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Michael P Bogenschutz

Department of Neurology, University of California San Francisco, San Francisco, California, USA.

6 papers in the library · 176 citations · publishing 2012-2026

Papers

Health status of ayahuasca users.

Drug testing and analysis January 1, 2012 Paulo Cesar Ribeiro Barbosa, Suely Mizumoto, Michael P Bogenschutz et al. 112 citations

Ayahuasca, a psychedelic brew traditionally used by Amazonian peoples, has spread to urban areas worldwide, raising concerns about potential health risks. A review of 15 studies from the PubMed database examined the emotional, cognitive, and physical health effects of ayahuasca use after acute effects subsided. The accumulated data suggest that ayahuasca use is safe and may even be beneficial under certain conditions. However, methodological bias in the reviewed studies may have contributed to the preponderance of beneficial effects and the few adverse effects reported. The data do not yet allow definitive conclusions about ayahuasca's effects on mental and physical health, but some studies point toward beneficial outcomes.

Psilocybin for alcohol use disorder: Rationale and design considerations for a randomized controlled trial.

Contemporary clinical trials December 1, 2022 Kelley C O'Donnell, Sarah E Mennenga, Lindsey T Owens et al. 24 citations

Classic psychedelics like psilocybin may help people change their behavior in substance use disorders. This paper describes the protocol for a multi-site, double-blind, randomized controlled trial that tested psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy in 96 alcohol-dependent volunteers. Participants received either psilocybin or an active placebo (diphenhydramine) during two dosing sessions, alongside a structured 12-week psychotherapy platform. The primary outcome was the proportion of heavy drinking days over 32 weeks after the first dose. Secondary outcomes included safety, abstinence, craving, and self-efficacy. The primary results are reported elsewhere; this paper focuses on the rationale and design decisions.

Clinical Trial Design Challenges and Opportunities for Emerging Treatments for Opioid Use Disorder: A Review.

JAMA psychiatry January 1, 2023 Brian D Kiluk, Bethea A Kleykamp, Sandra D Comer et al. 22 citations

A review sponsored by a public-private partnership addresses clinical trial design for new opioid use disorder (OUD) treatments that target systems other than the μ-opioid receptor. The authors present consensus recommendations for evaluating novel therapies such as cannabinoids, psychedelics, sedative-hypnotics, and immunotherapeutics. Key design elements include specifying the treatment stage (e.g., early abstinence, long-term recovery), defining the treatment's role (adjunctive or independent), selecting patient-informed primary outcomes that assess opioid use patterns, retention, and quality of life, and monitoring adverse events like relapse or overdose, especially when patients are not on maintenance opioid agonist or antagonist medications. Incorporating input from people with lived experience is urged to accelerate development and uptake of effective therapeutics.

The science of psychedelic medicine.

Nature medicine February 6, 2026 Joshua S Siegel, Conor Liston, Ginger E Nicol et al. 10 citations

Classic psychedelics, acting at the serotonin 5-HT2A receptor, alter brain function and consciousness. Research converges on two complementary processes: acute neural desynchronization, which destabilizes entrenched network patterns, and subacute neuroplasticity, which opens a window for psychological and behavioral change. Evidence of therapeutic response across neuropsychiatric indications is reviewed, integrating mechanistic findings. Challenges include discrepancies between preclinical evidence that non-hallucinogenic psychedelic analogs engage putative therapeutic mechanisms and clinical evidence linking subjective experience to therapeutic response, risks of enhanced neuroplasticity, and questions about trial design, scalability, and regulatory approval. The growth of psychedelic science may compel a rethinking of the relationship between subjective experience and biological change in psychiatry.

Exploring the Potential Utility of Psychedelic Therapy for Patients With Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis.

Journal of palliative medicine October 1, 2023 Noah D Gold, Austin J Mallard, Jacob C Hermann et al. 5 citations

Psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy (PAP) may help alleviate psychiatric and existential distress in people with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), a terminal neurodegenerative disease with an average survival of 3-4 years. The authors suggest PAP could also intervene on neuropathological dimensions of ALS, based on neuroprotective properties of psychedelics and robust improvements seen in other populations. They call for future preclinical trials in ALS models and rigorous clinical trials, given the lack of effective treatments for both disease progression and psychological distress.

Examining the Rationale for Studying Psychedelic-Assisted Psychotherapy for the Treatment of Caregiver Distress.

Psychedelic medicine (New Rochelle, N.Y.) June 1, 2023 Noah D Gold, Samantha K Podrebarac, Lindsay A White et al. 3 citations

Over 50 million Americans serve as unpaid caregivers for chronically ill loved ones, a role that can foster personal growth but also leads to caregiver distress—a mix of physiological, psychological, interpersonal, and spiritual impairments affecting 30-70% of caregivers. Existing treatments do not fully address all these components. Psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy (PAP) has shown promise in clinical trials for conditions overlapping with caregiver distress, such as anxiety, depression, suicidal ideation, and inflammation, while enhancing empathy, connectedness, and reducing existential distress. Although no studies have yet tested PAP for caregiver distress, this narrative review argues it could comprehensively treat all biopsychosocial-spiritual dimensions of the condition, outlining safety, psychedelic selection, and therapeutic structure for future research.