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Yesterday β€” 11 December 2024Main stream

Lisa Kudrow Says the β€˜Friends’ Cast Only Met Together Once in the 17 Years Between Series Finale and Reunion Special

By: Jack Dunn
11 December 2024 at 01:11
Lisa Kudrow, who played the free-spirited Pheobe Buffay in the hit NBC sitcom β€œFriends,” revealed that the entire cast of the ’90s mainstay only met up once in the 17 years between the series finale in 2004 and β€œFriends: The Reunion,” which premiered in 2021. β€œWe’d only had dinner, the six of us, once before […]

Before yesterdayMain stream

Ketamine pills for depression show positive results in trialβ€”but with caveats

By: Beth Mole
25 June 2024 at 20:18
Ketamine pills for depression show positive results in trialβ€”but with caveats

Enlarge (credit: Getty | RJ Sangosti)

After an MDMA therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder dramatically failed to impress Food and Drug Administration advisers earlier this month, researchers are moving forward with another psychedelicβ€”a slow-release oral dose of the hallucinogenic drug ketamineβ€”as a therapy for treatment-resistant depression.

In a mid-stage, randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial, researchers tested slow-release ketamine pills, taken twice weekly. The trial, sponsored by New Zealand-based Douglas Pharmaceuticals, found ketamine to be safe compared with placebo. At the trial's highest dose, the treatment showed some efficacy against depression in patients who had previously tried an average of nearly five antidepressants without success, according to the results published Monday in Nature Medicine.

But the Phase II trial, which started with 231 participants, indicated that the pool of patients who may benefit from the treatment could be quite limited. The researchers behind the trial chose an unusual "enrichment" design to test the depression treatment. This was intended to thwart the high failure rates generally seen in trials for depression treatments, even in patients without treatment-resistant cases. But even after selecting patients who initially responded to ketamine, 59.5 percent of the enriched participants still dropped out of the trial before its completion, largely due to a lack of efficacy.

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