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Anja Sofie Petersen

Danish Headache Center, Department of Neurology, Copenhagen University Hospital Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark.

3 papers in the library · 34 citations · publishing 2022-2026

Papers

CCH attack frequency reduction after psilocybin correlates with hypothalamic functional connectivity

Headache The Journal of Head and Face Pain January 1, 2024 Anja Sofie Petersen, Inger Marie Sørensen, Harald Schiønning et al. 29 citations

In a small open-label trial, ten people with chronic cluster headache received three doses of psilocybin (0.14 mg/kg) over three weeks. Attack frequency dropped by an average of 31% from the four-week baseline to the four-week follow-up, and one patient had 21 weeks of complete remission. Changes in hypothalamic–diencephalic functional connectivity correlated negatively with the reduction in attack frequency, suggesting this neural pathway may be involved in the treatment response. The treatment was well tolerated. The results indicate psilocybin may have prophylactic potential for chronic cluster headache, though larger controlled studies are needed.

Psilocybin-induced reduction in chronic cluster headache attack frequency correlates with changes in hypothalamic functional connectivity

medRxiv July 10, 2022 M. Madsen, Anja Sofie Petersen, Dea Siggaard Stenbæk et al. 5 citations preprint

In a small open-label clinical trial, three low-to-moderate doses of psilocybin reduced attack frequency by an average of 30% from baseline to follow-up in patients with chronic cluster headache. One patient experienced 21 weeks of complete remission. The treatment was well-tolerated with no serious adverse reactions. Changes in hypothalamic-diencephalic functional connectivity correlated negatively with the relative reduction in attack frequency, suggesting this neural pathway is involved in treatment response. Further studies are needed to confirm safety and prophylactic efficacy.

Patient perspectives on research gaps in cluster headache.

Headache February 1, 2026 Faraidoon Haghdoost, Dilara Bahceci, Candice Delcourt et al.

Many people with cluster headache lack effective treatments. An online survey of 202 Australian adults with cluster headache found that 35% rated their treatments as not at all or somewhat ineffective, and 27% reported only partial effectiveness. The main treatment challenges were ineffectiveness (74%), side effects (54%), cost (53%), and access difficulties (39%). Among participants, 62% expressed interest in joining future clinical trials, with psilocybin being the highest-ranked treatment (66% very interested), followed by combination therapies (84% very interested or interested). The findings highlight inadequate treatment options and a strong patient interest in research, particularly on psilocybin and combination therapies.