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Kansans are key to development of groundbreaking depression drug esketamine

Sheldon Preskorn, M.D., psychiatry professor at KU School of Medicine-Wichita, talks with Matthew Macaluso, D.O., associate professor of psychiatry at KU School of Medicine-Wichita. Both played a pivotal role in the research and development of esketamine, a new treatment for depression.

By JOE STUMPE
KU School of Medicine-Wichita

WICHITA – The most promising new treatment for depression in decades owes a debt to Wichita and its KU School of Medicine campus.

The drug, called esketamine, is being marketed as a nasal spray under the name Spravato. Approved for use by the FDA in March, esketamine has been shown to help a significant percentage of people who don’t respond to existing antidepressants, which all work on monoamine – also called biogenic amine – neurotransmitters such as serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine. In contrast, Spravato works via a new mechanism on a new transmitter system, glutamate.

“This medicine works via a different mechanism. That mechanism produces meaningful effects in approximately 60 percent of patients not meaningfully helped by existing antidepressants and within 24 hours,” said Sheldon Preskorn, M.D., a psychiatry professor at KU School of Medicine-Wichita who has helped in the development and now the launch of the drug. “It’s really quite different.”

About a third of the people suffering from depression – several million in the United States alone – aren’t helped by monoamine antidepressants such as Prozac or Zoloft.

“We’ve been working with those (drugs) for 50 years because that is all we’ve had up to the FDA approval of Spravato,” Preskorn said.

Preskorn knows the history, having led or participated in psychopharmacology research since the late 1970s. During a 25-year period, he took part in the development of every antidepressant and antipsychotic drug brought to market in the United States.

“I did one of the earliest studies showing that drugs of (esketamine’s) nature worked,” Preskorn said, referring to a study published in 2008. “It wasn’t esketamine, but it showed that this mechanism of action worked in patients with otherwise treatment-resistant depression.” That study, conducted in Wichita, has been cited more than 400 times in the world’s medical literature.

Preskorn also taught Wayne Drevets, M.D., the physician scientist who led drug development work for Janssen Research & Development, the subsidiary of Johnson & Johnson that won FDA approval to market esketamine. Drevets is a graduate of KU School of Medicine, as is Preskorn.

“He’s a native of Wichita, went to Collegiate High and graduated from medical school at KU in Kansas City,” Preskorn said. “He was a medical student of mine and then a resident of mine when I was on the faculty at KU in Kansas City and then Washington University” in St. Louis.

At Janssen, Drevets, as a vice president of the company, oversees the development of new treatments for depression and other mood and anxiety disorders.

Drevets was motivated to train as a psychiatrist by observing friends who struggled with depression, according to a profile on the Janssen website. He began his research career looking at the effects of existing medicines on the brain. At the time, researchers did not know where in the brain to look for abnormalities that affect emotional behavior. Today, imaging technology allows scientists to see the differences in a person’s brain when they are having symptoms.

The profile quotes Drevets as saying he believes the practice of psychiatry has lagged behind what is now known of the brain, and that’s the main reason he moved into the pharmaceutical industry.

“I wanted to help develop new treatments that would make a difference for patients in the clinic,” he said. Preskorn said he recognized that innovative spirit in Drevets as a medical student and resident.

In addition to Preskorn and Drevets, there is another important KU contributor to the approval of esketamine: Matthew Macaluso, D.O., an associate professor of psychiatry at KU School of Medicine-Wichita and a graduate of its residency program. Macaluso was principal investigator for a portion of the pivotal clinical trials conducted here that led to FDA approval of esketamine. An assistant dean for research and director of the psychiatry residency program, Macaluso also leads the Center for Clinical Research at KU Wichita.

During the course of about three years, Macaluso studied patients whose depression had not responded adequately to at least two therapeutic trials of different existing monoamine antidepressants. The patients were given doses of esketamine twice weekly for one month, and then the frequency of dosing was decreased with some patients receiving the drug only every two weeks.

“We saw good responses to the drug in most but not all the patients,” Macaluso said. “Many of the individuals in the study told us it was a life-changing treatment for them. These were people who had lost interest in life, had less energy and were chronically ill – truly suffering.”

Esketamine has an interesting history. Ketamine – which contains both esketamine and arketamine – was introduced as anesthetic in Germany in 1997. Ketamine showed signs of acting as an antidepressant, leading to research on its use for that purpose. Ketamine is also used by veterinarians as a tranquilizer and has been abused as a party drug nicknamed “Special K.” It is a controlled drug that can only be administered in a medical office.

The same is true of esketamine, which also distinguishes it from other depressants. It works on a chemical in the brain called glutamine, which is a different mechanism of action than drugs such as Prozac and Zoloft.

“Historically, most antidepressant drugs work on what are called biogenic amines – chemicals in the brain like serotonin, norepinephrine and dopamine,” Macaluso said. “Dr. Preskorn earlier studied a novel drug that worked on a different chemical called glutamate. Since then, there has been keen interest in the development of such drugs for patients with depressive illness, which is not responsive to monoamine antidepressants.”

Spravato is now FDA approved to be taken in conjunction with a daily oral monoamine antidepressant, which is how the studies were conducted that led to FDA approval. In addition to reducing depression, a “floating” or tranquilizing sensation is often felt. Some patients have reported dissociation, dizziness and other side effects.

FDA approval was based on research showing that esketamine treated depression where other drugs had not worked and prevented its recurrence. Preskorn said clinical trials are not always representative of how new treatments do in the “real world” of clinical practice, but he is optimistic.

Macaluso said “unfortunately” some psychiatrists may be reluctant to prescribe esketamine because it’s related to a drug “people have abused over the years.” Patients should be screened for a history of substance use disorder or risk for developing the same, he noted.

But Preskorn believes the fact that “it works well for patients who have not benefited from other treatments” will override that concern for many psychiatrists, other health care providers and their patients.

He was one of three psychiatrists picked by Janssen to serve as a panel on the initial broadcast launch presentations about esketamine across the country, reaching over 11,000 health care providers.

“To me, that shows there is a great deal of interest in this treatment,” Preskorn said.

Push to overturn controversial Kansas abortion ruling on hold

TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) — Pro-Life supporters are waiting until next year to try to overturn a Kansas Supreme Court decision protecting abortion rights.

Their plans signal that they may not have enough support yet to push the necessary state constitutional amendment through the Republican-controlled Legislature.

GOP legislative leaders were outraged by last week’s ruling but said they plan to take their time in responding to the ruling, despite the threat of state courts overturning existing abortion restrictions. Kansans for Life, the state’s most influential anti-abortion group, says it needs time to organize the push to get a proposition on the ballot.

Abortion opponents also fell just short this week of overriding Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto of an anti-abortion bill. They would need the same two-thirds majorities to pass a constitutional change.

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Tiny House tours available Friday afternoon

Courtesy photo

The instructor of the building trades class at Ness City High School is offering tours of a Tiny House built by his class.

Instructor Brent Kerr said tours at Gross Memorial Coliseum will resume about 1 p.m. and conclude by 4 p.m.

Click HERE and HERE for more on the Tiny House program.

Kansas man bound over for trial for alleged rape in 2015

HUTCHINSON, Kan. — A Kansas man charged with a single count of rape has been bound over for trial in Reno County.

Snell photo Reno Co.

Christopher Snell, 19, is accused of forcing a Hutchinson woman into sex while the two were walking the pedestrian/bike trail in Carey Park back in August of 2015.

The victim from Lyons testified Thursday that she had been friends with Snell.

After she enrolled at Hutchinson Community College, the two decided to visit the park. On the trail, she testified he began to touch her inappropriately and she told him to stop twice and started to walk away. That’s when he grabbed her wrist and forced her into sex while she was leaning against a pillar on the far southeast part of the park.

After this occurred, they went back to a college parking lot. She then drove back to Lyons and told her boyfriend what happened. It was then that the alleged crime was reported.

Arraignment is scheduled for  May 7.

HHS Lady Indian’ soccer plays to draw

By JEREMY McGUIRE
Hays Post

HAYS, Kan.-Silas Hibbs and his Hays High Lady Indian soccer team are becoming very accustomed to draws. For the second time this week HHS played to a draw with a Western Athletic Conference opponent. This time it was a 1-1 draw with Dodge City, a team they beat on 1-0 in double overtime back on April 2nd in Dodge City.

The two teams played a scoreless first half and the game remained scoreless deep into the second half. In the 72nd minute the Lady Demons took the lead after Hays High goalie Isabel Robben appeared to have the ball kicked out of her hand. No call was made and the Lady Indians trailed for the first time since a 2-1 loss to Maize South on March 28th.

Hays High would have the answer when Sierra Bryant stepped up to take a free kick in the 77th minute. The sailed just past the defenders and through the goalie and tied the game 1-1. The Lady Indians had opportunities in both overtimes but the Dodge City goalie turned back several nice shots by Hays High. The Lady Demons had a golden opportunity to win the match in the second overtime with a penalty shot that Robben denied to preserve the victory.

Hays picks up their fourth draw of the season and go into the final week of the regular season with an overall record of 9-1-4 and 4-0-4 in the WAC. They currently sit in second place in the league and need Garden City to lose on the road in Liberal next Tuesday in order to claim the league crown. The Lady Indians will host Nickerson on Tuesday and travel to Wichita Trinity Academy next Thursday.

SILAS HIBBS INTERVIEW

 

TMP softball sweeps Plainville/Stockton on senior night

HAYS – The TMP-Marian Monarchs picked up a pair of wins over Plainville/Stockton Thursday at TMP Field on senior night.

Game 1: TMP 7, Plainville/Stockton 6

The Monarchs rallied to score two in the bottom of the seventh inning and earned a walk-off win on a four-base error, 7-6 in game one of Thursday’s doubleheader.

TMP jumped out to an early lead scoring three runs on three hits and three Plainville errors in the first inning as Emilee Augustine and Sophia Coulter each drove in a run to put TMP up 3-0.

The Cardinals got a run back in the second inning to cut the TMP lead to 3-1. But Augustine’s second RBI double of the first two innings gave TMP a 4-1 after two innings.

A sacrifice fly by Emily Schulte in the fourth put TMP up 5-3 through four innings.

In the fifth inning Macy Odle drove in a pair of runs with an RBI single to tie the game at five and in the sixth Reece Becker drove in a run with a single giving Plainville/Stockton a 6-5 lead.

Down two in the seventh inning Kyleigh Allen reached with a leadoff single and then Emily Schulte in an effort to move the runner into scoring position laid down a bunt back to the pitcher, Odle. Her throw to first was off the mark and ended up in foul territory in right field.

Allen and Schulte both came home to score giving the Monarchs a 7-6 walk-off win.

Melissa Schoepf postgame interview

Senior Leanne Rack earned her first win of the season with an inning and a third of scoreless relief.

Augustine finished the game two-for-three with a pair of RBI doubles.

Game one highlights

Game 2: TMP 12, Plainville/Stockton 2 – 5 innings
In the second game of the doubleheader the Monarchs bats came alive scoring at least one run in all five innings on their way to a 12-2 win in five innings.

In the game the Monarchs two, three and four hitters would do the heavy lifting hitting a combined 9-for-11 with six RBI’s and eight runs scored.

Emily Schulte was four-for-four and scored three times, Emilee Augustine was three-for-four with a double, three RBI’s and two runs scored and Sophia Coulter finished two-for-three with three RBI’s and she scored two runs.

Kyleigh Allen earned the win in the circle. She allowed just two hits and struck out three with one walk in four innings. She improved to 8-6 with the win.

The Monarchs are now 10-6 on the season while Plainville/Stockton drops to 6-10.

Game two highlights

TMP travels to Great Bend on Friday. Plainville/Stockton hosts Ellsworth on Friday.

Indian baseball wins first two games of the Diamond Classic

HAYS, Kan. – The Hays High baseball team opened the Western Plains Diamond Classic with a couple of wins Thursday at the Hays High Field. The Indians defeated Manhattan 1-0 in the first game of the day then knocked off Great Bend 6-3.

Trey Riggs (5-1) pitched a complete game three-hitter, striking out four and walking three against Manhattan. Brock Lummus hit a fourth-inning solo homer for the game’s only run.

Lummus had a double and triple and drove in three against the Panthers. His double in the third put the Indians up 4-1.

Palmer Hutchison (5-0) allowed three runs on 10 hits with five strikeouts and a walk for the complete game win.

The Indians have won four straight and improve to 15-1. They play Salina Central at approximately 7:15pm Friday.

The Mustangs lost 5-3 to Manhattan in the second game Thursday.

Friday’s schedule…
Great Bend vs. Goddard-Eisenhower, 1pm
Salina Central vs. Goddard Eisenhower, 3pm
Great Bend vs. Manhattan, 5:15pm
Hays vs. Salina Central, 7:15pm

Professor from Ohio enters plea in Kansas City teen sex case

KANSAS CITY (AP) — A former professor at Miami University in Ohio has admitted to traveling to Missouri to have sex with a teen girl who was actually an undercover agent.

Kevin Connor Armitage-photo Caldwell Co.

53-year-old Kevin Connor Armitage entered a guilty plea Wednesday to a federal charge.

Court records say he posted details online of past sexual experiences. He also said he would be visiting the Kansas City area and asked for a recommendation. An FBI agent who was monitoring the site replied to the post and provided a phone number that Armitage believed would connect him with a 14-year-old girl.

Armitage was arrested when he went to a restaurant where he had arranged to meet the person whom he believed was the teen’s cousin. Sentencing is set for Aug. 15.

Kan. man in custody after violent disturbance, barricade situation

SHAWNEE COUNTY — Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect after a reported violent domestic disturbance.

David Garcia photo Shawnee Co.

Just after 6:15 p.m. Thursday, officers responded to a report of a violent domestic disturbance in the 5500 block of SW Avalon in Topeka, according to Lt. John Trimble.

While officers were still in route to the case address, information was developed that the suspect, 23 year old David J. Garcia, had fled the scene and was armed with a handgun.

Garcia then entered a house in the 5400 block of SW 15th and refused to comply with lawful orders to come out.

At approximately 09:07 p.m., Garcia exited the house and was taken into custody without incident.  Garcia is under arrest and charges will be determined after interviews were completed, according to Trimble.

Monarch baseball cruises to doubleheader sweep in Goodland

GOODLAND, Kan. – The Thomas More Prep-Marian baseball team scored 30 runs on 22 hits and took advantage of 11 Goodland errors as they cruised to a doubleheader sweep of the Cowboys Thursday. The Monarchs won game one 13-1 before taking the second game 17-0. They have won five straight and improve to 13-3 on the season.

Colby Dreiling (7-1) allowed one run on three hits with four strikeouts and one walk for the win in game one which was called after five innings by run rule. Carson Jacobs struck out five of the six batters he faced.

Brady Kreutzer and Eston Brown both had three hits and three RBIs. Kreutzer doubled twice. Dreiling doubled and Jace Wentling had a triple to highlight the Monarchs 11 hit attack.

Brady Kreutzer and Mason Robbins combined on a one-hitter in the second game which was called after four innings by run rule. Kreutzer (1-1) struck out five and allowed a hit in three innings and picked up the win. Robbins worked a scoreless inning in relief.

Kreutzer, Ethan Atherton and Noah Gibson all had two hits. Etherton, Gibson and Jace Wentling both drove in two runs.

Kansas K-9 helps deputy make $9M fentanyl bust

WABAUNSEE COUNTY— Law enforcement authorities are investigating a suspect on drug distribution charges after an arrest in northeast Kansas.

Photo courtesy Wabaunsee Co. Sheriff

On Wednesday, a Wabaunsee County deputy and his K-9 Partner Karma came across a vehicle in which the driver had a suspended driver’s license. Karma alerted to the odor and presence of narcotics, according to a social media report.

The deputy arrested the driver, the vehicle was impounded and a search warrant was obtained for the vehicle.

Investigators located two bags containing several hundred pills and 10 wrapped bundles. The pills are suspected to be fentanyl and the bundles were also suspected to be heroin or methamphetamine mixed with fentanyl. The estimated street value of these drugs were over 9 million dollars.

The sheriff will release the suspect’s name after charges are filed.

The sheriff did remind that Fentanyl is a very dangerous substance and has been the cause of many deaths by overdose.
Over 100 deaths occurred in Kansas last year and recently there were 2 deaths in Riley County from fentanyl.

Rays rally to beat Royals for 4-game split

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — Brandon Lowe followed a solid first month with a hot start to May.

The Tampa Bay rookie hit a two-run homer off Wily Peralta with two outs in the ninth inning, and the Tampa Bay Rays rallied to beat the Kansas City Royals 3-1 Thursday for a four-game split.

Lowe hit a changeup to right that just kept carrying and went over the wall.

“I didn’t know it was going to be a home run,” Lowe said. “As I was running, I was saying, ‘C’mon, get up.’ I was asking for it to do something for me. It wasn’t the intention in that at-bat. I was just trying to find a gap.”

Peralta (2-2) walked Daniel Robertson on four pitches leading off the ninth, and Lowe connected with two outs for his seventh home run this season.

Lowe’s average through the end of April with .289 with six homers and 17 RBIs. He is 5 for 12 in May.

“He did it right again today,” manager Kevin Cash said. “He came up in a clutch situation. He got a pitch, and it kind of looked like he got out in front of it a little bit. But we’ve talked about his power. For not the biggest guy in the world, he can generate a lot of power.”

Whit Merrifield became the third player with a two-triple game this season for the Royals, who lead the major leagues with 17 in 32 games. His third-inning triple drove in Martin Maldonado, who beat out an infield hit and is 7 for 13 against Charlie Morton.

Merrifield entered 30 for 89 against the Rays.

“I saw the stat that he’s 30-for-90 against us in his career,” Cash said. “I would have guessed he was like 90-for-30.”AL East-leading Tampa Bay tied the score in the fifth on consecutive singles by Willy Adames, Nate Lowe and Guillermo Heredia.

Adam Kolarek (2-1) got the final two outs of the eighth, and Diego Castillo struck out two in a perfect ninth for his fourth save in as many chances. Tampa Bay won the season series 4-3.

Royals starter Danny Duffy allowed six hits in six innings, while Charlie Morton gave up five hits in 6 2/3 innings with nine strikeouts.

“He’s nasty,” Kansas City’s Alex Gordon said. “Usually I’m pretty frustrated when the offense only scores one run. But when the guy has stuff like that and commands it like that, it’s hard to hit.”

GETTING HOT

Hunter Dozier had two hits. Since an opening 3-for-27 slide, he is 30 for 69 (.435).

STAYING COLD

Chris Owings was 0 for 22 with 10 strikeouts against the Rays this season.

MOVES

Rays: RHP Austin Pruitt, the 26th man during Wednesday’s doubleheader, was returned to Triple-A Durham. Tampa Bay recalled RHP Casey Sadler from Durham for his second stint of the season following a one-day appearance on April 19. He pitched two scoreless innings in his major league debut.

TRAINER’S ROOM

Rays: RHP Hunter Wood was put on the 10-day IL with right shoulder soreness.

UP NEXT

Rays: RHP Tyler Glasnow (5-0), who leads the AL with a 1.75 ERA, starts Friday at Baltimore.

Royals: RHP Jorge López (0-2) starts Friday’s series opener at Detroit.

Hays High announces new girls basketball coach

Hays High has announced the hiring of Kyle Porter as the next girls basketball coach.  Porter has been the head coach of Royal Valley High School the past two seasons.  The Panthers won the 3A state crown this past season and finished with a 21-5 record.  The team was 3A runner-up in 2018 and finished 17-8.  Porter was a four year assistant before taking over the program.

A Holton native, Porter played baseball at Kansas City Kansas Community College and a year at Washburn University where he earned his degree.  He will teach both Physical Education and Social Studies at Hays High.

In the below interview Porter talks about the “Gold Habits” his program will establish, returning Hays High players that already have caught his attention, and the style of play he would like to operate.

Coach Kyle Porter

 

The position at Hays High School opened when first year coach Alex Hutchins was announced as the new boys coach for the Indians.

Porter will move to Hays with his wife Crista (Bechard) who played basketball for two seasons at Fort Hays State University and a daughter.

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