Journal of substance use and addiction treatment
August 1, 2025
Reinhard Janssen-Aguilar, Shakila Meshkat, Ilya Demchenko et al.
12 citations
Ketamine may offer short-term benefits for treating substance use disorders, including alcohol, cocaine, opioid, and cannabis use disorders. In alcohol use disorder, it reduced withdrawal symptoms and the need for benzodiazepines. For cocaine use disorder, it decreased craving and increased abstinence rates. In opioid use disorder, high-dose ketamine combined with psychotherapy improved abstinence and reduced craving. For cannabis use disorder, it reduced weekly use and increased confidence in abstinence. However, the evidence is limited by small sample sizes and a lack of randomized trials. Larger, well-controlled studies are needed to determine optimal dosing, mechanisms, long-term efficacy, and risks before broader clinical use can be recommended.
Neuroscience and biobehavioral reviews
June 1, 2025
Shakila Meshkat, Gunjan Malik, Richard J Zeifman et al.
11 citations
Psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy may reduce alcohol consumption and help with smoking cessation, especially for alcohol and tobacco use disorders. In a systematic review of 16 published studies, most focused on alcohol or tobacco use, and over half used psilocybin combined with psychotherapy. Doses ranged from microdosing to 20–40 mg per 70 kg. Alcohol use disorder studies reported fewer heavy drinking days and higher abstinence rates, with brain scans showing normalized activity. Tobacco use disorder studies found high smoking abstinence rates, with mystical experiences predicting long-term success. Findings for other substance use disorders were mixed. The evidence is preliminary; larger clinical trials are needed.
Journal of Military Veteran and Family Health
February 1, 2026
Ian Stefanuk, Kaitlin Chivers-Wilson, Rakesh Jetly et al.
A retrospective chart review of 56 Veterans who completed a program combining sublingual ketamine therapy with a transdiagnostic intensive outpatient program (IOP) found significant reductions in symptoms of depression, anxiety, and posttraumatic stress, along with improved quality of life. Clinically meaningful improvements were most notable among those with moderate to severe baseline symptoms. The intervention is thought to enhance neuroplasticity and emotional learning while increasing treatment engagement and long-term resiliency. The lack of a control group limits the findings, and further research is needed to validate the results and adapt the model for Veterans.