-
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This is a tuberculosis ward,
-
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and at the time this picture was taken
in the late 1800s,
-
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one in seven of all people
-
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died from tuberculosis.
-
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We had no idea what was
causing this disease.
-
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The hypothesis was actually
-
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it was your constitution
that made you susceptible.
-
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And it was a highly romanticized disease.
-
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It was also called consumption,
-
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and it was the disorder of poets
-
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and artists and intellectuals,
-
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and some people actually thought
-
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it gave you heightened sensitivity
-
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and conferred creative genius.
-
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By the 1950s,
-
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we instead knew that tuberculosis
was caused by a highly contagious
-
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bacterial infection,
-
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which is slightly less romantic,
-
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but that had the upside of us
-
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being able to maybe develop
-
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drugs to treat it.
-
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So doctors had discovered a new drug,
-
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Iproniazid, that they were optimistic
-
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might cure tuberculosis,
-
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and they gave it to patients,
-
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and patients were elated.
-
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They were more social, more energetic.
-
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One medical report actually says
-
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they were dancing in the halls.
-
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And unfortunately this was not necessarily
because they were getting better.
-
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A lot of them were still dying.
-
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Another medical report describes them
-
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as being "inappropriately happy."
-
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And that is how the first
antidepressant was discovered.
-
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So accidental discovery
is not uncommon in science,
-
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but it requires more than just
a happy accident.
-
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You have to be able to recognize it
for discovery to occur.
-
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As a neuroscientist, I'm going
to talk to you a little bit
-
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about my firsthand experience
-
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with what you want to call
the opposite of dumb luck,
-
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let's call it smart luck.
-
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But first a bit more background.
-
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Thankfully, since the 1950s,
-
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we've developed some other drugs
and we can actually now cure tuberculosis.
-
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And at least in the United States,
though not necessarily in other countries,
-
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we have closed our sanitoriums
-
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and probably most of you
are not too worried about TB.
-
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But a lot of what was true
in the early 1900s
-
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about infectious disease,
-
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we can say now
about psychiatric disorders.
-
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We are in the middle of an epidemic
of mood disorders
-
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like depression and post-traumatic
stress disorder, or PTSD.
-
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One in four of all adults
in the United States
-
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suffers from mental illness,
-
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which means that if you haven't
experienced personally
-
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or someone in your family hasn't,
-
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it's still very likely
that someone you know has,
-
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though they may not talk about it.
-
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Depression has actually now surpassed
-
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HIV/AIDS, malaria, diabetes, and war
-
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as the leading cause
of disability worldwide,
-
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and also, like tuberculosis in the 1950s,
-
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we don't know what causes it.
-
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Once it's developed, it's chronic,
-
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lasts a lifetime,
-
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and there are no known cures.
-
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The second antidepressant we discovered
-
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also by accident in the 1950s
-
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from an antihistamine
that was making people manic,
-
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Imipramine.
-
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And in both the case of the tuberculosis
ward an the antihistamine,
-
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someone had to be able to recognize
-
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that a drug that was designed
to do one thing --
-
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treat tuberculosis
or suppress allergies --
-
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could be used to do something
very different --
-
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treat depression.
-
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And this sort of repurposing
is actually quite challenging.
-
Not Synced
When doctors first saw
this mood-enhancing effect of Iproniazid,
-
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they didn't really
recognize what they saw.
-
Not Synced
They were so used to thinking about it
-
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from the framework
of being a tuberculosis drug
-
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that they actually just listed it
-
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as a side effect, an adverse side effect.
-
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As you can see here,
a lot of these patients in 1954
-
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are experiencing severe euphoria.
-
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And they were worried that this
might somehow interfere
-
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with their recovering from tuberculosis.
-
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So they recommended that Iproniazid
-
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only be used in cases of extreme TB
-
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and in patients that were highly
emotionally stable,
-
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which is of course the exact opposite
of how we use it as an anti-depressant.
-
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They were so used to looking at it
from the perspective of this one disease,
-
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they could not see the larger implications
-
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for another disease.
-
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And to be fair,
it's not entirely their fault.
-
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Functional fixedness is a bias
that affects all of us.
-
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It's a tendency to only be able to think
-
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of an object in terms
of its traditional use or function.
-
Not Synced
And mental set is another thing. Right?
-
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That's sort of this
pre-conceived framework
-
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with which we approach problems.
-
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And that actually make repurposing
pretty hard for all of us,
-
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which is I guess why they gave
a TV show to the guy who was,
-
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like, really great at repurposing.
-
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(Laughter)
-
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So the effects in both the case
-
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of Iproniazid and Imipramine,
-
Not Synced
they were so strong, right,
-
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there was mania or people
dancing in the halls.
-
Not Synced
It's actually not that surprising
they were caught.
-
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But it does make you wonder
-
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what else we've missed.
-
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So Iproniazid and Imipramine,
-
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they're more than just a case study
in repurposing.
-
Not Synced
They have two other things in common
that are really important.
-
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One, they have terrible side effects
-
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that includes liver toxicity,
-
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weight gain of over 50 pounds,
-
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suicidality.
-
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And two, they both
increase levels of serotonin,
-
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which is a chemical signal in the brain,
-
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or a neurotransmitter.
-
Not Synced
And those two things together,
right, one or the two
-
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may not have been that important,
-
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but the two together meant
-
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that we had to develop
-
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safer drugs,
-
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and that serotonin
-
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seemed like a pretty good place to start.
-
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So we developed drugs
-
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to more specifically focus on serotonin,
-
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the selective serotonin
reuptake inhibitors, so the SSRIs,
-
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the most famous of which is Prozac.
-
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And that was 30 years ago,
-
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and since then we have mostly
just worked on optimizing those drugs.
-
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And the SSRIs, they are better
-
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than the drugs that came before them,
-
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but they still have a lot side effects,
-
Not Synced
including weight gain, insomnia,
-
Not Synced
suicidality,
-
Not Synced
and they take a really long time to work,
-
Not Synced
something like four to six weeks
in a lot of patients.
-
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And that's in the patients
where they do work.
-
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There are a lot of patients
where these drugs don't work.
-
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And that means now, in 2016,
-
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we still have no cures
-
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for any mood disorders,
-
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just drugs that suppress symptoms,
-
Not Synced
which is kind of the difference between
taking a painkiller for an infection
-
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versus an antibiotic.
-
Not Synced
Painkiller will make you feel better,
-
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but is not going to do anything
to treat that underlying disease.
-
Not Synced
And it was this flexibility, right,
in our thinking
-
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that let us recognize that
Iproniazid and Imipramine
-
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could be repurposed in this way,
-
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which led us to the serotonin hypothesis,
-
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which we then, ironically, fixated on.
-
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This is brain signaling, serotonin
-
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from an SSRI commercial.
-
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In case you're not clear,
this is a dramatization.
-
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And in science, we try
and remove our bias, right,
-
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by running double-blinded experiments
-
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or being statistically agnostic
as to what our results will be.
-
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But bias creeps in more insidiously
-
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in what we choose to study
-
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and how we choose to study it.
-
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So we've focused on serotonin now
-
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for the past 30 years,
-
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often to the exclusion of other things.
-
Not Synced
We still have no cures,
-
Not Synced
and what if serotonin
-
Not Synced
isn't all there is to depression?
-
Not Synced
What if it's not even the key part of it?
-
Not Synced
That means no matter how much time
-
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or money or effort that we put into it,
-
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it will never lead to a cure.
-
Not Synced
In the past few years,
-
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doctors have discovered
-
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probably what is the first truly new
antidepressant since the SSRIs,
-
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Calypsol,
-
Not Synced
and this drug works very quickly,
-
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within a few hours or a day,
-
Not Synced
and it doesn't work on serotonin.
-
Not Synced
It works on glutamate,
-
Not Synced
which is another neurotransmitter.
-
Not Synced
And it's also repurposed.
-
Not Synced
It was traditionally used
as anesthesia in surgery.
-
Not Synced
But unlike those other drugs,
-
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which were recognized pretty quickly,
-
Not Synced
it took us 20 years
-
Not Synced
to realize that Calypsol
was an antidepressant,
-
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despite the fact that it's actually
a better antidepressant,
-
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probably, than those other drugs.
-
Not Synced
It's actually probably because of
the fact that it's a better antidepressant
-
Not Synced
that it was harder for us to recognize.
-
Not Synced
There was no mania to signal its effects.
-
Not Synced
So in 2013, up at Columbia University,
-
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I was working with my colleague,
-
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Dr. ???,
-
Not Synced
and we were studying Calypsol
as an antidepressant in mice.
-
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And Calypsol has, like,
a really short half-life,
-
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which means it's out of your body
within a few hours.
-
Not Synced
And we were just piloting.
-
Not Synced
So we would give an injection to mice,
-
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and then we'd wait a week,
-
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and then we'd run
another experiment to save money.
-
Not Synced
And one of the experiments
I was running,
-
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we would stress the mice,
-
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and we used that as a model
of depression.
-
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And at first it kind of just looked
like it didn't really work at all.
-
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So we could have stopped there.
-
Not Synced
But I have run this model
of depression for years,
-
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and the data just looked kind of weird.
-
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It didn't really look right to me.
-
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So I went back,
-
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and we reanalyzed it
-
Not Synced
based on whether or not they had gotten
-
Not Synced
that one injection of Calypsol
-
Not Synced
a week beforehand.
-
Not Synced
And it looked kind of like this.
-
Not Synced
So if you look at the far left,
-
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if you put a mouse in a new space,
-
Not Synced
this is the box, it's very exciting,
-
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a mouse will walk around and explore,
-
Not Synced
and you can see that pink line
is actually the measure of them walking.
-
Not Synced
And we also give it another mouse
in a pencil cup
-
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that it can decide to interact with.
-
Not Synced
This is also a dramatization,
in case that's not clear.
-
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And a normal mouse will explore.
-
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It will be social.
-
Not Synced
Check out what's going on.
-
Not Synced
If you stress a mouse
-
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in this depression model,
-
Not Synced
which is the middle box,
-
Not Synced
they aren't social, they don't explore.
-
Not Synced
They mostly just kind of hide
in that back corner behind a cup.
-
Not Synced
Yet the mice that had gotten
that one injection of Calpysol
-
Not Synced
here on your right,
-
Not Synced
they were exploring. They were social.
-
Not Synced
They looked like they had never
been stressed at all,
-
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which is impossible.
-
Not Synced
So we could have just stopped there,
-
Not Synced
but Christine had also used
Calypsol before as anesthesia,
-
Not Synced
and a few years ago she had seen
that it seemed to have
-
Not Synced
some weird effects on cells
and some other behavior
-
Not Synced
that also seemed to last
-
Not Synced
long after the drug, maybe a few weeks.
-
Not Synced
So we were like, okay,
-
Not Synced
maybe this is not completely impossible,
-
Not Synced
but we were really skeptical.
-
Not Synced
So we did what you do in science
when you're not sure,
-
Not Synced
and we ran it again.
-
Not Synced
And I remember being in the animal room
-
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moving mice from box to box
-
Not Synced
to test them,
-
Not Synced
and Christine was actually sitting
on the floor with the computer in her lap
-
Not Synced
so the mice couldn't see her,
-
Not Synced
and she was analyzing
the data in real time.
-
Not Synced
And I remember us yelling,
-
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which you're not supposed to do
in an animal room where you're testing
-
Not Synced
because it had worked.
-
Not Synced
It seemed like these mice
were protected against stress,
-
Not Synced
or they were inappropriately happy,
however you want to call it.
-
Not Synced
And we we really excited.
-
Not Synced
And then we were really skeptical,
-
Not Synced
because it was too good to be true.
-
Not Synced
So we ran it again.
-
Not Synced
And then we ran it again
in a PTSD model,
-
Not Synced
and we ran it again
in a physiological model,
-
Not Synced
where all we did was give stress hormones.
-
Not Synced
And we had our undergrads run it.
-
Not Synced
And then we had our collaborators
halfway across the world in France run it.
-
Not Synced
And every time someone ran it,
they confirmed the same thing.
-
Not Synced
It seemed like this
one injection of Calypsol
-
Not Synced
was somehow protecting
against stress for weeks.
-
Not Synced
And we only published this a year ago,
-
Not Synced
but since then other labs
have independently confirmed this effect.
-
Not Synced
So we don't know what causes depression,
-
Not Synced
but we do know that stress is the
initial trigger in 80 percent of cases,
-
Not Synced
and depression and PTSD
are different diseases,
-
Not Synced
but this is something
they share in common.
-
Not Synced
Right? It is traumatic stress
-
Not Synced
like active combat or natural disasters
-
Not Synced
or community violence or sexual assault
-
Not Synced
that causes post-traumatic
stress disorder,
-
Not Synced
and not everyone that is exposed to stress
-
Not Synced
develops a mood disorder.
-
Not Synced
And this ability to experience stress
and be resilient
-
Not Synced
and bounce back and not develop
depression or PTSD
-
Not Synced
is known as stress resilience,
-
Not Synced
and in varies between people.
-
Not Synced
And we have always thought of it
as just sort of this passive property.
-
Not Synced
Right? It's the absence
of susceptibility factors
-
Not Synced
and risk factors for these disorders.
-
Not Synced
But what if it were active?
-
Not Synced
Maybe we could enhance it,
-
Not Synced
sort of akin to putting on armor.
-
Not Synced
We had accidentally discovered
-
Not Synced
the first resilience-enhancing drug.
-
Not Synced
And like I said, we only gave
a tiny amount of the drug,
-
Not Synced
and it lasted for weeks,
-
Not Synced
and that's not like anything you see
with antidepressants.
-
Not Synced
But it is actually kind of similar
to what you see in immune vaccines.
-
Not Synced
So in immune vaccines, right,
you'll get your shots,
-
Not Synced
and then weeks, months, years later
-
Not Synced
when you're actually exposed to bacteria,
-
Not Synced
it's not the vaccine in your body
that protects you.
-
Not Synced
It's your own immune system
-
Not Synced
that's developed resistance and resilience
to this bacteria, that fights it off,
-
Not Synced
and you actually never get the infection,
-
Not Synced
which is very different from, say,
our treatments. Right?
-
Not Synced
In that case, you get the infection,
you're exposed to the bacteria,
-
Not Synced
you're sick, and then you take,
say, an antibiotic which cures it,
-
Not Synced
and those drugs are actually working
to kill the bacteria.
-
Not Synced
Or similar to as I said before, right,
with this palliatave,
-
Not Synced
you'll take something that will
suppress the symptoms,
-
Not Synced
but it won't treat
the underlying infection,
-
Not Synced
and you'll only feel better
-
Not Synced
during the time in which you're taking it,
-
Not Synced
which is why you have to keep taking it.
-
Not Synced
And in depression, right, and PTSD,
-
Not Synced
here we have your stress exposure,
-
Not Synced
we only have palliative care.
-
Not Synced
Antidepressants only suppress symptoms,
-
Not Synced
and that is why you basically
have to keep taking them
-
Not Synced
for the life of the disease,
-
Not Synced
which is often the length
of your own life.
-
Not Synced
So we're calling our resilience
enhancing drugs "paravaccines,"
-
Not Synced
which means vaccine-like,
-
Not Synced
because it seems like they might
have the potential
-
Not Synced
to protect against stress
-
Not Synced
and prevent mice from developing
-
Not Synced
depression and post-traumatic
stress disorder.
-
Not Synced
Also, not all antidepressants
are also paravaccines.
-
Not Synced
We tried Prozac as well,
-
Not Synced
and that had no effect.
-
Not Synced
So if this were to translate into humans,
-
Not Synced
we might be able to protect people
-
Not Synced
who are predictably at risk
-
Not Synced
against stress-induced disorders
like depression and PTSD.
-
Not Synced
So that's first responders
and firefighters,
-
Not Synced
refugees, prisoners and prison guards,
-
Not Synced
soldiers, you name it.
-
Not Synced
And to give you a sense
-
Not Synced
of the scale of these diseases,
-
Not Synced
in 2010, the global burden of disease
-
Not Synced
was estimated at 2.5 trillion dollars,
-
Not Synced
and since they are chronic,
-
Not Synced
that cost is compounding
and is therefore expected to rise
-
Not Synced
up to six trillion dollars
in just the next 15 years.
-
Not Synced
As I mentioned before,
repurposing can be challenging
-
Not Synced
because of our prior biases.
-
Not Synced
Calypsol has another name,
-
Not Synced
Ketamine,
-
Not Synced
which also goes by another name,
-
Not Synced
Special K,
-
Not Synced
which is a club drug and drug of abuse.
-
Not Synced
It's still used across the world
as an anesthetic.
-
Not Synced
It's used in children.
We use it on the battlefield.
-
Not Synced
It's actually the drug of choice
in a lot of developing nations
-
Not Synced
because it doesn't affect breathing.
-
Not Synced
It is on the World Health Organization
list of most essential medicines.
-
Not Synced
If we had discovered Ketamine
as a paravaccine first,
-
Not Synced
it'd be pretty easy for us to develop it,
-
Not Synced
but as is, we have to compete
with our functional fixedness
-
Not Synced
and mental set that kind of interfere.
-
Not Synced
Fortunately, it's not the only compound
we have discovered
-
Not Synced
that has these prophylactic,
paravaccine qualities,
-
Not Synced
but all of the other
drugs we've discovered,
-
Not Synced
or compounds if you will,
they're totally new,
-
Not Synced
they have to go through
the entire FDA approval process,
-
Not Synced
if they make it,
-
Not Synced
before they can ever be used in humans.
-
Not Synced
And that will be years.
-
Not Synced
So if we want something sooner,
-
Not Synced
Ketamine is already FDA-approved.
-
Not Synced
It's generic, it's available.
-
Not Synced
We could develop it for a fraction
of the price and a fraction of the time.
-
Not Synced
But actually, beyond functional fixedness
-
Not Synced
and mental set,
-
Not Synced
there's a real other challenge
to repurposing drugs,
-
Not Synced
which is policy.
-
Not Synced
There are no incentives in place
-
Not Synced
once a drug is generic and off patent
and no longer exclusive
-
Not Synced
to encourage pharma companies
to develop them,
-
Not Synced
because they don't make money.
-
Not Synced
And that's not true for just Ketamine.
-
Not Synced
That is true for all drugs.
-
Not Synced
Regardless, the idea itself
is completely novel in psychiatry,
-
Not Synced
to use drugs to prevent mental illness
-
Not Synced
as opposed to just treat it.
-
Not Synced
It is possible
-
Not Synced
that 20, 50, 100 years from now,
-
Not Synced
we will look back now
at depression and PTSD
-
Not Synced
the way we look back
at tuberculosis sanitariums
-
Not Synced
as a thing of the past.
-
Not Synced
This could be the beginning
of the end of mental health epidemic.
-
Not Synced
But as a great scientist once said,
-
Not Synced
only a fool is sure of anything.
-
Not Synced
A wise man keeps on guessing.
-
Not Synced
Thank you guys.
-
Not Synced
(Applause)