Scientific reports
July 17, 2024
Sara de la Salle, Hannes Kettner, Julien Thibault Lévesque et al.
21 citations
A prospective longitudinal survey of eight Canadians with cancer who received legal psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy under Section 56 exemptions found significant improvements in anxiety, depression, pain, fear of COVID-19, quality of life, and spiritual well-being two weeks after the session. Attitudes toward death, medical assistance in dying, and desire for hastened death remained unchanged. Most participants found the sessions highly meaningful, though one reported a substantial decrease in well-being. These preliminary data suggest that real-world psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy can produce psychiatric benefits similar to those in clinical trials, but limited enrollment and negative experiences indicate a need for formal real-world evaluation programs.
The British Journal of Psychiatry
June 18, 2025
Kyle T Greenway, Nicolas Garel, Lê-Anh L Dinh-Williams et al.
8 citations
In a clinical trial of ketamine combined with psychotherapy for severe treatment-resistant depression, 32 participants received six ketamine infusions with psychological support, either with or without music. Both groups showed large and sustained reductions in depression, anxiety, and suicidality at four weeks, fully maintained at eight-week follow-up. The ketamine experiences were highly emotional and mystical, comparable to those seen with psilocybin. Converging analyses suggested that mystical-like experiences contributed to the immediate and lasting antidepressant effects. Music did not enhance outcomes or psychedelic experiences.
Expert review of clinical pharmacology
March 1, 2025
Danny Diep, Sara de la Salle, Julien Thibault Lévesque et al.
8 citations
Ketamine's subjective effects have been interpreted in three major ways since its 1962 synthesis: as dissociative, dream-like, or psychedelic, depending on the clinical context and dose. Biomedical frameworks often label its effects as dissociative or psychotomimetic, while psychedelic paradigms highlight potential therapeutic benefits. Factors such as language, dose, and environmental setting influence both the drug's effects and treatment outcomes. The authors argue that ketamine is best understood as a chameleon whose effects shift with context, rather than a tiger to be tamed. A nuanced, interdisciplinary approach is needed to maximize its clinical potential.
Journal of psychopharmacology (Oxford, England)
February 26, 2025
Sara de la Salle, Jennifer L Phillips, Pierre Blier et al.
3 citations
A sub-anesthetic dose of ketamine, an NMDAR antagonist, produces rapid antidepressant effects in treatment-resistant major depressive disorder. In 24 patients, ketamine reduced frontal mismatch negativity (MMN) amplitude, theta event-related oscillations, and source-localized frontal generator activity immediately and 2 hours after infusion, compared to midazolam. Larger reductions in MMN measures, particularly left frontal amplitude and theta oscillations, correlated with and predicted greater early and sustained symptom improvement on the Montgomery-Åsberg Depression Rating Scale. Baseline phase-locking factor also predicted sustained response. The findings suggest that acute NMDAR blockade reduces frontal MMN, and that MMN indices may serve as non-invasive biomarkers for predicting antidepressant response to glutamatergic agents.