Scott Wilkinson
Clinical Researcher in Psychiatry
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Papers
Trials
Research Footprint
Scott Wilkinson appears in 11 tracked papers (2017–2026), most studied alongside Ketamine, Esketamine and Placebo, across Depressive Disorders, Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) and Treatment-Resistant Depression (TRD).
Most-cited paper: The Effect of a Single Dose of Intravenous Ketamine on Suicidal Ideation: A Systematic Review and Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis (672 citations).
Frequent co-authors: Gerard Sanacora, Sanjay Mathew and James Murrough.
Background & Research
Scott T. Wilkinson is a clinical researcher focused on the psychopharmacology and therapeutic application of rapid-acting antidepressants, especially ketamine and esketamine, in mood and anxiety disorders. His work, as represented in multiple clinical studies and trials, examines both the acute psychoactive and dissociative effects of intravenous ketamine as well as strategies to sustain its antidepressant benefit, including combining ketamine with cognitive behavioural therapy. He has also contributed to comparative effectiveness research (ketamine versus electroconvulsive therapy) and to long-term safety and efficacy evaluations of esketamine in treatment-resistant depression.
Wilkinson's contributions span symptomatic characterisation, trial methodology and translational implications for clinical practice: quantifying acute clinician-observed dissociative states during ketamine administration, testing adjunctive psychotherapeutic approaches to prolong antidepressant response, and analysing extension-phase data on repeated esketamine dosing and its safety profile. His research informs clinical decision-making around integrating rapid-acting NMDA-receptor modulating treatments into care pathways for people with refractory depressive illness and suicidality risks.
Key Impact
Noted for contributions to clinical research on ketamine and esketamine treatments for treatment-resistant depression, including work on acute psychoactive effects, adjunctive psychotherapy, and long-term safety.
Collaboration Network
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Affiliations
Institutions, companies, and organisations Scott Wilkinson is associated with.