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Focus: Journal of Life Long Learning in Psychiatry logoLink to Focus: Journal of Life Long Learning in Psychiatry
. 2023 Apr 14;21(2):225–232. doi: 10.1176/appi.focus.23021003

Existing and Novel Biological Therapeutics in Suicide Prevention

Joshua J Griffiths 1, Carlos A Zarate Jr 1, J J Rasimas 1,
PMCID: PMC10172549  PMID: 37201148

Abstract

We summarize outcomes for several pharmacologic and neurostimulatory approaches that have been considered potential treatments to reduce suicide risk, namely, by reducing suicide deaths, attempts, and ideation in various clinical populations. Available treatments include clozapine, lithium, antidepressants, antipsychotics, electroconvulsive therapy, and transcranial magnetic stimulation. The novel repurposing of ketamine as a potential suicide risk–mitigating agent in the acute setting is also discussed. Research pathways to better understand and treat suicidal ideation and behavior from a neurobiological perspective are proposed in light of this foundation of information and the limitations and challenges inherent in suicide research. Such pathways include trials of fast-acting medications, registry approaches to identify appropriate patients for trials, identification of biomarkers, neuropsychological vulnerabilities, and endophenotypes through the study of known suicide risk–mitigating agents in hope of determining mechanisms of pathophysiology and the action of protective biological interventions.

Reprinted from Am J Prev Med 2014; 47:S195–S203, with permission from Elsevier. Copyright © 2014


Articles from Focus: Journal of Life Long Learning in Psychiatry are provided here courtesy of American Psychiatric Publishing

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