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Are ecstasy induced serotonergic alterations overestimated for the majority of users?

Balázs Szigeti, Adam Winstock, David Erritzøe, Larissa J. Maier

Journal of Psychopharmacology May 7, 2018 DOI: 10.1177/0269881118767646 via OpenAlex

Summary

Neuroimaging studies of people who regularly use ecstasy have focused on unusually heavy users, not typical users. A systematic review of 10 imaging studies that measured serotonin transporter levels in recreational ecstasy users found that the average number of pills taken per session and sessions per month corresponded to the top 5-10% of users in the Global Drug Survey, a large international self-report database. Imaging participants consumed, on average, 720% more pills per year than the Global Drug Survey participants. This suggests that conclusions from these brain imaging studies likely overestimate the extent of serotonergic alterations experienced by the majority of people who use ecstasy.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Systematic review Peer reviewed
Topics MDMA Serotonin
Keywords Psychology Neuroscience Psychiatry
Citations 17
Key finding Ecstasy users in neuroimaging studies are unusually heavy users, consuming 720% more pills per year than typical users, so conclusions from these studies likely overestimate serotonergic alterations for most users.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Neuroimaging studies imply that the regular use of ±3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA), the major constituent of ecstasy pills, alters the brain's serotonergic system in a dose-dependent manner. However, the relevance of these findings remains unclear due to limited knowledge about the ecstasy/MDMA use pattern of real-life users. AIMS: We examined the representativeness of ecstasy users enrolled in neuroimaging studies by comparing their ecstasy use habits with the use patterns of a large, international sample. METHODS: A systematic literature search revealed 10 imaging studies that compare serotonin transporter levels in recreational ecstasy users to matched controls. To characterize the ecstasy use patterns we relied on the Global Drug Survey, the world's largest self-report database on drug use. The basis of the dose comparison were the Usual Amount (pills/session), Use Frequency (sessions/month) and Dose Intensity (pills/year) variables. RESULTS: Both the average Usual Amount (pills/session) and Use Frequency (sessions/month) of neuroimaging study participants corresponded to the top 5-10% of the Global Drug Survey sample and imaging participants, on average, consumed 720% more pills over a year than the Global Drug Survey participants. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings suggest that the serotonin brain imaging literature has focused on unusually heavy ecstasy use and therefore the conclusions from these studies are likely to overestimate the extent of serotonergic alterations experienced by the majority of people who use ecstays.

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