Major depressive disorder is a complex and debilitating psychiatric condition that affects millions of individuals worldwide (
1). Despite widespread use of traditional monoamine-modulating antidepressants for managing major depressive disorder, these medications have limited efficacy in the treatment of depression and have no fast-acting antidepressant effects (
2,
3). Furthermore, about 37% of patients do not have a clinically meaningful treatment response in two successive trials of these traditional antidepressant medications, and 44% do not experience symptom remission (
2). Such patients are deemed to have treatment-resistant depression, and subsequent medication trials are commonly of limited benefit. The pursuit of innovative therapeutic approaches to treat individuals with depression has stimulated much scientific interest in interventions that can produce robust, rapid, and durable symptom reduction. The therapeutic potential of various mechanistically novel treatments for depression has therefore been investigated (
4).
Nitrous oxide (N
2O) is an inhaled anesthetic drug discovered in 1772 by the chemist Joseph Priestly. By 1800, many clinical experiments investigating the medical applications of N
2O had been published, and its utility in surgical contexts was established by the early- to mid-19th century (
5). It has notoriety as a substance of misuse because of its ability to produce transient but enjoyable subjective effects, such as altered states of consciousness, euphoria, and analgesia (
6). N
2O shares mechanistic similarities with ketamine (
7), another anesthetic drug with utility in treating depression. Given this, the performance of N
2O in resolving depressive symptoms among patients with major depressive disorder and treatment-resistant depression has been evaluated in clinical trial settings (
8–
11).
Administration and Pharmacology
In clinical settings, N
2O is administered as a continually inhaled gas given at varying concentrations in combination with molecular oxygen (O
2). A concentration of 25% N
2O provides sufficient analgesia, and higher concentrations, 30%–50% and up to 70%, are used for sedation and general anesthesia, respectively (
6). A dose of 50% N
2O/50% O
2 administered continuously for 1 hour is the standard dosing protocol used in clinical trials investigating the antidepressant effect of N
2O (
12). N
2O is rapidly eliminated through the pulmonary system with limited urinary excretion due to poor blood solubility; concentrations measured in exhaled air are 6%–9% and 2%–4% at 5 minutes and 30 minutes postexposure, respectively (
6). Recovery to baseline mentation generally occurs within a few minutes postexposure. The pharmacokinetic profile of N
2O makes continuous or repeated use necessary to sustain its effects, lending to the potential for misuse and complicating screening in clinical settings should N
2O-induced sequelae be suspected.
Interest in N
2O stems from its ability to block the
N-methyl-
d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) on cortical gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) interneurons, a mechanism shared with ketamine (
7). Once NMDAR is blocked, regional glutamatergic neurotransmission will increase downstream binding of AMPAR (alpha-amino-3-hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid receptor), activation of the mTOR (mechanistic target of rapamycin) pathway, and the release of growth factors such as BDNF (brain-derived neurotrophic factor). Increased synaptic plasticity via long-term potentiation follows, involving increases in the density, efficiency, and overall strength of cortical synapses. These effects are thought to be mechanistically responsible for the rapid antidepressant effects of NMDAR antagonism (
13). However, N
2O may preferentially act on opioid receptors at subanesthetic doses, a finding that points toward a potential role of the opioidergic system in modulating its antidepressant effects (
12). Importantly, N
2O also interacts directly with the GABAergic, cholinergic, and noradrenergic systems to produce a variety of effects, and further research into its mechanisms is warranted (
6).
Efficacy
Four published randomized controlled trials (RCTs) (
8–
11) have examined the efficacy of N
2O in decreasing symptoms of major depressive disorder or treatment-resistant depression as the primary outcome (
Table 1). All trials used inhaled 50% N
2O/50% O
2 for 1 hour as the intervention compared with 1 hour of inhaled 50% air/50% O
2. One of these trials compared 25% N
2O, 50% N
2O, and placebo and revealed a significant decrease in depression symptoms 2 hours postadministration in both N
2O groups but not in the placebo group (9). However, the two N
2O treatment groups did not significantly differ in depressive symptom attenuation. In that study, the 25% N
2O group had a lower rate of adverse effect events. N
2O appears to have the largest effects on remission and response rates among those with major depressive disorder compared with those with treatment-resistant depression (
Table 1).
A meta-analysis of these four trials (N=133) (
12) revealed that N
2O significantly outperformed placebo in improving depressive symptoms, as measured by the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HAM-D), at 2 hours (p=0.001), 24 hours (p=0.001), and 2 weeks (p=0.011) postadministration, with moderate Cohen’s d effect sizes of 0.63, 0.63, and 0.76, respectively. However, results from a separate analysis indicated a significant reduction in depressive symptoms on the HAM-D at 24 hours (p<0.001), with a large standardized mean difference of −2.36 (
14).
Results from a recent RCT (N=38;
15) revealed that a 1-hour dose of inhaled 50% N
2O can increase functional connectivity between depression-relevant brain regions among patients with treatment-resistant depression and linked these changes to reductions in depressive symptoms. An increase in global brain connectivity after N
2O administration was also recently demonstrated among healthy participants (
16). Another recent RCT (N=34;
17) tested the effect of a single 1-hour dose of 50% N
2O on various neurocognitive domains and reported significant (p=0.002) improvements in executive function at 1 week and secondarily reported significant reductions in HAM-D scores at 2 hours (p=0.005) and 24 hours (p=0.037).
A pooled analysis of three RCTs (N=30) testing N
2O as a depression treatment (
18) revealed no effect of N
2O on suicidal ideation at 2 hours postadministration; however, a significant (p=0.019) reduction in suicidal ideation at 24 hours postadministration was identified. In that analysis, a 2-point reduction on item 3 of the HAM-D, which assesses suicidality, was deemed a “meaningful reduction.” At 24 hours, 7 of 13 (54%) participants in the treatment group had a meaningful reduction in suicidal ideation compared with 2 of 17 (12%) in the placebo group. Despite the small sample sizes of the studies, these data are promising, and the role of N
2O in attenuating suicidal ideation warrants continued investigation.
Beyond major depressive disorder and treatment-resistant depression, a recent double-blind RCT of 25 adults with treatment-resistant bipolar depression (
19) revealed significant (p<0.001) same-day reductions in symptoms of depression with 20 minutes of inhaled 25% N
2O/75% O
2 and intravenous saline administration compared with inhaled medical air and 2 mg of intravenous midazolam.
Safety
Clinical use of N
2O is relatively safe and well tolerated (
6). Common adverse effects from clinical or short-term N
2O use include headache, dizziness, nausea, and vomiting. A pooled analysis of four clinical trials (
12) reported no significant difference in the incidence of dizziness and headache between the treatment and placebo groups; however, a significantly (p=0.009) higher event rate of nausea and vomiting in the treatment group was found.
Additional problems due to chronic N
2O exposure are closely associated with recreational use of repeated inhaled doses of 100% N
2O and are not often seen in clinical populations (
6). Research protocols typically involve few and infrequent administrations of N
2O either once or repeatedly over a few weeks. Given this observation, safety data from chronic exposure to N
2O are also limited to its use in recreational contexts. We note that providers of N
2O treatments are also at risk for chronic exposure to N
2O and the sequelae of such exposure.
N
2O irreversibly lowers vitamin B12 levels, and chronic use may contribute to the development of various neuropathic conditions, including subacute combined degeneration, and may lead to a precarious accumulation of homocysteine, which increases the risk for thromboembolic, cardiovascular, and cerebrovascular events (
6,
20). Additionally, recreational use of N
2O may produce transient brain hypoxia and may increase the risk for anoxic brain injuries.
Conclusions
The clinical investigation of N
2O as a novel therapeutic for major depressive disorder and treatment-resistant depression is supported by replicated demonstrations of its ability to rapidly and robustly attenuate depressive symptoms (
8–
11,
15,
17). However, available evidence is limited in strength given small participant populations. Concerns about an increase in N
2O use–associated morbidity and mortality rates are valid; however, serious risks are most prominently seen in populations of recreational users rather than clinical participants (
6,
20). Recreational misuse of N
2O is worrisome, although concerns about such use should not preclude rigorous scientific investigation of this promising intervention. Taken together, the available evidence supports the clinical use of N
2O as a rapid-acting treatment for depression, which holds promise for forthcoming investigational applications for various psychiatric conditions (
21). Further examination of the utility of N
2O in major depressive disorder, treatment-resistant depression, and other mental health conditions should continue to be pursued in clinical trial settings.