Gerard Sanacora
Professor of Psychiatry
Data updated
Research Footprint
Gerard Sanacora appears in 23 tracked papers (2014–2026), most studied alongside Ketamine, Esketamine and Placebo, across Depressive Disorders, Major Depressive Disorder (MDD) and Treatment-Resistant Depression (TRD).
Most-cited paper: Synthesizing the Evidence for Ketamine and Esketamine in Treatment-Resistant Depression: An International Expert Opinion on the Available Evidence and Implementation (676 citations).
Frequent co-authors: Scott Wilkinson, John Krystal and Sanjay Mathew.
Background & Research
Gerard Sanacora, MD, PhD, is a clinician‑scientist based at Yale School of Medicine who trained in an NIH‑sponsored Medical Scientist Training Program at SUNY Stony Brook, earning both MD and PhD degrees. His work bridges translational neurobiology and rigorous clinical trials, with a sustained focus on mood disorders and the development of rapid‑acting antidepressant treatments.
Sanacora has led and co‑authored multiple influential clinical studies of intravenous ketamine for treatment‑resistant depression, including randomized, placebo‑controlled dose‑frequency trials, analyses of acute psychoactive and dissociative effects, trials examining predictors (such as anxious versus non‑anxious subtypes), and efforts to combine psychotherapeutic strategies (for example, cognitive behavioural therapy) to extend ketamine's antidepressant benefits. He has also contributed to pilot studies of enantiomer‑specific compounds (arketamine) and comparative effectiveness research (e.g. ketamine versus ECT). Beyond ketamine, Sanacora has participated in cross‑cutting consensus statements and methodological guidance for clinical research in psychedelic medicine and has co‑authored work related to single‑dose psilocybin trials, reflecting his broader engagement with the evolving field of psychedelic therapeutics. His research integrates clinical trials, neurobiological mechanisms—particularly glutamatergic signalling—and biomarker and neuroimaging approaches to understand and optimise rapid‑onset interventions for depression.
Key Impact
A leading clinician–scientist in rapid‑acting antidepressant research, best known for pioneering clinical trials of ketamine for treatment‑resistant depression and for helping shape methodological standards in contemporary psychedelic clinical research.
Collaboration Network
45 collaborators· click a node to visit their profile
Full network →Compounds
Topics
Top Collaborators
Affiliations
Institutions, companies, and organisations Gerard Sanacora is associated with.
Yale School of Medicine Center for Brain Mind Health
academicA research center within Yale School of Medicine focused on understanding the neuroscience of consciousness, mental health disorders, and the mechanisms of psychoactive substances. The Center for Brain and Mind Health bridges psychiatry and neuroscience to advance knowledge of brain-mind relationships and explore novel therapeutic approaches including psychedelic-assisted treatment at Yale.
View stakeholder →Yale University
academicIn 2016, the 'Yale Psychedelic Science Group' was established as a forum where clinicians and scholars from across Yale can learn about and discuss the rapidly re-emerging field of psychedelic science and therapeutics in an academically rigorous manner. Research with psychedelics is also underway at Yale School of Medicine. A recent study at the university found that a single dose of psilocybin can cause structural changes in the brain that counteract symptoms of depression.
View stakeholder →