Ketamine Prescriptions and Abuse, Made Easier by Telemedicine
Chris Hambry, New York Times, 2/20/2023
For Greg Rice, ketamine was transformative. The drug,
approved decades ago to sedate patients during surgery, was increasingly being
used to treat mental health conditions like his depression. Since his teenage
years, Mr. Rice had cycled through a long list of medications. Searching for
relief, he sometimes abused his prescriptions and experimented with LSD,
psychedelic mushrooms and other illicit substances.
At a particularly low point following a breakup a few years ago, Mr. Rice, 38,
bought ketamine through back channels and injected it nightly for two weeks. The
psychedelic-like journeys seemed to loosen the grip of his negative thoughts.
"That was probably not the best way of coping," he acknowledged, "but it got me
through a really rough experience."
He continued using the drug periodically, he said, but was left hunting for a
supply — until last year, when he discovered the freewheeling world of
telemedicine. Mr. Rice went online and made an appointment with a doctor more
than 2,500 miles from his California home whom he had never met. After a
30-minute video call, he received a prescription for a month's supply. "I
finally had an avenue to get pure medical-grade ketamine for cheap, sent to me
over the mail," he said.
Not long ago, such an arrangement would have been illegal. Access to ketamine
was tightly controlled by the Drug Enforce Administration, which puts its risk
of abuse one notch below that of opioids like oxycodone and fentanyl. While
prescribing it for depression was allowed, patients needed to first meet in
person with a doctor, and treatment was mostly limited to infusions in clinics.
But in 2020, at the height of the pandemic, the Trump administration made it
easier to treat patients by telemedicine including remotely prescribing
controlled substances. These regulatory changes, which have continued under
President Biden, have made all manner of medical care, from management of
chronic diseases like diabetes to substance abuse treatment, more accessible and
affordable.
While many patients have benefited, the rapid growth of remote prescribing and
at-home use of various drugs has outpaced the evidence that doing so is safe and
effective. As the gap between medical treatment and online shopping has
narrowed, already thorny debates over the proper balance between availability
and safety have become increasingly urgent.
The ketamine boom is a particularly fraught case study of
this new reality because of the drug's powerful effects and the vulnerable
patients drawn to it: typically those with severe depression or other mental
health conditions who have not responded to traditional therapies. The shift
away from clinics has led many patients to take the drug more frequently and for
longer periods of time — multiple times a week, even daily in some cases, and
for months or years — despite scant research on safety.
To better understand how this is playing out, The Times interviewed more than 40
patients who said their access to the drug was expanded through telehealth,
spoke with two dozen doctors and other medical professionals, and reviewed
scientific studies, case reports and data from researchers, government agencies
and private analytics firms.
Many of the patients said ketamine was life-changing, the only drug that had
ever relieved their crushing symptoms. But some described serious drawbacks —
including addiction and bladder damage — that have been documented for years
among recreational users but have been largely played down by the drug's medical
proponents.
On a Reddit forum devoted to ketamine therapy, an online community that has
grown from fewer than 2,000 members in 2019 to more than 25,000 today, posts
about misuse of the drug have appeared often enough that some members have
pleaded for discretion, fearing a tightening of telehealth regulations. "I feel
like some authority at some point is going to want to crack down and be like,
'No, we don't think this is OK: " said one ketamine patient, Samuel Brooks, in
an interview.
Covid-19 exacerbated the nation's mental health crisis and underscored the
inadequacy of many existing treatments, accelerating a reconsideration of
once-stigmatized psychedelics. Because the Food and Drug Administration approved
ketamine as an anesthetic more than 50 years ago, federal rules allow doctors to
prescribe it for other conditions as well, and its use for depression, anxiety
and post-traumatic stress disorder was growing before the pandemic.
With the rule changes in 2020, the at-home ketamine
industry appeared practically overnight. Tech start-ups and individual doctors
began offering medical services online, and so-called compounding pharmacies,
which can make variations of approved drugs, found a market for tablet and
lozenge versions of ketamine, normally manufactured as a liquid and distributed
in vials.
Primed by glowing media coverage and aggressive advertising, many patients
interviewed by The Times came to regard the drug — and its remote availability —
as akin to a miracle cure with few risks. They can now pursue a treatment course
not approved by the F.D.A., taking forms of the drug that are also not approved,
produced by companies operating largely outside the agency's oversight — all
without comprehensive monitoring.
Some found their way to online physicians like Scott Smith, a family medicine
doctor who closed his practice in South Carolina in 2020 to focus full time on
online ketamine treatment. In the past three years, Dr. Smith has remotely
treated about 3,000 patients in 44 states, and has been featured in The
Washington Post and on social media sites like YouTube and Reddit. Others sought
out fledgling tech companies like Joyous, which offers rock-bottom pricing and
daily dosing adjusted by text message, or a host of more established firms.
Studies of recreational users have documented that ketamine — popularly known as
K or Special K, with a reputation as a club drug — can be addictive and, when
taken chronically in high doses, can cause severe bladder damage that in the
worst cases requires surgical reconstruction of the organ. There are indications
that abuse may also lead to cognitive impairment.
Advocates of increased therapeutic use say those issues are exceedingly rare or
nonexistent at the doses and frequencies commonly prescribed. But because
treatment is remote and there is little mandatory reporting of side effects, it
is nearly impossible to accurately gauge their prevalence.
Patients who told The Times they began experiencing problems after starting
ketamine included a 50-year-old man who must use a catheter to empty his bladder
and a 37-year-old woman who wears adult diapers.
Some said they concealed problems from their telehealth providers for fear of
losing access to the only treatment that had ever helped, while others
acknowledged abusing their prescriptions, taking too much and in some cases
dissolving and injecting the drug.
On private online forums for medical professionals,
accounts of bladder issues are common enough that some providers are becoming
more restrained in their prescriptions, according to multiple people with access
to the websites. Some psychiatrists have published cautionary reports.
The approaches of patients like Mr. Rice highlight the underlying tension. He
acknowledged his "addictive tendencies" with ketamine, but his top priority in
choosing online treatment was clear: "I wanted something hands-off."
A Trip With Risks
Many ketamine patients described the drug as a reset
button for the brain. During treatment sessions, they experienced pleasant
visualizations, sometimes accompanied by a sense of existing outside themselves
and melding with the universe. Afterward, their daily problems seemed less
weighty.
The considerable hype surrounding ketamine stems in part from the drug's ability
to affect brain receptors that traditional antidepressants do not target. The
psychedelic-like trip, many believe, is integral to the drug's therapeutic
effect.
But for some patients who spoke to The Times, including a
Tennessee cybersecurity manager and a former Pennsylvania factory worker, the
profound experiences of their early sessions faded. Chasing the lost high, they
sought increased doses, took multiple days' worth at once or altered the
medicine to release more of its payload. For others — a Utah data analyst, a
California bartender and a Pennsylvania Internet entrepreneur — ketamine
treatment eventually meant dealing with a constant urge to urinate, often
painfully, as well as other bladder ailments.
The experiences of the dozens of patients who shared their stories with The
Times encapsulate both the well-publicized promise of ketamine and the
lesser-discussed risks. Driving the interest are early-stage studies showing that
the drug can rapidly and dramatically relieve symptoms of depression. But there
has been little research on how to maintain the improvements and even less on
whether prolonged treatment is safe.
When discussing the risks, prescribers often insist there is a sharp line
between chronic abuse and medical use. "That happens in people that abuse
ketamine and use more than a thousand milligrams on a daily basis," Dr. Smith,
the online physician from South Carolina, said of bladder damage. "We're
treating most people with 200 milligrams every three days. We haven't seen
anybody that's had that problem."
Still, two of Dr. Smith's former patients said in interviews that they
experienced serious issues that required care from a urologist. Both said they
did not tell Dr. Smith because they felt addicted to the drug and wanted to
continue their prescriptions, which they were misusing.
Among the 12 patients who described bladder problems, most saw their symptoms
resolve after they stopped taking ketamine. Most said their doctors couldn't
conclusively peg the cause of their problems but identified ketamine as the
likely culprit. Three patients said their troubles persisted. One of them, a man
living in Utah, recounted the painful daily ritual of using a catheter to empty
his bladder but expressed no regrets. Without ketamine, he said, he might have
killed himself.
For other patients, a similar calculus led them to stay on ketamine despite the
harm. All of them spoke on the condition that their full names not be published,
for fear of losing access to the drug or affecting their job prospects. Sarah, a
30-year-old Californian, said she had tried more than a dozen psychotropic
medications and undergone more than 30 electroconvulsive therapy treatments
before finding ketamine. Now, between periodic infusions at a local clinic, she
takes tablets at home that she gets through an online service. But she has not
told either provider about her worsening bladder issues. Her urologist may soon
need to inject Botox into her bladder, a treatment for certain urinary problems.
"It's kind of a lot to admit that you have bladder issues as a 30-year-old,
mostly because you're causing it," she said.
Many ketamine proponents minimize the potential for addiction and abuse. Dr.
Smith said that of the thousands of patients he had treated, only two or three
had misused the drug, and that he got them help. He said he had reported one
patient to the D.E.A. tip line and also stopped treating a handful of patients
after learning they were taking more than prescribed. "I have to go through hoops to be licensed to treat
people with controlled substances," he said. "So I comply with all federal and
state laws regarding that. And part of my daily job is to look for people that
are abusing the medicine or diverting the medicine."
Three of Dr. Smith's patients told The Times they abused their prescriptions and
concealed it from him. Two others described dissolving the tablet or lozenge and
administering it rectally, a practice known as boofing that some believe
produces a faster and more intense high. Abuse is "absolutely unacceptable," Dr.
Smith said, but "just because there's a handful of people that don't follow
directions, that does not mean that this medicine is not safe for the rest of
the population of competent adults."
Six patients of various medical providers said they came to crave the ketamine
trip so much they began to use the drug compulsively. The more they took, some
found, the more they needed. "It's pretty powerful," said a 59-year-old woman
from Philadelphia who sometimes takes more than prescribed, runs out early and
tries to buy the drug on the dark web.
A 41-year-old man from Nashville who has battled depression since childhood
described the drug as his "superpower." People liked him more, he had more
energy and "I got more stuff done." After undergoing infusions at a clinic, he
said, he transitioned during the pandemic to taking small lozenges called
`roches' at home. He started at 100 milligrams a day, then took 200, then 400.
His provider would not increase the dose any further, so he now exhausts his
monthly prescription early —taking 800 milligrams a day. Speaking on a Tuesday
afternoon in December, he said he had just received a performance review at the
company where he works in cybersecurity. "My boss was like, You're not meeting
expectations,"' he said. I'm using it right now," he continued. "Since the start
of this call, I've taken 400 milligrams."
In the Absence of Science
While proponents of at-home ketamine stress the lack of scientific studies showing that long-term medical use might be harmful, the converse is also true: There are few studies showing that it isn't. Some urge caution. "We know at a certain point you will get both the neurotoxic and the bladder-toxic effects — we just don't know at what level," said Dr. Gerard Sanacora, a psychiatrist and leading ketamine researcher at Yale University.
In the absence of data, some medical professionals said they were becoming more
conservative in their prescribing because of anecdotes in published case reports
or online forums. Professional groups have developed informal guidelines that
emphasize catching symptoms early, reducing the dose and sparing out treatments.
But some at-home providers are pushing in the opposite direction, viewing
ketamine as just another medicine to be taken regularly. "I would be worried
about chronic usage" said Dr. Adam Howe, a urologist at Albany Medical Center
who advises a group developing treatment guidance. Damage is avoidable with
proper safeguards, he said, but "common sense would tell you, if you're to use
this every day for years on end, then at a certain point, you're going to be
damaging your bladder probably."
The literature on addiction and abuse among medical users is also thin and
inconclusive. Supporters point to studies indicating that patients on ketamine
rarely, if ever, have those issues. Others note a pattern common in drug
development: an initial overestimation of benefit, followed by more tempered
results and recognition of previously undetected harm.
"We really don't know what sort of addiction we might be
causing," said Dr. Noah Capurso, a Yale psychiatrist who co-wrote a case study
of a patient whose at-home, prescribed use escalated until he was involuntarily
admitted to a psychiatric unit. Doctors at the Baylor College of Medicine and
the Mayo Clinic have published similar accounts. In one case, after a
52-year-old man who regularly took more than prescribed had to be hospitalized,
his family said the drug was "ripping his life apart" and he had "no control
over it."
Production Is Booming
For years, mental health clinics have administered the
F.D.A approved liquid form of ketamine that doctors also use to sedate patients
in surgery. But at-home treatment created demand for a version that was less
potent and easier to take — something not available from drugmakers.
Enter a uniquely positioned industry: compounding pharmacies. These
specialized companies operate in a murky regulatory space somewhere between a
corner drugstore and a pharmaceutical manufacturer. They can produce variations
of approved drugs but do not have to follow the same quality-control rules as
drugmakers.
Most compounding pharmacies do not have to notify federal
regulators when they learn of a patient experiencing a problem, and they are
rarely, if ever, inspected by the ED.A. In many cases, the agency may not even
know they exist.
The companies were originally granted legal leeway to produce small amounts of
drugs for patients with particular needs, such as an allergy to an ingredient
in a commercial product or an inability to swallow a pill. But some have
dramatically grown their production capacity and reach. Companies that once
served primarily local customers now ship their products across the country as
the ketamine boom has presented an alluring opportunity. "It's become the new
buzz in this space," said Jeanine Sinanan-Singh, chief executive of Vitae
Industries, which sells a machine that compounding pharmacies can use to
produce doses at a faster clip than with other methods.
The size of this new market is difficult to gauge. The number of mental health
patients prescribed ketamine more than doubled from just under 15,000 in 2016
to nearly 30,000 in 2021, according to data from the analytics company Komodo
Health. But the actual numbers are likely to be far higher because the data is
drawn from insurance claims, and plans tend not to cover the drug's off-label
uses,
Most compounders do not report the amount of ketamine they produce to the F.D.A.,
and the agency refuses to disclose data from those that do, asserting that it is
confidential commercial information. In a statement, the F.D.A. noted its
limited authority over most compounding pharmacies and said it "continues to
monitor reports of adverse events or other complaints involving compounded
ketamine."
Some compounding pharmacies have gone public with stepped-up efforts to attract
customers. In social media posts and mailers to doctors, they extol the benefits
of ketamine, and some offer to connect patients with prescribers. They promise
fast shipping and low prices. Compounders can formulate troches from
inexpensive generic ketamine and charge between $50 and $100 for a month's
supply, a fraction of the cost of receiving treatment at a clinic.
After a deadly meningitis outbreak was linked to one compounding pharmacy in
2012, the F.D.A. sought to impose greater oversight on companies that mailed
drugs to other states in large volumes, but the industry has successfully
stalled the restrictions. As a result, most of the largest ketamine
compounders can ship across the country with little federal scrutiny. Scott
Brunner, chief executive of the Alliance for Pharmacy Compounding, a trade
group, said that the F.D.A's proposals constituted overreach but that the
industry was open to some reporting of interstate shipments and adverse events.
"Compounding pharmacists' concern is always the health and safety of their
patients,” he said.
Just one of the major at-home ketamine compounders appears to have registered
with the F.D.A., and the resulting inspections have turned up serious quality
problems, according to agency records. That company, Empower Pharmacy, ships to
all 50 states. Three times over the past five years, F.D.A. inspectors have
visited its Houston production site and cited violations, including inadequate
monitoring for contamination, insufficient investigations of batches that
failed quality tests and a failure to properly report adverse events.
During a visit last summer, inspectors found that the company had been producing
ketamine nasal spray for more than two years without ever conducting potency
tests to ensure the product had the correct strength. Empower did not respond
to questions from The Times. In a letter to the F.D.A. after last year's
inspection, the company said it had been "steadily improving its management
and corporate governance" and "restructuring its manufacturing, quality and
compliance departments for greater oversight."
Daily Doses at Bargain Rates
Cost concerns led Chad Curl to the telehealth startup
Joyous. After trying seemingly everything —prescription pills, electroconvulsive
therapy, an implanted nerve stimulator — he found relief from depression at a
clinic administering a closely related drug, esketamine, which is a nasal spray
approved by the F.D.A. as a mental health treatment. But it cannot be taken at
home, and he could afford only a few sessions.
Searching online for alternatives last fall, he documented among those abusing
ketamine, the company said, "it is not a known risk of low doses." It said nine
out of every 10 patients "report feeling better overall." "We want to emphasize
that Joyous is a public benefits corporation," the company said, "meaning that
we prioritize public goods over profits." Joyous describes itself as a
collaboration between "medical experts, psychology specialists and Silicon
Valley technologists." The company's cofounder and chief medical officer, Dr.
Bobbi Leben, has a physical rehabilitation and pain management practice in the
Florida Keys, and Joyous is not her first foray into telehealth
entrepreneurship.
Archived versions of the website for a company called Everyone's M.D. identify
Dr. Leben as a cofounder and offer treatments including ketamine, generic
Viagra and hemp cream for pain. Joyous said she "was involved in the initial
discussion" about the company but "was not involved in the launch" and now had
no affiliation with the firm.
Joyous patients typically receive ketamine from SmartScript, a compounding
pharmacy in Wisconsin, records show, that is managed by Dr. Leben's husband,
Daniel. In its written responses, Joyous said that patients were free to choose
where their prescription was filled.
As Joyous's customer base has grown, so have complaints.
Messages to the company's support line go unreturned for days, multiple patients
said. Mr. Curl, who initially praised Joyous in an interview in November,
expressed exasperation last month: "They don't respond to your comments anymore,
and I figure, what's the point?"
For patients dealing with debilitating depression or thoughts of self-harm,
delayed or cookie-cutter responses in the weeks or months between video
appointments can amplify stress. A 27-year-old California woman said her
depression symptoms worsened and she began cutting herself while receiving
treatment from Joyous. For 10 straight weeks, she reported having suicidal
thoughts in her responses to a company questionnaire. Each time, she received
the same text message in reply. It contained the number of the national suicide
and crisis lifeline and concluded, "We hope you start feeling better very soon!"
"Not once," the woman said, "did a human being ever check on me."
Joyous said it could not discuss specific patients because of privacy laws but
said the company followed federal guidance in such situations, adding,
"Patients always have the option to schedule live telemedicine visits with their
providers at any time for no additional cost."
The future of the ketamine boom depends largely on the actions of the federal
government in the coming months. While states have some authority, the most
important policy decision rests with the D.E.A. If the agency doesn't take
action before the Covid-19 public health emergency is scheduled to end in May,
patients may be required to have at least one in-person visit before they can be
prescribed ketamine. The D.E.A. declined to comment on its plans.
Many patients who spoke with The Times expressed hope
for a middle ground: something more stringent than the current laissez-faire
approach but not so restrictive that a potentially lifesaving treatment became
inaccessible.
Mr. Curl said he hoped that his and other patients' negative experiences would
not ruin the at-home ketamine experiment more broadly. "I'm not on a mission to
get them shut down or anything," he said, "because that's not going to solve any
problems for people like me."