New Findings About The Ketamine Effect And Treating Depression
• By Mark Ratner
Research has now revealed the mechanism underlying the anesthetic ketamine's rapid and sustained antidepressant effect: it activates an important signaling pathway in the prefrontal cortex of the brain. The findings provide clues that could lead to faster-acting drugs for depression or potentially even the adoption of current drugs for this use or augmentation of the effects of existing antidepressants.
Mark L. Ratner
A research team at Yale University has revealed the mechanism underlying ketamine's rapid and sustained antidepressant effect: the anesthetic...
Read the full article – start your free trial today!
Join thousands of industry professionals who rely on Scrip for daily insights
Editor’s note: This is your final call to participate in the survey to better understand our subscribers’ content and delivery needs. The deadline is 20 September.
Editor’s note: We are conducting a survey to better understand our subscribers’ content and delivery needs. If there are any changes you’d like to see in the coverage topics, content format or the method in which you receive and access Scrip, or if you love it how it is, now is the time to have your voice heard.
CEO Paul Stoffels said gaining US clearance for an IND for its novel CAR-T product was demanding, but now opens up a pathway towards a pivotal study starting in 2025.
A final rejection of Leqembi could also spell the same fate for Lilly’s rival drug but public outcry and demand for Alzheimer’s therapies might force the regulator’s hand
The first Phase III data for the CD38-targeting antibody is expected in 2027 in antibody-mediated rejection in kidney transplant patients, followed by other indications.
Novo Nordisk will partner with privately held Deep Apple to study a novel, non-incretin target that could be better suited than GLP-1s for long-term obesity treatment.