Shiroma 2020.
Study characteristics | ||
Methods | Randomised, double‐blind, active placebo‐controlled trial | |
Participants |
Diagnosis: DSM‐IV major depressive disorder N: 54 Age: ketamine group M = 54.4 (SD = 13.8); midazolam group M = 51.2 (SD = 12.5) Sex: ketamine group 12% female; midazolam group 17.2% female Baseline depression severity: Ketamine group MADRS M = 34.88 (SD=7.80); Midazolam group MADRS M = 33.82 (SD=5.02) |
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Interventions | Participants were randomised to receive 6 ketamine (0.5mmg/kg) infusions or 5 midazolam (0.045mmg/kg) plus 1 ketamine (0.5mmg/kg) infusion. They received six infusions over a 12‐day period. Concomitant medications: participants were allowed to continue concomitant psychiatric medication regimen on stable dosages for at least 6 weeks prior to study onset. |
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Outcomes | MADRS mean change Response (≥50% MADRS reduction from baseline) Adverse events |
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Notes | Authors provided additional data for 5 ketamine infusions vs. 5 midazolam infusions. | |
Risk of bias | ||
Bias | Authors' judgement | Support for judgement |
Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Low risk | Quote: “Randomization was conducted using permutated blocks of 4 and 1:1 assignment between treatments”. |
Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Low risk | Quote: "Group assignments for each participant was concealed in sequentially numbered, sealed, opaque envelopes.” |
Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) All outcomes | High risk | Blinding tested with limited effectiveness for both personnel and participants. Quote: "At the end of the last infusion (midazolam plus single ketamine versus six ketamine),10.7% among midazolam cases and 50.0% among ketamine cases guessed incorrectly about assigned treatment (X2 1df = 9.12; P = 0.002). Raters, who were different during infusions days from those rating antidepressant outcomes at 24 h., incorrectly guessed 20.8% of midazolam cases and 7.1% of repeated ketamine cases prior to the last infusion (X2 1df = 1.25; P = 0.26). After the last infusion, 6.9 and 26% raters were incorrect about treatment assignment among midazolam plus single ketamine and repeated ketamine cases, respectively (X2 1df = 3.62; P = 0.06)." |
Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) All outcomes | Unclear risk | Blinding tested with limited effectiveness for both personnel and participants. |
Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) All outcomes | Unclear risk | Participant recruitment and withdrawals documented. No participants withdrew after baseline assessment. |
Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Unclear risk | Protocol unavailable. |
Other bias | Low risk | None identified. |