Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics
September 21, 2020
Hartej Gill, Barjot Gill, David Chen‐li et al.
62 citations
Psychedelics like psilocybin and MDMA show promise as a new type of therapy for mental health disorders. Evidence suggests they may work with just one dose, produce rapid effects, and be effective for treatment-resistant conditions, possibly serving as a standalone treatment. More clinical trials are needed to test their safety, tolerability, and effectiveness in real-world patient populations.
CNS drugs
October 1, 2022
Niloufar Pouyan, Zahra Halvaei Khankahdani, Farnaz Younesi Sisi et al.
16 citations
A systematic review of psilocybin research organized by the Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) framework found that psilocybin has beneficial effects across multiple domains, particularly on positive valence systems, negative valence systems, and social processes. Short-term (23 assessments) and long-term (15 assessments) benefits were reported for positive valence systems. For the negative valence system, 12 outcome measures indicated increased fear, 19 showed no significant effect, and 7 parameters indicated lowered sustained threat over the long term. Thirty-four outcome measures revealed short-term alterations in social systems, including enhanced perception and understanding of others and affiliation. Cognitive systems findings mostly reported dyscognitive effects. Seven studies suggested transdiagnostic effects.
Psychiatry research
January 1, 2022
Joshua D Di Vincenzo, Orly Lipsitz, Nelson B Rodrigues et al.
11 citations
A small proportion of people with treatment-resistant depression experience clinically significant worsening of symptoms during a course of intravenous ketamine, but the rate is very low—between 1.83% and 5.49% across infusion time points—and similar to that seen with conventional antidepressants. In a retrospective analysis of 164 adults (142 with unipolar depression and 22 with bipolar depression) who received four ketamine infusions over two weeks, no individuals with bipolar depression reported worsening. The findings suggest that symptomatic worsening with ketamine is uncommon, though the study's uncontrolled, single-center design limits certainty.