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Luke Mitcheson

3 papers in the library · 142 citations · publishing 2006-2025

Papers

5-Year Trends in Use of Hallucinogens and Other Adjunct Drugs among UK Dance Drug Users

European Addiction Research December 18, 2006 Jim Mccambridge, Adam Winstock, Neil Hunt et al. 113 citations

From 1999 to 2003, a survey of people who use drugs in dance contexts found rising lifetime and current use of psilocybin, ketamine, GHB, and nitrates. Current psilocybin use increased sharply in 2002–2003, while ketamine use rose more gradually throughout the period. LSD use declined, mirroring trends in general population surveys. These increases among dance drug users may signal wider prevalence increases among young people, warranting careful study and development of effective interventions.

Psychedelic‐assisted treatment for substance use disorder: A narrative systematic review

Addiction January 30, 2025 Theodore Piper, Francesca Small, Michael Kelleher et al. 27 citations

This first systematic review of psychedelic-assisted treatments for alcohol, tobacco, and other substance use disorders examined 37 studies involving 2,035 participants. The best evidence of efficacy came from a phase 2 randomized controlled trial of psilocybin for alcohol use disorder and a phase 2 trial of ketamine for alcohol use disorder. Psilocybin-assisted treatment for alcohol use disorder appears to have the strongest evidence among all major psychedelic-assisted treatments. No serious adverse events were reported across any study. The review recommends that future research report all safety events, identify contraindications, mitigate participant blinding, use factorial designs, and develop a core outcome set.

5‐Methoxy‐ N , N ‐dimethyltryptamine (5‐MeO‐DMT) for alcohol use disorder: An open‐label, phase 2, proof‐of‐concept, clinical trial

Addiction December 10, 2025 John Marsden, Michael Kelleher, Fiona Dunbar et al. 2 citations

A single 10 mg intranasal dose of the psychedelic drug BPL-003 (a formulation of 5-MeO-DMT) combined with cognitive behavioral therapy was safe and tolerable in people with moderate-to-severe alcohol use disorder. Over 12 weeks, the average percentage of abstinent days increased from 33.2% at baseline to 80.8%, and heavy drinking days dropped from 56.2% to 13.2%. Half of the 12 participants who completed the study were continuously abstinent, a quarter had meaningful reductions in drinking, and a quarter showed little change. Measures of craving, well-being, and quality of life also improved. The findings support larger controlled trials.