Study of IV Ketamine for Emergency Department Treatment of Adolescent Suicidal Ideation
NCT ID: NCT06366334
Last Updated: 2024-06-05
Study Results
The study team has not published outcome measurements, participant flow, or safety data for this trial yet. Check back later for updates.
Basic Information
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RECRUITING
NA
20 participants
INTERVENTIONAL
2024-01-15
2024-06-28
Brief Summary
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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.
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Detailed Description
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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.
Conditions
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Study Design
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RANDOMIZED
PARALLEL
TREATMENT
QUADRUPLE
Study Groups
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Ketamine
Participants in the intervention group will receive 0.5mg/kg of 1mg/mL intravenous ketamine (50 mg maximum) over 40 minutes.
Ketamine Hydrochloride
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Normal Saline
Participants in the control group will receive 0.5mL/kg intravenous normal saline (50 ml maximum) over 40 minutes
Normal saline
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Interventions
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Ketamine Hydrochloride
See arm description
Normal saline
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Other Intervention Names
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Eligibility Criteria
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Inclusion Criteria
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 (deemed fit for participation in the trial), as judged by the treating physician. Minimum criteria required to be deemed medically clear are: a) No evidence of serious physical injury requiring urgent intervention b) No evidence of acute ingestion requiring monitoring, blood tests, imaging or ECG or in the context of acute ingestion they have satisfied the requisite number of hours of post-ingestion monitoring with no further need for intervention.
Exclusion Criteria
2. Previously enrolled in the current study or currently enrolled in 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: a) Known allergy or hypersensitivity to ketamine by patient history b) History of cerebrovascular accident (stroke or aneurysm) c) History of elevated intracranial pressure or idiopathic intracranial hypertension d) Significant hypertension requiring daily medication e) Severe cardiac decompensation
7. On an involuntary psychiatric hold
8. Requires physical or chemical restraint
9. History of violence while in hospital
10. Pregnant or breastfeeding
11. Received opioids in the 2-hours prior to study screening
12 Years
17 Years
ALL
No
Sponsors
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Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario
OTHER
Responsible Party
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Maala Bhatt
Associate Professor of Pediatrics, Director of Emergency Research
Principal Investigators
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Tyrus Crawford, BA
Role: STUDY_DIRECTOR
CHEO
Locations
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Children's Hospital Of Eastern Ontario
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
Countries
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Central Contacts
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Facility Contacts
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Other Identifiers
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23/02E
Identifier Type: -
Identifier Source: org_study_id
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