Treatments

Three paths, one goal

IV ketamine, Spravato® (esketamine), and at-home oral ketamine all act on the same NMDA-glutamate pathway — but they differ in how they're given, how fast they work, what they cost, and who they fit. Here's an honest comparison so you can walk into your consultation already informed.

Off-label · Cash

IV Ketamine

Precisely-dosed in-clinic infusion with continuous monitoring. Fast onset, fine-grained titration.

FDA-approved

Spravato®

Esketamine nasal spray, FDA-approved for treatment-resistant depression. Given in clinic under REMS, often insurance-covered.

Off-label · Cash

At-Home Ketamine

Sublingual maintenance at home after in-person evaluation and supervised induction. Lower cost, lower commute.

Side-by-side

How they actually compare

Mechanism, protocol, evidence, and fit. Numbers reflect published trial ranges; your physician will discuss what applies to you.

IV Ketamine Spravato® At-Home Oral
MechanismNMDA antagonist → glutamate surge → rapid synaptic plasticity (BDNF / mTOR).S-enantiomer of ketamine, same NMDA pathway, delivered intranasally.Same NMDA pathway; lower, slower-rising plasma levels via sublingual absorption.
RouteIntravenous infusionIntranasal spray (self-administered, observed)Sublingual lozenge / rapid-dissolve tablet
SettingIn clinic, private suiteIn clinic, REMS-certifiedAt home, after in-person eval + supervised induction
FDA statusOff-label for depressionFDA-approved (TRD & MDD w/ acute SI)Off-label, compounded
Typical induction6 infusions over 2–3 weeks2×/week × 4 weeks → 1×/week × 4 weeks2×/week × 4 weeks (peer-monitored)
MaintenanceBooster every 2–6 weeks based on responseEvery 1–2 weeks indefinitely per responseWeekly or biweekly at home with check-ins
Session length~40 min infusion + 30 min recovery~5 min dose + 2 hr observation (REMS)~60–90 min with monitor at home
Typical onsetHours to 1–2 daysWithin 24 hours, builds over weeksDays to 2 weeks
Reported response rate*~50–70% in TRD trials~50–70% in pivotal TRD trialsSmaller evidence base; meaningful response in monitored programs
InsuranceCash-payCommonly covered (prior auth)Cash-pay
Cost band$$ — per infusion$ — copay (when covered)$ — monthly subscription
Best fit forSevere / urgent symptoms, prior partial response, wants precise titrationTRD with insurance, wants FDA-approved route, comfortable in clinicStable patients seeking maintenance with less commute, after induction
Not ideal ifNeedle aversion, uncontrolled cardiovascular diseaseCannot commit to 2-hour monitored visits, nasal pathologyUnstable home environment, active substance use, untreated severe disease
Mechanism
IV NMDA antagonist → glutamate surge → rapid synaptic plasticity (BDNF / mTOR).
Spravato S-enantiomer of ketamine, same NMDA pathway, delivered intranasally.
Oral Same NMDA pathway; lower, slower-rising plasma levels via sublingual absorption.
Route
IV Intravenous infusion
Spravato Intranasal spray (self-administered, observed)
Oral Sublingual lozenge / rapid-dissolve tablet
Setting
IV In clinic, private suite
Spravato In clinic, REMS-certified
Oral At home, after in-person eval + supervised induction
FDA status
IV Off-label for depression
Spravato FDA-approved (TRD & MDD w/ acute SI)
Oral Off-label, compounded
Typical induction
IV 6 infusions over 2–3 weeks
Spravato 2×/week × 4 weeks → 1×/week × 4 weeks
Oral 2×/week × 4 weeks (peer-monitored)
Maintenance
IV Booster every 2–6 weeks based on response
Spravato Every 1–2 weeks indefinitely per response
Oral Weekly or biweekly at home with check-ins
Session length
IV ~40 min infusion + 30 min recovery
Spravato ~5 min dose + 2 hr observation (REMS)
Oral ~60–90 min with monitor at home
Typical onset
IV Hours to 1–2 days
Spravato Within 24 hours, builds over weeks
Oral Days to 2 weeks
Reported response rate*
IV ~50–70% in TRD trials
Spravato ~50–70% in pivotal TRD trials
Oral Smaller evidence base; meaningful response in monitored programs
Insurance
IV Cash-pay
Spravato Commonly covered (prior auth)
Oral Cash-pay
Cost band
IV $$ — per infusion
Spravato $ — copay (when covered)
Oral $ — monthly subscription
Best fit for
IV Severe / urgent symptoms, prior partial response, wants precise titration
Spravato TRD with insurance, wants FDA-approved route, comfortable in clinic
Oral Stable patients seeking maintenance with less commute, after induction
Not ideal if
IV Needle aversion, uncontrolled cardiovascular disease
Spravato Cannot commit to 2-hour monitored visits, nasal pathology
Oral Unstable home environment, active substance use, untreated severe disease

*Response rates reflect peer-reviewed trials in treatment-resistant depression and vary by population, dose, and concurrent therapy. Educational only — not a guarantee of outcome.

Educational, not medical advice. Eligibility, dose, and program are decided with your Trellis physician at your in-person evaluation. Final program recommendation considers your full medical and psychiatric history.
Ready when you are

Talk it through with a real physician

Book a no-pressure consultation and we'll walk you through which option fits your history and goals.

Physician-led ketamine and Spravato therapy held together by one careful pathway.

Medical disclaimer. Ketamine and Spravato® are prescription medicines. At-home and IV ketamine are administered off-label for mood and pain conditions; Spravato® (esketamine) is FDA-approved for treatment-resistant depression and administered under a REMS program. All treatment requires an in-person physician evaluation and ongoing clinical oversight. This page is educational and does not constitute medical advice. Results vary; treatment may not be appropriate for every patient. If you are in crisis, call or text 988.