Combined DMT-harmine formulation reduces negative self-referential emotions during social self-evaluation: a randomized placebo-controlled trial in healthy volunteers.
Helena D Aicher, Joëlle Dornbierer, Luzia Caflisch, Dila Suay, Michael J Mueller, Hans-Peter Landolt, Boris B Quednow, Milan Scheidegger, Dario Dornbierer
Psychopharmacology July 14, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1007/s00213-026-07118-4 via PubMed
Summary
A combination of harmine and DMT, the active ingredients in ayahuasca, reduces feelings of embarrassment and shame in healthy men. In a randomized trial with 28 participants, those who received the combination reported significantly less embarrassment when listening to recordings of their own singing compared to those who received a placebo. The treatment also lowered overall shame scores. Harmine alone did not produce these effects. The findings suggest that this compound may help treat psychiatric disorders where negative self-focused emotions play a key role.
Study at a glance
| Design | randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial |
|---|---|
| Sample size | 28 |
| Population | healthy males |
| Key finding | A combination of harmine and DMT, but not harmine alone, significantly reduced embarrassment and shame compared to placebo in healthy males. |
Abstract
Negative self-referential emotions such as embarrassment and shame play a key role in the psychopathology of psychiatric disorders but are often insufficiently addressed by standard treatments. Psychedelics such as ayahuasca - an Amazonian plant decoction containing the psychedelic N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) and harmala alkaloids, have been proposed to positively modulate self-referential processing. The aim of this study was to investigate the effects of an ayahuasca-inspired harmine+DMT formulation and harmine on embarrassment and shame. In this randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial (N = 28 healthy males), the effects of combined 100mg harmine and 100mg DMT (HAR/DMT), harmine alone (HAR), against placebo (PLA) on self-referential processing was investigated using a karaoke paradigm, where participants listened to recordings of their own singing (Self = S) and control vocal tracks (other bad = OB; other good = OG) and rated emotional responses. Acute emotions were assessed with visual analogue scales (items: pleasant, unpleasant, embarrassing, funny, and objective quality) and the Experiential Shame Scale (ESS). HAR/DMT compared to placebo significantly reduced embarrassment in the Self condition (EMM=-16.83, p=.001), but not in the two other conditions (OB: EMM=-4.38, p=.628; OG: EMM= 2.14, p=.894). HAR/DMT-HAR or HAR-PLA contrasts for embarrassment were not significant for any condition. HAR/DMT compared to placebo reduced ESS global score (F(df)= 4.26(2, 54); p=.019) and ESS emotional subscale (F(df)=5.11(2, 54); p=.009), while harmine alone showed no significant effects. These findings suggest that HAR/DMT acutely modulates negative self-referential emotions and may, thus, offer a promising therapeutic approach, which should be further investigated in clinical populations.