes, 120 minutes, 24 hours, and seven days post treatment start]

      The durability of a treatment effect on suicidal ideation will be measured by BDI9 at 80 minutes, 120 minutes, 24 hours, and seven days post treatment start. The Beck Depression Inventory is a 21 item depression questionnaire. Item 9 rates suicidal ideation from 0 (I don't have thoughts of killing myself) to 3 (I would kill myself if I had the chance) with higher scores indicating more severe suicidal ideation.

    12. Admission to Hospital [18 months]

      The number and percentage of patients who require hospital admission at the enrolment ED visit will be reported.

    13. Length of Stay in Hospital [18 months]

      The mean and standard deviation of length of hospital stay for patients admitted at the enrolment visit will be reported.

    14. Revisits to the ED [18 months]

      The number and percentage of patients who require a repeat ED visit(s) for mental health complaints within 30 days following enrolment will be reported.

    Eligibility Criteria

    Criteria

    Ages Eligible for Study:
    12 Years to 17 Years
    Sexes Eligible for Study:
    All
    Accepts Healthy Volunteers:
    No

    Inclusion Criteria

    1. Responds "yes" to ASQ questionnaire at triage, which asks; "Are you having thoughts of killing yourself right now?"

    2. Moderate to severe suicidal ideation, defined as score ≥ 3 on the first 5 questions of the Beck Scale for Suicidal Ideation (SSI5)

    3. Age 12 to 17 years, inclusive

    4. Medically clear, as judged by the treating physician

    5. Speaks English or French

    Exclusion Criteria

    1. Acute intoxication

    2. Previously enrolled in the current study or another clinical trial

    3. History of intellectual disability or autism spectrum disorder by patient/parent report

    4. Active, or history of, psychosis or psychotic disorder

    5. History of non-psychiatric neurologic disorder (e.g., epilepsy)

    6. Any of the following contraindications to ketamine based on the drug monograph:

    7. Known allergy or hypersensitivity to ketamine by patient history

    8. History of cerebrovascular accident (stroke or aneurysm)

    9. History of elevated intracranial pressure or idiopathic intracranial hypertension

    10. Significant hypertension requiring daily medication

    11. Severe cardiac decompensation

    12. On a Form 1

    13. Requires physical or chemical restraint

    14. History of violence while in hospital

    15. Assessment by a mental health practitioner during the current ED visit prior to study enrollment

    16. Pregnant or breastfeeding

    Contacts and Locations

    Locations

    No locations specified.

    Sponsors and Collaborators

    • University of Ottawa

    Investigators

    None specified.

    Study Documents (Full-Text)

    None provided.

    More Information

    Publications

    None provided.
    Responsible Party:
    Michael Schlegelmilch, Principal Investigator, University of Ottawa
    ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier:
    NCT05468840
    Other Study ID Numbers:
    • 0000001
    First Posted:
    Jul 21, 2022
    Last Update Posted:
    Jul 21, 2022
    Last Verified:
    Jul 1, 2022
    Individual Participant Data (IPD) Sharing Statement:
    No
    Plan to Share IPD:
    No
    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Drug Product:
    No
    Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated Device Product:
    No
    Product Manufactured in and Exported from the U.S.:
    Yes
    Keywords provided by Michael Schlegelmilch, Principal Investigator, University of Ottawa
    Additional relevant MeSH terms:

    Study Results

    No Results Posted as of Jul 21, 2022