Comprehensive psychiatry
July 1, 2025
Luca Pellegrini, Naomi A Fineberg, Sorcha O'Connor et al.
17 citations
A 10 mg dose of psilocybin produced a rapid, moderate-to-large reduction in compulsive symptoms in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), lasting up to one week after dosing. In a blinded pharmacological challenge study, 18 adults with at least moderate OCD received a 1 mg and then a 10 mg dose of oral psilocybin, separated by four weeks. One week after the 10 mg dose, scores on the compulsion subscale of the Yale-Brown Obsessive Compulsive Scale showed a significant improvement compared to the 1 mg dose (Cohen's d = 0.74). No effect on depression was detected. The drug was well tolerated with no serious adverse events.
Journal of Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders
March 19, 2025
Rodolfo Leuzzi, Giovanni Tardivo, Luca Pellegrini et al.
3 citations
Only two published and seven unpublished studies have investigated psychedelics for Obsessive-Compulsive and Related Disorders. A systematic review found a critical risk of bias in all studies, mainly due to lack of adequate control conditions, expectation bias among participants, and poor blinding. Unpublished studies showed similar problems but also implemented promising strategies like blinded raters, credible controls such as virtual reality, lower drug doses, and including only drug-naive subjects. The shortage of unbiased evidence means early potential efficacy justifies further well-designed research.
Cureus
January 29, 2025
Sorcha O'Connor, Kate Godfrey, Sara Reed et al.
2 citations
The study aims to uncover the neural mechanisms by which psilocybin-assisted therapy affects obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and whether those brain changes align with improvements in cognitive symptoms. A secondary goal is to test whether a low, tolerable dose is both practical and effective as a clinical treatment. The results will provide essential data for designing a future randomized controlled trial.
Cureus
January 1, 2025
Sorcha O'Connor, Kate Godfrey, Sara Reed et al.
correction
A protocol describes a planned study testing whether a low-moderate dose of psilocybin (10 mg), combined with non-interventional therapy, can improve cognitive flexibility and neuroplasticity in people with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Twenty blinded participants will receive an active placebo (1 mg psilocybin) in a first session and 10 mg in a second session four weeks later. Cognitive flexibility will be measured with the intradimensional-extradimensional shift task two days after each session, and neuroplasticity will be assessed via electroencephalography immediately after each session. Secondary outcomes include OCD symptom severity and patient-reported measures. The results are expected to clarify neural mechanisms and guide a future randomized controlled trial.