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Fu-Chi Yang

Department of Neurology, Tri-Service General Hospital, National Defense Medical Centre, Taipei, Taiwan.

3 papers in the library · 9 citations · publishing 2024-2026

Papers

The association between diverse psychological protocols and the efficacy of psilocybin-assisted therapy for clinical depressive symptoms: a Bayesian meta-analysis

Frontiers in Psychiatry August 13, 2024 Mu-Hong Chen, Shu-Li Cheng, Yu-Chen Kao et al. 8 citations

A Bayesian meta-analysis of 10 clinical trials involving 515 adults with diagnosed depression found that psilocybin-assisted therapy produced a pooled mean reduction of 10.08 points on the 17-Item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale. The psychological protocols used alongside psilocybin varied: manualized directive psychotherapy, manualized nondirective psychological support, non-manualized nondirective psychological support, and non-manualized supportive psychotherapy. Compared with manualized nondirective psychological support, the other three approaches did not differ significantly in their effect on depressive symptoms. The improvement in depressive symptoms was not associated with the type of psychological protocol employed.

The association between study design and antidepressant effects in psychedelic-assisted therapy: A meta-analysis.

Journal of affective disorders January 15, 2025 Jia-Ru Li, Kuo-Tung Chiang, Yu-Chen Kao et al. 1 citation

The antidepressant effects of psychedelics may be overestimated in trials using pre-post single-arm, non-active-drug-as-placebo, and waitlist-control designs. A systematic review of 19 trials found that psilocybin and MDMA showed large to medium effect sizes in non-active-placebo designs (psilocybin: Hedges' g = 0.87; MDMA: g = 0.65), but effects were not statistically significant in active-placebo designs. Psilocybin effect sizes were very large in pre-post (g = 2.51) and waitlist-control (g = 2.88) designs. Ayahuasca also showed large effects in pre-post (g = 1.88) and non-active-placebo (g = 1.60) designs. LSD was significant only in non-active-placebo design (g = 1.49). Limited sample sizes, difficulty maintaining participant blinding, and high expectancy likely inflate apparent efficacy.

Prescribing bias and adverse outcomes of esketamine in major depression comorbid substance.

Journal of affective disorders November 1, 2026 Dian-Jeng Li, Tien-Wei Hsu, Te-Chang Changchien et al.

Patients with major depressive disorder who are prescribed esketamine have higher rates of comorbid substance use disorders compared to those treated with antidepressants or repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation. Among esketamine users, those with a substance use disorder face greater risks of self-harm, suicide attempt, emergency visits, hospitalization, and mortality. The findings indicate a prescription bias toward patients with comorbid substance use disorders and highlight the need for careful monitoring and specialized care for this population.