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Matthew B Young

Compass Pathways, Inc. (a subsidiary of Compass Pathways plc), New York, New York.

5 papers in the library · 228 citations · publishing 2023-2026

Papers

Single-dose psilocybin for a treatment-resistant episode of major depression: Impact on patient-reported depression severity, anxiety, function, and quality of life

Journal of Affective Disorders February 3, 2023 Guy M Goodwin, Scott T Aaronson, Oscar Alvarez et al. 168 citations

Three weeks after a single dose, 25 mg of psilocybin, and to a lesser extent 10 mg, improved patient-reported measures of depression severity, anxiety, affect, and functioning in people with treatment-resistant depression. These findings extend the primary results from the largest randomized clinical trial of psilocybin for TRD, highlighting outcomes that matter to patients.

The role of the psychedelic experience in psilocybin treatment for treatment-resistant depression.

Journal of affective disorders March 1, 2025 Guy M Goodwin, Scott T Aaronson, Oscar Alvarez et al. 35 citations

In treatment-resistant depression, a single dose of 25 mg of psilocybin produced stronger correlations between certain psychedelic experiences and depression improvement three weeks later than lower doses. The intensity of psychedelic effects was dose-related, but scores for different doses overlapped considerably. At the 25 mg dose, dimensions of oceanic boundlessness and visual restructuralization, along with emotional breakthrough, showed the strongest correlations with reduced depression scores. The study does not establish causation and requires replication. The overlap in experience intensity across doses suggests unblinding to dose is less likely. Correlations between psychedelic experience and outcome indicate specificity in psilocybin's mechanism of action.

Results From a Long-Term Observational Follow-Up Study of a Single Dose of Psilocybin for a Treatment-Resistant Episode of Major Depressive Disorder.

The Journal of clinical psychiatry March 3, 2025 Guy M Goodwin, Ania Nowakowska, Merve Atli et al. 14 citations

A single 25 mg dose of the synthetic psilocybin formulation COMP360 showed a longer time before depressive events recurred over 52 weeks compared with 1 mg and 10 mg doses in people with treatment-resistant depression. In the full group of 233 participants, the median time to a depressive event was 92 days for the 25 mg group, 83 days for the 10 mg group, and 62 days for the 1 mg group. Most participants had a depressive event by 12 weeks. Adverse events were rare; one case of mild suicidal ideation in the 1 mg group was considered possibly related to the drug. Larger long-term studies are needed to confirm these results.

The impact of antidepressant discontinuation prior to treatment with psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression.

Journal of psychiatric research December 1, 2024 Lindsey Marwood, Megan Croal, Sunil Mistry et al. 9 citations

In a phase II randomized controlled trial of 233 participants with treatment-resistant depression, those who discontinued antidepressant drugs before receiving psilocybin showed no worsening of depression severity during the discontinuation period, comparable baseline suicidality, and no compromise in psilocybin's treatment efficacy or subjective psychedelic effects relative to those who entered the trial antidepressant-free. The findings suggest that antidepressant discontinuation does not limit the feasibility of psilocybin treatment for treatment-resistant depression and support the homogeneity of psilocybin's effects as a monotherapy.

The role of therapeutic alliance in psilocybin treatment for treatment-resistant depression: A post hoc path analysis.

Journal of affective disorders August 1, 2026 Guy M Goodwin, Scott T Aaronson, Oscar Alvarez et al. 2 citations

In people with treatment-resistant depression receiving 25 mg psilocybin with monitoring and support, the therapeutic alliance before dosing had only weak correlations with improvement in depression scores at three weeks. Stronger correlations were seen with the intensity of the psychedelic experience itself, particularly emotional breakthrough and visual restructuring. Path analysis suggested that therapeutic alliance helped facilitate the psychedelic experience, but it was the psychedelic experience—not the alliance—that had stronger direct effects on clinical outcomes. The alliance's direct effect on antidepressant response was limited or absent.