DXM, CYP2D6-Inhibiting Antidepressants, Piracetam, and Glutamine: Proposing a Ketamine-Class Antidepressant Regimen with Existing Drugs
Discuss this preprint
Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?Listed in
This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.Abstract
Rapid‐acting antidepressants show that mood can lift within hours when glutamatergic circuits are pushed from an "NMDA-dominant" to an "AMPA-dominant" state. Intravenous ketamine achieves this flip but is hampered by dissociative side-effects and clinical logistics, while the oral pairing of dextromethorphan + bupropion (Auvelity®) delivers only the initial NMDA blockade and therefore yields slower, less durable benefit. We propose a fully oral, low-cost, four-component regimen designed to replicate ketamine's entire plasticity cascade: (1) dextromethorphan (DXM) supplies fast NMDA antagonism; (2) a strong CYP2D6 inhibitor (fluoxetine, paroxetine, or high-dose duloxetine) prolongs DXM exposure without relying on bupropion; (3) the AMPA positive allosteric modulator piracetam amplifies the downstream glutamate burst, driving BDNF- and mTOR-dependent synaptogenesis; and (4) micronized L-glutamine restores presynaptic glutamate pools and buffers against excitotoxicity. Preclinical evidence shows that each element—DXM's ketamine-like behavioral effects, piracetam's enhancement of AMPA currents, and glutamine's reversal of stress-induced glutamatergic depletion—synergizes along the same mechanistic axis. This strategy could democratize ketamine-level efficacy using inexpensive, readily available medications.