Safety and Efficacy of Monoamine Oxidase Inhibitors in Patients Who Use Psychoactive Substances: Potential Drug Interactions and Substance Use Disorder Treatment Data.
CNS drugs – January 17, 2026
Source: PubMed
Summary
Combining MAOIs with certain psychoactive substances can be fatal. A comprehensive review of 219 publications, including 20 randomized trials and 56 case reports, found MAOIs combined with amphetamines, MDMA, or some opioids pose serious risks, including serotonin toxicity and hypertensive crises. Fatalities were reported with eight different substances. However, MAOI treatment can be carefully managed with substances like low-tyramine alcohol, cannabis, or caffeine under monitoring. Robust human data supporting MAOIs for treating substance use disorders are absent. Further safety investigation in these complex patients is crucial.
Abstract
Monoamine oxidase inhibitors (MAOIs) remain an important option for patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD) and other psychiatric conditions, despite potentially serious drug-drug interactions and associated dietary tyramine restrictions. However, they are rarely prescribed in patients with comorbid substance use disorders (SUDs) due to concerns about potential drug interactions and limited research in these populations. This narrative review investigates the use of MAOIs in patients who use psychoactive substances, exploring potential interactions while summarizing the relatively scant literature on using MAOIs as treatments for SUDs. It synthesizes data from 219 peer-reviewed publications investigating MAOI/psychoactive substance interactions or the use of MAOIs to treat SUDs or psychiatric conditions in patients with comorbid SUDs, including 20 randomized controlled trials, 18 non-randomized interventional trials, 32 observational studies/case series, 56 case reports, 85 preclinical studies, and 8 reviews, with publication years spanning from 1955 to 2025. Data from 28 non-peer-reviewed user-submitted reports from drug use/harm reduction forums are also included. Suspected cases of serotonin toxicity have been reported for MAOIs in combination with amphetamine, dextromethorphan, 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), meperidine (pethidine), methadone, and tramadol. Hypertensive urgency/emergency has been reported for MAOIs in combination with alcohol (varieties containing significant amounts of tyramine), amphetamine, cocaine, dextroamphetamine, khat, methamphetamine, and psilocybin mushrooms. Other notable adverse events associated with MAOIs in combination with psychoactive substances include agitation (4-bromo-2,5-dimethoxyphenethylamine [2C-B] 5-methoxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine [5-Meo-DMT]), N,N-dimethyltryptamine [DMT]), delirium/confusion (DMT, propoxyphene, and tramadol), edema (chlordiazepoxide), intracranial hemorrhage (amphetamine, khat, and methamphetamine), mania/psychosis (DMT), rhabdomyolysis (5-MeO-DMT, DMT, and propoxyphene), and sedation/stupor/loss of consciousness (amobarbital, amphetamine, cocaine, dextroamphetamine, and propoxyphene). Fatalities have been reported for MAOIs in combination with 5-MeO-DMT, amphetamine, dextroamphetamine, dextromethorphan (in overdose), MDMA, methamphetamine, meperidine, and tramadol (in overdose). Based on our findings, some substances, such as alcoholic beverages containing significant tyramine quantities (uncommon today), amphetamines, opioids with significant serotonergic reuptake inhibition, and some hallucinogens such as the empathogen/entactogen MDMA, can pose potentially fatal risks in combination with MAOIs. However, MAOI treatment of patients who use alcoholic beverages low in tyramine, caffeine, cannabis, nicotine, sedatives, some (primarily classic) hallucinogens, and some other substances can likely be appropriately managed with careful monitoring, although psychoactive substance dose and route of administration are important safety considerations. While there was initially hope MAOIs might effectively treat some SUDs, there are no robust human data to support their efficacy in this context. Given growing levels of substance use and an increasing number of novel illicit compounds being produced, more research on MAOI safety in patients with psychiatric conditions and comorbid psychoactive substance use/misuse is essential to determining their appropriateness in this complex patient population.