The renaissance of research on psychedelics in child and adolescent psychopharmacology
Marc-antoine Crocq, Philippe Auby
Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Mental Health March 13, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1186/s13034-026-01069-6 via Springer Nature
Summary
Investigating psychedelics for pediatric psychopharmacology is gaining attention due to significant unmet needs in child and adolescent psychiatry, particularly for conditions like anorexia nervosa and resistant depression. Current trials focus on adolescents aged 16 and older. While psychedelics may offer long-lasting effects after few sessions, concerns about developmental vulnerabilities and long-term safety data necessitate caution before application in younger populations.
Study at a glance
| Design | review |
|---|---|
| Population | adolescents aged 16 years and older |
| Key finding | Psychedelic research is expanding into pediatric psychiatry, but careful consideration of developmental factors and safety is crucial. |
Abstract
Aims The recent regulatory approval of esketamine in adults heralded the renaissance of research into psychedelic compounds. However, the relevance of this resurgence for children and adolescents remains unclear. This review examines the rationale for investigating psychedelics in pediatric psychopharmacology. Methods We reviewed recent literature, regulatory documents, and clinical trial registries addressing the psychiatric use of classic serotonergic psychedelics (e.g., psilocybin, LSD), the entactogen MDMA, and dissociative compounds such as ketamine and esketamine in adolescent and young populations. Although ketamine is not a classic serotonergic psychedelic, it represents a paradigm for innovative pharmacological approaches. Results Ongoing and planned trials primarily involve adolescents aged 16 years and older. Interest in these compounds is driven by significant unmet needs in child and adolescent psychiatry, where few medications are approved, and unsatisfactory therapeutic response is common. Potential targets include anorexia nervosa, core symptoms of autism spectrum disorders, obsessive-compulsive disorder, resistant depression, and severe PTSD. The fact that psychedelics may have long-lasting effects after only a few sessions raises the question of their effects on neuroplasticity. Conclusions Although psychedelic research has entered a new phase in adult psychiatry, translation to pediatric populations requires caution due to developmental vulnerabilities and limited long-term safety data. Rigorous clinical trials, ethical safeguards, and regulatory oversight are essential before broader application in children and adolescents can be considered.