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Gregory A. Fonzo

The University of Texas at Austin

5 papers in the library · 208 citations · publishing 2023-2025

Papers

Must Psilocybin Always “Assist Psychotherapy”?

American Journal of Psychiatry July 12, 2023 Guy M. Goodwin, Ekaterina Malievskaia, Gregory A. Fonzo et al. 187 citations

Psilocybin, a hallucinogen derived from mushrooms, significantly improved psychological well-being in 70% of participants in a recent drug study. Involving 100 adults undergoing therapy, those receiving psilocybin experienced enhanced emotional processing and reduced anxiety. This effect is attributed to psilocybin's influence on neurotransmitter receptors, which alters behavior and mood. Psychotherapists reported that patients showed increased openness and decreased fear of death after treatment, highlighting the potential of psychedelics like psilocybin for therapeutic use in mental health care.

Psilocybin: From Psychiatric Pariah to Perceived Panacea

American Journal of Psychiatry January 1, 2025 Adrienne Grzenda, Gregory A. Fonzo, Aaron Wolfgang et al. 14 citations

Current evidence does not support recommending psilocybin combined with psychological support (PST) as a psychiatric treatment. More rigorous clinical trials are needed to confirm its effectiveness in larger and more diverse patient groups, determine appropriate dosing, improve blinding methods, and understand how it works and for whom it works best. Comparing it directly with other proven treatments will clarify its potential future role in treating major psychiatric disorders.

Considerations and cautions for the integration of psilocybin into routine clinical care: a consensus statement from the US National Network of Depression Centers' Task Group on Psychedelics and Related Compounds

EClinicalMedicine September 24, 2025 Megan Hosein, Matthew J. Reid, Sarah A. Walser et al. 5 citations

Psilocybin and other psychedelics show promise as a new class of psychiatric treatments, but their rapid development risks outpacing the guidelines and infrastructure needed for safe clinical integration. A consensus statement from the US National Network of Depression Centers (NNDC) Task Group on Psychedelics and Related Compounds, comprising psychiatrists, psychologists, neuroscientists, psychedelic researchers, and healthcare consultants, recognizes psilocybin's therapeutic potential while emphasizing the need for further research. Key gaps include understanding therapeutic dosage, efficacy across diverse populations, and long-term safety. The authors call for diversified funding, collaborative research, standardized provider training, and careful ethical consideration. They advocate for a balanced approach prioritizing rigorous science and equitable access, noting the single-country focus limits international generalizability.

Resetting the Hippocampal Buffer: A Neurocognitive Account of Psychedelic Therapy for Anxiety-Related Psychopathology

May 26, 2024 Hugh McGovern, Nick Wellman, Brendan Hutchinson et al. 2 citations preprint

Psychedelics such as psilocybin show promise for treating anxiety, but how they work is unclear. This review proposes a model where anxiety disorders involve the hippocampus biasing the amygdala and salience network toward anxiety-related information, creating a self-perpetuating cycle. Psychedelics temporarily free cortical networks from this hippocampal constraint, and increased plasticity afterward allows the hippocampus to integrate new information into a less biased contextual frame, reducing anxious thoughts. The model highlights that psychedelics can acutely increase anxiety, and future research should determine optimal treatment approaches informed by cognitive neuroscience.

A biopsychosocial model of MDMA-assisted therapy in application: Dyadic One Session Treatment for specific phobia

Frontiers in Psychiatry September 5, 2025 Nicholas J. Ahari, Gregory A. Fonzo

MDMA may help treat PTSD by affecting brain circuits involved in fear and reward. No studies have tested MDMA on specific phobias. This article proposes a model of MDMA-assisted therapy that combines biological, psychological, and social factors, informed by emotional processing theory, inhibitory learning, and cognitive behavioral interpersonal theory. It applies this model to spider phobia, a common animal phobia, suggesting a novel one-session treatment. The authors hypothesize that MDMA's neurobiological and prosocial effects can enhance emotional processing and learning during exposure, reducing avoidance and phobia symptoms. This framework could guide integration of exposure therapies with MDMA and other psychedelics for fear-based conditions.