Review of potential psychedelic treatments for PTSD.
Study Goal
The researchers aimed to review the proposed mechanism of action, clinical evidence, safety, and side effects of MDMA-assisted psychotherapy for treating PTSD.
Results Summary
MDMA-assisted therapy showed significant improvement in PTSD symptoms with a good safety and side effect profile, though studies were relatively small and participants were well-screened. Classical psychedelics lacked direct clinical evidence for PTSD but showed potential for future trials.
Population
Individuals with PTSD, well-screened for potential co-morbidities.
Effective Dosage
Not specified
Duration
Not specified
Interactions
None mentioned
| Intervention | Direction | Endpoint | Population | Dosage | Impact | Claim # |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
MDMA-assisted psychotherapy | increase | empathy | - | - | is purported to work by way of | #1 |
MDMA-assisted psychotherapy | decrease | amygdala activation during the therapeutic encounter and trauma processing | - | - | is purported to work by way of | #2 |
MDMA-assisted therapy | decrease | PTSD symptoms | human-subject studies | - | resulted in significant improvement in | #3 |
MDMA-assisted therapy | no change | safety and side effect profile | human-subject studies | good | resulted in | #4 |
Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a debilitating mental illness with limited treatment options and a high treatment dropout rate. Psychedelics, often in combination with psychotherapy, are now under investigation as a potential treatment option for a variety of psychiatric conditions including PTSD. This paper reviews the proposed mechanism of action for 3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) and classical psychedelics such as psilocybin in treating PTSD, along with available clinical evidence, safety and side effects. MDMA-assisted psychotherapy is in FDA phase III clinical trials for PTSD and is purported to work by way of increased empathy and decreased amygdala activation during the therapeutic encounter and trauma processing. Classical psychedelics may create change by a subjective transformative experience along with an observable process of brain network alterations, though these substances have not been clinically studied in the context PTSD. In recent human-subject studies MDMA-assisted therapy resulted in significant improvement in PTSD symptoms with a good safety and side effect profile. There is not yet direct clinical evidence for classical psychedelics in treating PTSD, but the evidence supports such a trial. The studies to date have been relatively small, and participants are wellscreened for potential co-morbidities which could increase the risks of psychedelic treatment. Nonetheless, the data is promising for psychedelic-assisted treatment to become a much-needed treatment option for PTSD.