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Psychedelics for the Treatment of Substance Use Disorders: A Narrative Review of the Literature.

Olivia Marcus, Brian Rush

Substance use & addiction journal January 1, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1177/29767342251351123 via PubMed

Summary

Psychedelics show promise in treating substance use disorders (SUDs) and enhancing overall health, with evidence indicating symptom reduction linked to various processes. A narrative review of studies from 1990 to 2025 highlights the need for more rigorous research to address methodological concerns and improve the generalizability of findings. It emphasizes the importance of diverse research methods and calls for increased investment in observational studies for better public health data on psychedelic treatments.

Study at a glance

Design narrative review
Population research on substance use and SUDs involving classic and non-classic psychedelics
Key finding Symptom reduction in substance use disorders is associated with various pharmacological, spiritual, and interpersonal processes as indicated by diverse studies.

Abstract

There is an increasing interest in the use of psychedelics for the treatment of substance use disorders (SUDs) and to improve overall health and wellbeing. We aimed to update and complement research syntheses that have focused only on results from clinical trials by synthesizing the research across diverse methods to discuss implications from a broad and multi-faceted literature. We conducted a narrative review of research focused on substance use and SUDs and both classic and non-classic/atypical psychedelics published between 1990 and 2025, synthesizing the evidence across population/survey studies, observational research, and clinical trials. There is growing investment in clinical research on psychedelics, yet methodological concerns within and across studies present challenges to the validity and generalizability of results. Research across population/survey studies, observational studies, as well as clinical trials suggest that symptom reduction is associated with a range of pharmacological, spiritual, and interpersonal processes. Findings from population surveys and observational studies align with growing clinical evidence in support of the use of psychedelics in the treatment of SUDs, indicating a need for more research to improve generalizability, understanding of safety concerns, the role of psychotherapies, and ethical implications of giving psychedelics to vulnerable populations. There is a need for more transparency in clinical research design and reporting, as well as for larger studies that track long-term outcomes. Studies with diverse methodological approaches are important to fill in knowledge gaps concerning treatment safety, tolerability, real-world effectiveness, accessibility, and respect for religious, traditional, and Indigenous communities. We specifically encourage more investment in observational, naturalistic, population-level, and survey research that can provide broad public health data on psychedelic-related SUD treatments and/or highly contextualized and historicized data on treatment methods, delivery, and experiences.

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