Abstract

The glutamatergic modulator ketamine has been shown to rapidly reduce depressive symptoms in patients with treatment-resistant major depressive disorder (TRD). Although its mechanisms of action are not fully understood, changes in cortical excitation/inhibition (E/I) following ketamine administration are well documented in animal models and could represent a potential biomarker of treatment response. Here, we analyse neuromagnetic virtual electrode time series collected from the primary somatosensory cortex in 18 unmedicated patients with TRD and in an equal number of age-matched healthy controls during a somatosensory ‘airpuff’ stimulation task. These two groups were scanned as part of a clinical trial of ketamine efficacy under three conditions: (a) baseline; (b) 6–9 h following subanesthetic ketamine infusion; and (c) 6–9 h following placebo-saline infusion. We obtained estimates of E/I interaction strengths by using dynamic causal modelling (DCM) on the time series, thereby allowing us to pinpoint, under each scanning condition, where each subject’s dynamics lie within the Poincaré diagram—as defined in dynamical systems theory. We demonstrate that the Poincaré diagram offers classification capability for TRD patients, in that the further the patients’ coordinates were shifted (by virtue of ketamine) toward the stable (top-left) quadrant of the Poincaré diagram, the more their depressive symptoms improved. The same relationship was not observed by virtue of a placebo effect—thereby verifying the drug-specific nature of the results. We show that the shift in neural dynamics required for symptom improvement necessitates an increase in both excitatory and inhibitory coupling. We present accompanying MATLAB code made available in a public repository, thereby allowing for future studies to assess individually tailored treatments of TRD.

Highlights

  • Ketamine’s rapid antidepressant efficacy was first demonstrated in a clinical trial by Berman et al.1—a study that led to an intense focus on the glutamatergic system’s putative role in mood disorders, including major depressive disorder (MDD)[2,3] and bipolar depression[4,5]

  • We demonstrated that circuit-level excitatory and inhibitory coupling strengths can be derived noninvasively from neuromagnetic data, potentially offering an important first step towards personalised, rapid-acting antidepressant treatment for treatment-resistant MDD (TRD)

  • We have demonstrated that the Poincaré diagram acts as a robust classification tool for predicting the efficacy of ketamine in the treatment of TRD

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Summary

Introduction

Ketamine’s rapid antidepressant efficacy was first demonstrated in a clinical trial by Berman et al.1—a study that led to an intense focus on the glutamatergic system’s putative role in mood disorders, including major depressive disorder (MDD)[2,3] and bipolar depression[4,5]. Ergic interneurons, the parvalbumin basket cells, leads to local inhibition of interneuron tonic firing and subsequent disinhibition of pyramidal neurons downstream of NMDA receptor antagonism[12,13] This produces an immediate glutamate surge[14], activating the Fagerholm et al Translational Psychiatry(2021)11:335 mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1) pathway[15], increasing BDNF release, and activating downstream signalling pathways that stimulate synapse formation[16]. DCM involves the fitting of parameterised mean-field models to electrophysiological data features in order to furnish parameter estimates of unobservable neuronal states Previous findings suggest this approach offers the translational potential to characterise how ketamine alters receptor-mediated connectivity between various cell populations and modelled receptor dynamics[22]. We show that this relationship does not arise by virtue of a placebo effect either in TRD patients or within the healthy control group

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