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Alan C. Courtes

1 paper in the library · 1 citation · publishing 2026

Papers

Advancing cancer neuroscience through stress modulation: Interdisciplinary potential of psilocybin and ketamine

General Hospital Psychiatry February 25, 2026 Alan C. Courtes, Blake Myers, Noah Daly et al. 1 citation

Psychological stress worsens cancer outcomes by activating adrenergic signaling between nerves and tumors, a process called tumor-neuron crosstalk. Preclinical models show stress triggers sympathetic pathways that promote cancer progression and treatment resistance. Conventional antidepressants are often less effective for cancer patients, but psilocybin has achieved 60-80% long-term remission of cancer-related depression and anxiety in limited samples, while ketamine provides rapid but short-lived symptom control. These agents may normalize HPA axis function and upregulate neurotrophic factors, reducing sustained adrenergic tone and interrupting stress-driven tumor-neuron signaling. Integrating these drugs into oncology could improve survival, and hospital-based psychiatrists are positioned to lead interdisciplinary research with biomarker-rich trials.