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Daniel Perkins

School of Population and Global Health, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Australia.

30 papers in the library · 1,113 citations · publishing 0-2025

Papers

Default Mode Network Modulation by Psychedelics: A Systematic Review

The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology October 21, 2022 James J Gattuso, Daniel Perkins, Simon Ruffell et al. 233 citations

Classical psychedelics like LSD, psilocybin, and ayahuasca consistently disrupt resting-state connectivity within the Default Mode Network (DMN) and increase functional connectivity between canonical resting-state networks. The DMN, a set of brain regions active during self-referencing and mind wandering, is altered in various neuropsychiatric conditions. While DMN modulation is central to some cognitive models of psychedelics, its role in their therapeutic potential remains unclear. This systematic review provides a comprehensive overview to guide future research on the neurocognitive mechanisms of these agents.

Classic serotonergic psychedelics for mood and depressive symptoms: a meta-analysis of mood disorder patients and healthy participants

Psychopharmacology January 11, 2021 Nicole Leite Galvão‐coelho, Wolfgang Marx, Maria Gonzalez et al. 143 citations

Classic serotonergic psychedelics such as psilocybin, LSD, and ayahuasca may improve mood and reduce depressive symptoms more than placebo, with effects appearing within hours and lasting up to 60 days. A meta-analysis of 12 randomized controlled trials involving 257 participants (124 healthy volunteers and 133 patients with mood disorders) found moderate significant effect sizes favoring psychedelics for acute mood improvements in both groups and for longer-term mood benefits in patients. For patients with mood disorders, significant reductions in depressive symptoms were seen acutely, at 2–7 days, and at 16–60 days after treatment. Although unblinding and expectancy are concerns, the strength, speed, and durability of effects support further placebo-controlled trials.

Changes in inflammatory biomarkers are related to the antidepressant effects of Ayahuasca

Journal of Psychopharmacology July 10, 2020 Nicole Leite Galvão‐coelho, Ana Cecília de Menezes Galvão, Raíssa Nóbrega de Almeida et al. 124 citations

In a double-blind placebo-controlled trial, people with treatment-resistant depression had higher baseline levels of C-reactive protein than healthy controls, and a negative correlation between C-reactive protein and cortisol was observed. Ayahuasca, but not placebo, reduced C-reactive protein levels in both patients and healthy controls 48 hours after ingestion. Among patients treated with ayahuasca, larger reductions in C-reactive protein correlated with lower depressive symptoms. No significant changes were found for interleukin 6 or brain-derived neurotrophic factor, and these biomarkers did not predict antidepressant response or remission. The findings clarify biological mechanisms underlying ayahuasca's antidepressant effects.

Adverse effects of ayahuasca: Results from the Global Ayahuasca Survey.

PLOS global public health January 1, 2022 José Carlos Bouso, Óscar Andión, Jerome J Sarris et al. 115 citations

A large global survey of over 10,800 ayahuasca users from more than 50 countries found that acute physical adverse effects, primarily vomiting, occurred in 69.9% of participants, with 2.3% needing medical attention. Adverse mental health effects in the weeks or months after use were reported by 55.9% of the sample, but about 88% of those viewed these effects as part of a positive growth or integration process; around 12% sought professional support. Physical adverse effects were linked to older age at first use, having a physical health condition, higher lifetime and recent use, a prior substance use disorder diagnosis, and using ayahuasca in unsupervised settings.

Ayahuasca use and reported effects on depression and anxiety symptoms: An international cross-sectional study of 11,912 consumers

Journal of Affective Disorders Reports February 6, 2021 Jerome Sarris, Daniel Perkins, Lachlan Cribb et al. 72 citations

Among 1,571 people who reported depression and 1,125 who reported anxiety at the time of consuming ayahuasca, 78% of those with depression said their symptoms were 'very much' improved (46%) or 'completely resolved' (32%), while 70% of those with anxiety reported 'very much' improvement (54%) or complete resolution (16%). Greater improvement was linked to mystical experiences, more ayahuasca sessions, and personal psychological insights. A small minority—2.7% with depression and 4.5% with anxiety—reported worsened symptoms. The authors note this cross-sectional survey cannot establish treatment efficacy and call for randomized controlled trials.

Associations between ayahuasca consumption in naturalistic settings and current alcohol and drug use: Results of a large international cross‐sectional survey

Drug and Alcohol Review July 25, 2021 Daniel Perkins, Emérita Sátiro Opaleye, Hana Šimonová et al. 54 citations

People who consumed ayahuasca in naturalistic settings reported lower current use of alcohol and other drugs, including risky drinking, compared to those who used it less often. The more times ayahuasca was consumed, the stronger the association with never or rarely drinking alcohol and not using a range of drugs in the past month. These effects were greater for individuals with a prior substance use disorder. The strength of subjective spiritual experience, number of personal insights gained, and drinking ayahuasca with an ayahuasca church were also linked to lower substance use in some analyses. The associations remained after adjusting for religious or social group effects.

Changes in mental health, wellbeing and personality following ayahuasca consumption: Results of a naturalistic longitudinal study.

Frontiers in pharmacology January 1, 2022 Daniel Perkins, Broc A Pagni, Jerome Sarris et al. 53 citations

Fifty-three first-time ayahuasca users (32 women, 21 men) completed questionnaires before and one month after a facilitated ceremony. Depression, anxiety, stress, alcohol and cannabis use, body dissociation, self-alienation, impulsivity, and negative affect significantly decreased, while positive mood, self-efficacy, authentic living, extraversion, agreeableness, open-mindedness, spirituality, and relationship satisfaction increased. Baseline traits—especially high negative emotionality and body dissociation, and low self-efficacy—strongly predicted improvements in mental health and substance use, whereas the intensity of the mystical experience had little predictive value. The findings suggest ayahuasca may produce broad mental health benefits and that personal traits could guide personalized treatment.

Medicinal psychedelics for mental health and addiction: Advancing research of an emerging paradigm

Australian & New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry March 21, 2021 Daniel Perkins, Jerome Sarris, Susan L. Rossell et al. 53 citations

Psychedelic substances such as psilocybin, ayahuasca, LSD, and MDMA are gaining renewed medical interest due to the need for new psychiatric treatments and promising study results. This viewpoint reflects on the Royal Australian and New Zealand College of Psychiatrists' Clinical Memorandum on Psychedelics and notes regulatory developments, including applications for down-scheduling and access approvals. The authors argue that rigorous research is needed to assess benefits, safety, and therapeutic mechanisms. They summarize recent findings on mechanisms of action and the psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy model, suggesting medicinal psychedelics could become a new class of psychiatric treatments when used under medical supervision with psychotherapeutic support. However, sufficiently powered trials and safety protocols are required before clinical use, and untrained practitioner access could be harmful.

Drug–drug interactions involving classic psychedelics: A systematic review

Journal of Psychopharmacology November 20, 2023 Andreas Halman, Geraldine Kong, Jerome Sarris et al. 42 citations

A systematic review of 52 studies published before September 2023 examined how classic psychedelics (LSD, psilocybin, mescaline, DMT, 5-MeO-DMT, and ayahuasca) interact with other drugs in humans. When combined with antidepressants, antipsychotics, anxiolytics, mood stabilizers, or recreational drugs, the psychedelics' effects were sometimes weakened, sometimes strengthened, and sometimes unchanged. Except for a few case reports, no serious adverse events were reported. The review maps the potential molecular pathways that may explain these interactions, highlighting a critical gap in knowledge about the safety and outcomes of combining psychedelics with other substances.

Ayahuasca: A review of historical, pharmacological, and therapeutic aspects.

PCN reports : psychiatry and clinical neurosciences December 1, 2023 Simon G D Ruffell, Max Crosland-Wood, Rob Palmer et al. 37 citations

Ayahuasca, a psychedelic plant brew from the Amazon made from Banisteriopsis caapi vine and a DMT-containing plant like Psychotria viridis, has attracted growing interest since the year 2000. This review covers its history, pharmacology, and the phenomenological responses it produces. Anecdotal reports range from positive to accounts of physical and psychological harm. The authors discuss effects on personality and mental health, and examine phenomenological analyses of the experience. They conclude that ayahuasca is a promising psychedelic agent deserving more empirical research into its neurochemical mechanisms and potential therapeutic use.

Psychotherapeutic and neurobiological processes associated with ayahuasca: A proposed model and implications for therapeutic use

Frontiers in Neuroscience January 31, 2023 Daniel Perkins, Kimberley Day, Jerome Sarris et al. 27 citations

Ayahuasca, a psychoactive Amazonian brew containing DMT and harmala alkaloids, is increasingly used worldwide in traditional and neo-shamanic settings. A review of existing literature and original qualitative data from a large cross-sectional study of ayahuasca drinkers proposes a model of five key psychotherapeutic processes inherent to the experience: somatic effects, introspection and emotional processing, increased self-connection, increased spiritual connection, and gaining insights and new perspectives. These processes, facilitated by neurobiological effects, are argued to lead to beneficial mental health and wellbeing outcomes. The model highlights differences from other classic psychedelics and implications for therapeutic use.

Life after Ayahuasca: A Qualitative Analysis of the Psychedelic Integration Experiences of 1630 Ayahuasca Drinkers from a Global Survey

Psychoactives June 13, 2023 Tessa Cowley‐court, Richard Chenhall, Jerome Sarris et al. 19 citations

Integrating ayahuasca experiences can be challenging and take considerable time, though working through these challenges may facilitate positive growth. A global online survey of 1630 ayahuasca drinkers (50.4% male, mean age 43) identified three main themes in integration experiences: overall appraisal (easy, challenging, or long-term/ongoing), beneficial tools (like-minded community, yoga, meditation, journaling), and challenges (feeling disconnected, returning to old life with new understandings). Findings challenge individual psychotherapy as the primary integration tool, suggesting communal and somatic elements may also be useful. An expanded definition of psychedelic integration is proposed that includes working with challenges and adjusting to life changes.

Insights, Life Changes and Lifestyle Changes Reported by Individuals Consuming Ayahuasca in Naturalistic Settings: Nature, Frequency and Associations with Mental Health and Wellbeing

Psychoactives October 3, 2023 Daniel Perkins, Emérita Sátiro Opaleye, José Carlos Bouso et al. 18 citations

Ayahuasca drinkers almost universally report gaining insights during their experiences, and these insights strongly predict subsequent beneficial life and lifestyle changes, including improvements in psychological wellbeing and mental health. In a large international survey of 8,907 ayahuasca drinkers, common changes attributed to ayahuasca included personal, vocational, religious or spiritual, and health-related shifts, along with healthier behaviors. Demographic factors and drinking patterns also predicted these outcomes. The findings suggest that insights and resulting life changes are central to the transformative effects of ayahuasca, occurring across diverse contexts and groups.

Drug-drug interactions between classic psychedelics and psychoactive drugs: a systematic review

medRxiv June 1, 2023 Andreas Halman, Geraldine Kong, Jerome Sarris et al. 17 citations preprint

Classic psychedelics—LSD, psilocybin, mescaline, and DMT—are powerful psychoactive substances, but little is known about how they interact with other psychoactive drugs. This systematic review screened 8,487 records and identified 50 studies from 34 reports published before April 20, 2023, covering 31 studies on LSD, 11 on psilocybin, 4 on mescaline, 3 on DMT, and 1 on ayahuasca. The findings show that combining these psychedelics with antidepressants, antipsychotics, anxiolytics, mood stabilizers, or recreational drugs can attenuate, potentiate, or produce no change in effects. Except for a few case reports, no serious adverse drug events were reported.

Moderators of ayahuasca’s biological antidepressant action

Frontiers in Psychiatry December 5, 2022 Geovan Menezes de Sousa, Vagner Deuel de Oliveira Tavares, Ana Cecília de Menezes Galvão et al. 14 citations

In a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial with 72 participants, ayahuasca's effects on depression-related biomarkers were examined two days after dosing. Larger reductions in depressive symptoms during the session were linked to higher serum cortisol levels in patients with treatment-resistant depression. Smaller changes in salivary cortisol during ayahuasca use were associated with higher brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels in patients who showed greater clinical improvement in depressive symptoms. No moderating effects were found for the cortisol awakening response, interleukin-6, or C-reactive protein in patients, nor for any biomarker in healthy controls or the placebo group. The findings suggest that acute emotional and physiological responses during ayahuasca sessions may influence key biomarkers of depression.

Harnessing Pharmacogenomics in Clinical Research on Psychedelic‐Assisted Therapy

Clinical Pharmacology & Therapeutics September 30, 2024 Andreas Halman, Rachel Conyers, Claire Moore et al. 13 citations

Genetic variations in drug-metabolizing enzymes, particularly cytochrome P450, can influence the intensity of acute effects from psychedelics like LSD and ibogaine, suggesting that dose reductions may be appropriate for CYP2D6 poor metabolizers. Preclinical evidence also indicates that CYP2D6 metabolizer status might alter psychedelic experiences with 5-MeO-DMT and psilocybin when combined with monoamine oxidase inhibitors. Although evidence is limited, especially for pharmacodynamics, pharmacogenomic testing warrants further investigation to potentially improve safety and personalize psychedelic-assisted therapies for psychiatric conditions.

Ayahuasca and Dimethyltryptamine Adverse Events and Toxicity Analysis: A Systematic Thematic Review.

International journal of toxicology January 1, 2024 Eleanor White, Tom Kennedy, Simon Ruffell et al. 13 citations

A systematic thematic review of 78 articles found that ayahuasca and its main psychoactive alkaloid DMT are generally safe in controlled settings, with serious adverse effects rarely reported among healthy populations. However, some adverse human events have been documented. In animal models, higher doses of ayahuasca showed abortifacient and teratogenic effects, and isolated harmala alkaloid studies—especially with harmaline—revealed potential toxicity at higher doses, which may increase when co-administered with certain medications. The authors note that high-dose animal studies using synthetic isolates may not translate to human use of therapeutic plant-based extracts. The review concludes that traditional use of ayahuasca and DMT has an acceptable safety profile, but further randomized controlled trials with larger samples and longer follow-up are needed.

Ayahuasca and Childhood Trauma: Potential Therapeutic Applications

January 1, 2021 Daniel Perkins, Jerome Sarris 13 citations

Ayahuasca shows promise for improving mental health, with a study involving 100 participants revealing that 70% reported reduced anxiety and enhanced mood after treatment. Participants experienced significant positive changes in early childhood trauma responses, suggesting ayahuasca's potential in clinical psychology and psychiatry. The study also noted a low incidence of adverse effects, with only 10% experiencing mild discomfort. This highlights the need to explore psychedelics further, particularly their influence on neurotransmitter receptors and behavior, as well as their role in addressing stressors like anxiety.

Prophylactic action of ayahuasca in a non-human primate model of depressive-like behavior.

Frontiers in behavioral neuroscience January 1, 2022 Maria Lara Porpino de Meiroz Grilo, Geovan Menezes de Sousa, Lilían Andrade Carlos de Mendonça et al. 12 citations

Repeated ayahuasca administration before and during social isolation prevented depressive-like behaviors and cortisol alterations in common marmosets. Animals given ayahuasca showed higher cortisol reactivity and fecal cortisol levels similar to family-group controls, no signs of anhedonia, and no increase in chronic stress-related behaviors, unlike isolated animals that received no intervention. The findings suggest ayahuasca promotes resilient responses and may have a prophylactic action against depression.

Psychedelic medicines for mood disorders: current evidence and clinical considerations

Current Opinion in Psychiatry November 15, 2021 Jerome Sarris, Diego Pinzon Rubiano, Kimberley Day et al. 12 citations

Serotonergic psychedelics, including psilocybin, ayahuasca, LSD, and MDMA, show promise for treating mood disorders and PTSD, often combined with psychotherapy. Psilocybin with psychological support has been effective for depression, including treatment-resistant cases, in randomized placebo-controlled trials. LSD has shown anxiolytic effects, and MDMA has Phase III evidence for PTSD. Microdosing has not been found to improve mood in a controlled trial. Challenges remain with blinding, small sample sizes, and lack of definitive Phase III studies (except MDMA for PTSD). Further research into novel formulations, pharmacogenomics, microbiome interactions, and inflammatory pathways is needed.

Participation in an indigenous Amazonian-led ayahuasca retreat associated with increases in nature relatedness – a pilot study

Drug Science Policy and Law January 1, 2024 Simon Ruffell, Sam Gandy, WaiFung Tsang et al. 10 citations

Participating in ayahuasca retreats in a traditional Indigenous Amazonian context was associated with significant increases in nature relatedness and improvements in depression and stress, but not anxiety. A moderate negative correlation indicated that greater increases in nature relatedness were linked to lower stress levels. The study involved a mean of 6.31 ceremonies. It remains unclear whether changes resulted from the ayahuasca brew, the ceremonies, or the retreat setting. The findings suggest a potential therapeutic role for such retreats as a multidimensional intervention, but further research is needed to identify mediators and assess long-term effects.

Artificial intelligence and psychedelic medicine

Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences September 23, 2024 Jerome Sarris, Andreas Halman, Anna Urokohara et al. 6 citations

Artificial intelligence and psychedelic medicines, two prominent disruptive innovations in mental healthcare, have potential to combine for novel treatments. A scoping review of literature up to August 2024 explored AI applications in psychedelic medicine, including drug discovery, clinical trial optimization, study design, understanding psychedelic experiences, personalizing treatments, clinical screening and follow-up via chatbots or apps, psychological preparation and integration, and enhancing treatment with brain modulatory devices like virtual reality and haptic suits. Challenges include data protection and ethical safeguards. Future possibilities involve administering psychedelics or algorithm-generated effects to inorganic AI-interfaced neural networks, potentially exceeding human cognitive capacity.

Associations Between Ayahuasca Use in Naturalistic Settings and Mental Health and Wellbeing Outcomes: Analysis of a Large Global Dataset.

Journal of psychoactive drugs November 23, 2024 Daniel Perkins, Jerome Sarris, Tessa Cowley-Court et al. 5 citations

People who consume ayahuasca in naturalistic settings—religious, traditional, or non-traditional—report better current mental health and greater psychological well-being, according to a large online survey of 7,576 participants from over 50 countries. More lifetime ayahuasca uses were linked to better mental health scores, and this association remained strong even after accounting for other factors and did not fade over time. Strong mystical experiences, self-insights, and community or social support were also tied to better mental health and well-being, whereas acute extreme fear during sessions and difficulty integrating the experience were linked to poorer outcomes. These patterns held for individuals both with and without a history of mental illness.

Ayahuasca – a review of historical, pharmacological, and therapeutic aspects

February 21, 2023 Simon Ruffell, Nigel Netzband, WaiFung Tsang et al. 3 citations preprint

Ayahuasca, a psychedelic brew from the Amazon Rainforest made from the Banisteriopsis caapi vine and a DMT-containing plant like Psychotria viridis, has seen a surge in global interest since 2000. This review covers its history, pharmacology, and phenomenological effects, as well as clinical applications. Tourists increasingly travel to the Amazon to consume it, and retreat centers offering plant medicine have become a thriving business. Anecdotal reports range from evangelical accounts to stories of physical and psychological harm. The brew shows promise as a psychedelic agent warranting more empirical research into its neurochemical mechanisms and therapeutic uses.

Psilocybin-Assisted suppoRtive psychoTherapy IN the treatment of prolonged Grief (PARTING) trial: protocol for an open-label pilot trial for cancer-related bereavement

BMJ Open April 1, 2025 Vanessa L. Beesley, Tom Kennedy, Fiona Maccallum et al. 2 citations

Prolonged grief disorder (PGD) affects up to 30% of bereaved carers in oncology settings, and current treatments fail up to half of participants. The PARTING trial is the first to test psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy for cancer-related PGD. In this open-label pilot, about 15 participants receive a 25 mg dose of psilocybin with supportive guidance, plus preparation and integration sessions delivered by a psychologist and a nurse or Indigenous Therapist. Feasibility, safety, and acceptability are assessed through recruitment rates, adverse events, physiological measures, and qualitative interviews. Quantitative measures include grief severity, depression, anxiety, and quality of life over a 12-month follow-up.