Skip to content

Bruce Poulter

6 papers in the library · 1,316 citations · publishing 2018-2024

Papers

MDMA-assisted therapy for severe PTSD: a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 3 study.

Nature medicine June 1, 2021 Jennifer M Mitchell, Michael Bogenschutz, Alia Lilienstein et al. 965 citations

A phase 3 clinical trial tested MDMA-assisted therapy against placebo for severe PTSD. Participants received manualized therapy with either MDMA or placebo alongside preparatory and integrative sessions. At two months after the last session, the MDMA group showed a significantly greater reduction in PTSD symptoms (average 24.4-point drop on the CAPS-5 scale) compared to the placebo group (13.9-point drop), with a large effect size. Functional impairment also improved more with MDMA. No serious safety issues such as abuse potential, suicidality, or heart rhythm problems were observed. The findings suggest MDMA-assisted therapy is highly effective and safe for severe PTSD, including in people with common co-occurring conditions.

3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine-assisted psychotherapy for treatment of chronic posttraumatic stress disorder: A randomized phase 2 controlled trial.

Journal of psychopharmacology (Oxford, England) December 1, 2018 Marcela Ot'Alora G, Jim Grigsby, Bruce Poulter et al. 232 citations

MDMA-assisted psychotherapy reduces posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms more than a low dose, with effects lasting at least 12 months. In a double-blind trial, 28 people with chronic PTSD received either 100 mg, 125 mg, or 40 mg of MDMA during psychotherapy sessions. The active dose groups showed larger reductions in Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale scores one month after two sessions, with mean changes of -26.3 for 125 mg, -24.4 for 100 mg, and -11.5 for 40 mg. At 12-month follow-up, 76% no longer met PTSD criteria. No serious adverse events occurred, and the treatment was well-tolerated.

MDMA-Assisted Therapy for Severe PTSD: A Randomized, Double-Blind, Placebo-Controlled Phase 3 Study.

Focus (American Psychiatric Publishing) July 1, 2023 Jennifer M Mitchell, Michael Bogenschutz, Alia Lilienstein et al. 97 citations

A phase 3 clinical trial tested MDMA-assisted therapy for severe PTSD. In 90 participants randomized to receive either MDMA or placebo alongside therapy, those receiving MDMA showed a significantly larger reduction in PTSD symptoms, with an average decrease of 24.4 points on the CAPS-5 scale compared to 13.9 points in the placebo group. Functional impairment also improved more with MDMA. No serious safety issues like abuse potential or suicidality were observed. The treatment was effective even for patients with common co-occurring conditions such as depression or substance use history. The authors conclude MDMA-assisted therapy is a safe and highly effective treatment for severe PTSD.

Scaling Up: Multisite Open-Label Clinical Trials of MDMA-Assisted Therapy for Severe Posttraumatic Stress Disorder

Journal of Humanistic Psychology June 23, 2021 Julie B. Wang, Jessica Lin, Leah Bedrosian et al. 22 citations

MDMA-assisted therapy (MDMA-AT) can be scaled across multiple clinic sites while maintaining high treatment fidelity. In an open-label study across 14 North American sites, cotherapist dyads were trained in a manualized protocol and administered three experimental sessions to participants with severe PTSD. Adherence to the therapy protocol was high across both dyads and sites. PTSD symptom severity, measured by the CAPS-5, decreased substantially after three sessions at 18 weeks. MDMA was well tolerated. These results indicate that the benefits of MDMA-AT for PTSD can be achieved in a multi-site, real-world clinical setting.

The conceptual framework for the therapeutic approach used in phase 3 trials of MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD.

Frontiers in psychology January 1, 2024 Kelley C O'Donnell, Lauren Okano, Michael Alpert et al.

A conceptual framework for MDMA-Assisted Therapy for PTSD centers on the participant's inner healing intelligence as the primary agent of change, with the therapeutic relationship as the core facilitative condition. This inner-directed, holistic, self-directed, relational, and trauma-informed approach includes a non-pathologizing stance toward embodied experiences, such as intense emotional expression, multiplicity, suicidal ideation, and transpersonal experiences. Therapists bring psychodynamic, somatic, and transpersonal awareness, empathic attunement, relational skillfulness, and cultural humility. MDMA with this psychotherapy outperformed placebo with psychotherapy in Phase 2 and 3 trials, though significant symptom reduction also occurred in the placebo group, supporting the psychotherapy model itself.

The Conceptual Framework for the Therapeutic Approach used in Phase 3 Trials of MDMA-AT for PTSD

Kelley O'Donnell, Michael Alpert, Lauren Okano et al. preprint

MDMA-Assisted Therapy for PTSD uses a short-term, intensive psychotherapy model that includes three sessions facilitated by MDMA along with non-drug therapy sessions. The MDMA helps recall and process traumatic memories and enhances learning in social contexts, integrating top-down and bottom-up trauma care. This paper describes the psychotherapeutic concepts and theories behind this approach, centering on the participant's inner healing intelligence as the main agent of change, with the therapeutic relationship as a core facilitative condition. Phase 2 and 3 trials showed MDMA with therapy outperformed placebo with therapy in reducing PTSD symptoms, though significant symptom reduction also occurred in participants who received only therapy.