[June 25, 2018 at 17:58 PM EDT] A pharma CEO says a new depression drug could have lasting effects after  one short course, like antibiotics — here's what experts think (SAGE)
 
 - Investors' excitement about a promising new drug for  depression reached a fever pitch last week when the CEO of the company  behind it likened the drug to an antibiotic.
 - Sage  Therapeutics' CEO Jeff Jonas said the drug, called SAGE-217, could be  administered like a two-week course of antibiotics, which are given only  once.
 - A once-only course of treatment is  essentially unheard of for depression, and experts within and outside of  the company say they doubt that's how SAGE-217 would actually work.  Instead, they say it would likely need to be given monthly.
 - Sage has yet to complete any long-term studies of the drug.
  Investors'  excitement about a promising new drug for depression reached a fever  pitch last week when the CEO of the company behind it likened the drug  to an antibiotic.
  This drug has the "potential for patients with  major depressive disorder to feel well within days, with just a two week  course of treatment — similar to how antibiotics are used today —  instead of enduring long-term chronic treatment," Sage Therapeutics' CEO  Jeff Jonas  said on Tuesday of his company's drug, SAGE-217.
  The comments came shortly after the company  said it had received the green light from the Food and Drug Administration to accelerate the approval process for its drug.
  A  once-only course of treatment is essentially unheard of for depression  or for any other chronic disease. And experts within and outside of the  company say they doubt that's how SAGE-217 would actually work. Instead  of working as a once-only treatment, they said that data on the drug  suggest that its effects would likely last as long as one month.  Patients would still need to take the drug regularly for long-lasting  results.
  More importantly, although the drug has shown a promising  potential ability to treat depression in preliminary studies, those  findings have yet to be borne out by the kinds of longer and larger  trials that are needed before it gets anywhere near federal approval.
  An area in desperate need of new treatmentsDepression is the  leading cause of disability worldwide, and  it can kill. While not the sole cause of suicide, depression is often a contributing factor. And while suicide rates have  climbed for nearly 20 years, not a single new drug for depression has emerged.
  Most  treatments for depression and suicidal thinking are limited to a narrow  class of drugs known as selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or  SSRIs, which includes popular drugs like Prozac and Lexapro. While they  can help some people, failure rates hover around 50%.
  So researchers  are on the hunt for better options  — options that could soon include Sage's new compound, which  preliminary studies have suggested works well to treat depressive  symptoms within a short time period.
  Sage's drug would not be a one-and-done treatmentBut  Sage's drug wouldn't be a one-and-done kind of depression treatment,  according to researchers within and outside the company. In sharp  contrast to what Sage CEO Jeff Jonas suggested last week, the drug would  most likely need to be administered regularly, possibly as frequently  as every month,  Gerard Sanacora, the director of the Yale Depression Research Program and a clinical advisor to Sage, told Business Insider.
  "There  will need to be further studies" to help the team fully understand how  well SAGE-217 works and how long its depression-relieving effects last,  Sanacora said.
  In a statement emailed to Business Insider, a representative from Sage said:
  "An  important aspect of what we are doing is minimizing chronic exposure to  pharmaceutical treatments for diseases like depression, a desired  outcome for patients. Given the ongoing concern about chronic dosing of  antidepressants, the fact that episodic dosing has not been achieved  previously is precisely the reason to keep trying."
  "As noted in  our recent announcement, Sage will conduct an additional open-label  study of SAGE-217 that follows approximately 300 patients for 6 months  and 100 patients for one year, allowing us to evaluate the potential of  treating recurrent or new major depressive episodes as needed. As part  of this study, patients will be retreated if symptoms of major  depressive disorder return."
   Cristina Cusin,  a psychiatrist at Massachusetts General Hospital and an assistant  professor at Harvard University who specializes in depression, cautioned  that she's seen many promising drug candidates for depression fail once  they get to the last phase of clinical study — phase 3. Sage has yet to  complete those studies. 
  While the Sage compound appears  "incredible" in some ways, Cusin said "the problem is we have seen this  before with other phase 2 studies that don’t get held out in phase 3."
  So  Cusin said she is "cautiously — or preliminarily — excited," but added  that she felt it was "a little excessive to say a chronic disease would  disappear after two weeks, that’s something you can’t say about diabetes  or any other chronic disease."
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