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Stefan Aguiar

University Health Network, University of Toronto (S.A., M.M., O.L., Z.D., R.S.M., G.R., C.Z., E.M., B.H., C.S.Q., A.A.K., Z.P., J.D.R., M.L.), Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

1 paper in the library · publishing 2026

Papers

Intranasal Ketamine for Existential Distress in Advanced Cancer.

Journal of pain and symptom management August 1, 2026 Stefan Aguiar, Mary Makarious, Orly Lipsitz et al.

In adults with advanced cancer receiving palliative care, intranasal ketamine was associated with clinically meaningful improvements in existential distress, anxiety, symptom burden, and quality of life. Fifteen participants who completed three doses of ketamine showed improvements exceeding established minimal clinically important differences on measures of anxiety, death and dying distress, overall symptoms, and quality of life. Improvements in existential well-being were larger than those in physical symptoms. Changes in depression did not significantly correlate with changes in existential distress outcomes, suggesting ketamine may have independent effects on multiple dimensions of distress in this population.