Psychedelics and Suicide-Related Outcomes: A Systematic Review
Journal of Clinical Medicine February 20, 2025 Shakila Meshkat, Taha Malik, Jennifer Swainson et al. 3 citations
A systematic review examined whether psychedelic therapies can rapidly reduce suicide risk. Four randomized controlled trials reported significant reductions in suicidal ideation with psilocybin (three studies) and MDMA-assisted therapy (one study), with effect sizes (Cohen's d) ranging from 0.52 to 1.25 and no safety issues. Five additional randomized trials also showed reductions. Among 24 non-randomized and cross-sectional studies, results were mixed: psilocybin reduced suicidal ideation (odds ratios 0.40–0.75), MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD showed a pooled effect of d = 0.61, while LSD was associated with increased odds of suicidality (odds ratios 1.15–2.08). DMT studies showed no significant effects. The evidence remains inconclusive, underscoring the need for further trials.