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Exploring MDMA assisted therapy in eating disorders: mechanisms, clinical evidence, and future directions.

Michael Harkhoe, Tim Offringa, Eric Vermetten

Journal of eating disorders December 29, 2025 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1186/s40337-025-01409-5 via PubMed

Summary

MDMA-assisted therapy may improve treatment outcomes for patients with eating disorders, particularly anorexia nervosa, by enhancing emotional processing and therapeutic alliance. While no clinical trials have yet tested MDMA in eating disorder populations, existing PTSD studies suggest that MDMA can reduce fear responses and promote cognitive flexibility, which are crucial for effective therapy. The integration of MDMA into treatment will need careful validation and ethical oversight.

Study at a glance

Population patients with eating disorders, particularly anorexia nervosa, and comorbid PTSD
Key finding MDMA may enhance emotional processing and therapeutic alliance in patients with eating disorders, which could improve treatment outcomes.

Abstract

Patients with eating disorders (EDs), particularly anorexia nervosa (AN), experience a complex psychiatric condition often characterized by extreme food restriction, intense fear of weight gain, elevated levels of emotional dysregulation, body image disturbance, and comorbid trauma. Several of these factors can undermine the therapeutic alliance and reduce engagement with treatment, contributing to poorer outcomes. MDMA, a non-classical psychedelic, is being explored as a novel PTSD treatment adjuvans due to its ability to rapidly reduce trauma symptoms and enhance therapeutic alliance. Recent clinical trials and regulatory considerations, as highlighted in emerging research, are shaping its potential therapeutic role, and MDMA may offer a unique mechanism to disrupt maladaptive neural circuits, enhance cognitive flexibility, and facilitate emotional processing in EDs. To comprehensively evaluate the potential of MDMA-assisted therapy for EDs with a particular focus on the distinct neurobiological and psychological profiles of AN and comorbid PTSD. This paper synthesizes current research literature on MDMA, PTSD, and EDs, with an emphasis on clinical trial outcomes, neurobiological mechanisms, and therapeutic frameworks. Both pharmacological and psychotherapeutic components of MDMA-AT are reviewed. No clinical trials of MDMA-AT have been conducted in ED populations to date. Findings from clinical trials in patients with PTSD suggest that MDMA's pro-social and fear-reducing and neuroplastic properties may enhance emotional processing, therapeutic alliance, and cognitive flexibility - key factors that often hinder eating disorder treatment. The ability of MDMA to increase emotional openness, reduce fear responses, and promote cognitive flexibility could support deeper engagement with the therapeutic process and improve treatment outcomes in EDs with comorbid trauma. The current evidence base suggests that MDMA-AT may hold promise as an adjunctive treatment for EDs echoing its demonstrated therapeutic potential in PTSD. By facilitating deeper emotional processing, enhancing patient-therapist attunement, and fostering openness to change, MDMA may help overcome avoidance, cognitive rigidity, and therapeutic impasses that often hinder progress in EDs. Its integration into clinical practice will require rigorous validation through well powered trials, alongside careful ethical and regulatory oversight, and integration into multidisciplinary treatment frameworks. Tailored dosing, patient selection, and therapist training will be essential for safe and effective implementation. Further research is warranted to fully explore this potential application.

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