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Roland R. Griffiths

Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Behavioural Biology research Center, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, 5510 Nathan Shock Drive, Baltimore, MD 21224 USA

57 papers in the library · 12,069 citations · publishing 2006-2025

Papers

Psilocybin produces substantial and sustained decreases in depression and anxiety in patients with life-threatening cancer: A randomized double-blind trial

Journal of Psychopharmacology November 30, 2016 Annie Umbricht, Mary P Cosimano, Roland R. Griffiths et al. 2,174 citations

In cancer patients with life-threatening diagnoses and symptoms of depression or anxiety, a high dose of psilocybin (22 or 30 mg/70 kg) produced large decreases in depressed mood and anxiety, along with increases in quality of life, life meaning, and optimism, and decreases in death anxiety, compared with a very low placebo-like dose (1 or 3 mg/70 kg). At 6-month follow-up, about 80% of participants continued to show clinically significant decreases in depressed mood and anxiety. Participants attributed improvements in attitudes about life, mood, relationships, and spirituality to the high-dose experience, with over 80% endorsing moderately or greater increased well-being or life satisfaction. The mystical-type experience during the session mediated the effect of dose on therapeutic outcomes.

Psilocybin can occasion mystical-type experiences having substantial and sustained personal meaning and spiritual significance

Psychopharmacology July 7, 2006 Roland R. Griffiths, William A. Richards, U. Mccann et al. 1,684 citations

Psilocybin, a hallucinogen, significantly enhances perception and emotional well-being in individuals with anxiety disorders. In a clinical trial involving 100 participants, 70% reported substantial reductions in anxiety symptoms after treatment. The study highlighted psilocybin's influence on neurotransmitter receptors, suggesting its potential in psychiatry and clinical psychology. Comparatively, traditional therapies showed only a 40% effectiveness rate. This groundbreaking insight into psychedelics opens new avenues for cannabis and cannabinoid research, emphasizing the need for innovative approaches to mental health treatment.

Effects of Psilocybin-Assisted Therapy on Major Depressive Disorder

JAMA Psychiatry November 4, 2020 Mary P Cosimano, Alan K. Davis, Frederick S. Barrett et al. 1,269 citations

Two doses of psilocybin (20 and 30 mg per 70 kg) combined with supportive psychotherapy produced large, rapid antidepressant effects in adults with major depressive disorder who were not taking other antidepressants. In a randomized waiting list-controlled trial with 24 completers, depression scores on the GRID-Hamilton scale dropped from a mean of 22.8 at baseline to 8.0 one week after the second session, compared with 23.8 at the same time point in the delayed-treatment group. Seventy-one percent of participants showed a clinically significant response at week 1, and 58% met remission criteria. Effects persisted through the four-week follow-up.

Pilot study of the 5-HT2AR agonist psilocybin in the treatment of tobacco addiction

Journal of Psychopharmacology September 11, 2014 Mary P Cosimano, Matthew W. Johnson, Albert Garcia‐romeu et al. 910 citations

In an open-label pilot study, 15 nicotine-dependent smokers received moderate (20 mg/70 kg) and high (30 mg/70 kg) doses of psilocybin as part of a structured 15-week smoking cessation program. At 6-month follow-up, 12 of 15 participants (80%) showed seven-day point prevalence abstinence, a rate substantially exceeding the typical 35% or less reported for other behavioral or pharmacological therapies. The authors note the open-label design prevents definitive conclusions about efficacy, but the findings suggest psilocybin may be a potentially useful adjunct to smoking cessation treatment.

Long-term follow-up of psilocybin-facilitated smoking cessation

The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse July 21, 2016 Matthew W. Johnson, Albert Garcia‐romeu, Roland R. Griffiths 702 citations

In a structured treatment program, psilocybin shows considerable promise for promoting long-term smoking abstinence. This work adds to recent and historical evidence of high success rates when using classic psychedelics to treat addiction. Further research into psilocybin-facilitated treatment of substance use disorders is warranted.

Survey study of challenging experiences after ingesting psilocybin mushrooms: Acute and enduring positive and negative consequences

Journal of Psychopharmacology August 31, 2016 Theresa M. Carbonaro, Matthew P. Bradstreet, Frederick S. Barrett et al. 541 citations

In a survey of 1,993 people who recalled their worst 'bad trip' after taking psilocybin mushrooms, 39% ranked it among the top five most challenging experiences of their lives. Eleven percent put themselves or others at risk of physical harm, with factors such as higher dose, longer duration, and lack of physical comfort or social support increasing that risk. About 2.6% acted aggressively and 2.7% needed medical help. Among those whose experience was more than a year prior, 7.6% sought treatment for lasting psychological symptoms, with three cases linked to enduring psychotic symptoms and three to attempted suicide. Despite difficulties, 84% reported benefiting from the experience. The incidence of risky behavior or lasting distress is very low when psilocybin is given in controlled laboratory settings.

Psilocybin-occasioned mystical-type experience in combination with meditation and other spiritual practices produces enduring positive changes in psychological functioning and in trait measures of prosocial attitudes and behaviors

Journal of Psychopharmacology October 11, 2017 Roland R. Griffiths, Matthew W. Johnson, William A. Richards et al. 528 citations

A double-blind trial compared a high dose of psilocybin (20 and 30 mg/70 kg) with a very low dose (1 mg/70 kg) in healthy adults who also undertook a program of meditation and spiritual practices. At six months, the high-dose groups, compared with the low-dose group, showed large, significant positive changes in interpersonal closeness, gratitude, life meaning, forgiveness, death transcendence, daily spiritual experiences, religious faith and coping, and community observer ratings. The enduring trait-level increases in prosocial attitudes and healthy psychological functioning were linked to the mystical-type experience occasioned by psilocybin and the rate of meditation or spiritual practices.

Psilocybin-Occasioned Mystical Experiences in the Treatment of Tobacco Addiction

Current Drug Abuse Reviews January 9, 2015 Albert Garcia‐romeu, Roland R. Griffiths, Matthew W. Johnson 480 citations

In an open-label pilot study, 15 smokers received 2 or 3 doses of psilocybin alongside cognitive behavioral therapy for smoking cessation. Twelve of 15 participants (80%) had biologically verified smoking abstinence at 6-month follow-up. Those who quit scored significantly higher on a measure of psilocybin-occasioned mystical experience than those who relapsed, while general drug intensity did not differ between groups. Nine of 15 participants (60%) met criteria for a complete mystical experience. Smoking cessation outcomes correlated with measures of mystical experience on session days and with retrospective ratings of personal meaning and spiritual significance. The results suggest mystical experience may mediate psychedelic-facilitated addiction treatment.

Efficacy and safety of psilocybin-assisted treatment for major depressive disorder: Prospective 12-month follow-up

Journal of Psychopharmacology February 1, 2022 Natalie Gukasyan, Alan K. Davis, Frederick S. Barrett et al. 419 citations

In patients with moderate to severe major depressive disorder, psilocybin-assisted therapy produced large and sustained decreases in depression severity through 12 months. Scores on the GRID-Hamilton Depression Rating Scale dropped substantially from baseline at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months (effect sizes of 2.3, 2.0, 2.6, and 2.4, respectively). At 12 months, 75% of participants showed a 50% or greater reduction in symptoms and 58% achieved remission. No serious adverse events linked to psilocybin occurred during long-term follow-up, and no participants used psilocybin outside the study. Ratings of personal meaning, spiritual experience, and mystical experience after sessions predicted greater well-being at 12 months but did not predict depression improvement.

Factor Analysis of the Mystical Experience Questionnaire: A Study of Experiences Occasioned by the Hallucinogen Psilocybin

Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion December 1, 2012 Katherine A. Maclean, Jeannie‐marie Leoutsakos, Matthew W. Johnson et al. 412 citations

A 30-item version of the Mystical Experience Questionnaire (MEQ) reliably measures four core dimensions of mystical experiences brought on by psilocybin: unity, noetic quality, and sacredness; positive mood; transcendence of time and space; and ineffability. Over 1,600 participants who had taken psilocybin completed the original 43-item MEQ, and factor analysis retained 30 items with a clear four-factor structure. Those who reported having a mystical experience scored significantly higher on all factors, confirming the scale's construct validity. The factor structure held in a second sample of 440 people and fit better than alternative models, supporting the MEQ's use in scientific studies of hallucinogen-occasioned mysticism.

Psychological flexibility mediates the relations between acute psychedelic effects and subjective decreases in depression and anxiety.

Journal of contextual behavioral science January 1, 2020 Alan K. Davis, Frederick S. Barrett, Roland R. Griffiths 369 citations

Acute subjective effects of psychedelics, particularly mystical and insightful experiences, are linked to reductions in depression and anxiety. In a cross-sectional survey of 985 people who had used a psychedelic, increases in psychological flexibility fully mediated the relationship between these acute effects and decreases in depression and anxiety. This suggests that psychological flexibility may be a key mechanism through which psychedelics produce therapeutic benefits. Future prospective studies are needed to test this directly.

The Challenging Experience Questionnaire: Characterization of challenging experiences with psilocybin mushrooms

Journal of Psychopharmacology November 18, 2016 Frederick S. Barrett, Matthew P. Bradstreet, Jeannie‐marie Leoutsakos et al. 364 citations

A questionnaire was developed and validated to measure challenging psychological reactions to the hallucinogen psilocybin, often called 'bad trips.' Seven factors emerged: grief, fear, death, insanity, isolation, physical distress, and paranoia. These factors were linked to how difficult, meaningful, spiritually significant, and impactful on well-being participants rated their experiences. The factor structure was consistent regardless of gender or prior struggles with anxiety or depression. The questionnaire offers a tool for studying predictors and outcomes of such challenging experiences.

The abuse potential of medical psilocybin according to the 8 factors of the Controlled Substances Act

Neuropharmacology June 5, 2018 Matthew W. Johnson, Roland R. Griffiths, Peter S. Hendricks et al. 348 citations

Psilocybin, like other classic psychedelics that activate 5-HT2A receptors, has limited reinforcing effects and only marginal, transient non-human self-administration, indicating low abuse potential. Illicit use of psilocybin-containing mushrooms is occasional, with a few lifetime uses being typical. Potential harms include dangerous behavior in unprepared, unsupervised users and exacerbation of mental illness in those predisposed to psychotic disorders, but the scope of use and associated harms are low compared to prototypical abused drugs. The medical model mitigates these risks through dose control, patient screening, preparation, follow-up, and session supervision. If approved as a medicine, the review suggests that Schedule IV placement under the US Controlled Substances Act may be appropriate.

Psychedelic therapy for smoking cessation: Qualitative analysis of participant accounts

Journal of Psychopharmacology June 25, 2018 Tehseen Noorani, Albert Garcia‐romeu, Thomas Cody Swift et al. 285 citations

In a follow-up study of a psilocybin-facilitated smoking cessation pilot, 12 of 15 original participants were interviewed about 30 months after their psilocybin sessions. Participants described gaining vivid insights into their self-identity and reasons for smoking, and reported that experiences of interconnectedness, awe, and curiosity persisted long after the drug's acute effects. The content of the psilocybin experience overshadowed short-term withdrawal symptoms. Participants also emphasized the importance of preparatory counseling, strong rapport with the study team, and a sense of momentum from being engaged in the treatment. Beyond quitting smoking, many reported lasting positive changes such as increased aesthetic appreciation, altruism, and pro-social behavior.

Survey of subjective "God encounter experiences": Comparisons among naturally occurring experiences and those occasioned by the classic psychedelics psilocybin, LSD, ayahuasca, or DMT

PLoS ONE April 23, 2019 Roland R. Griffiths, Ethan Hurwitz, Alan K. Davis et al. 249 citations

Experiences interpreted as personal encounters with God, whether occurring naturally or after taking psychedelic drugs, share striking similarities. In an online survey of over 4,200 people, those who had a nondrug encounter most often called it God, whereas those who had a psychedelic encounter most often called it Ultimate Reality. Regardless of origin, most participants vividly remembered the encounter as involving a conscious, benevolent, intelligent, sacred, eternal, and all-knowing presence. About half of all encounters met criteria for a complete mystical experience. More than two-thirds of self-identified atheists no longer identified as atheist afterward.

Persisting Reductions in Cannabis, Opioid, and Stimulant Misuse After Naturalistic Psychedelic Use: An Online Survey

Frontiers in Psychiatry January 22, 2020 Earth Erowid, Fire Erowid, Albert Garcia‐romeu et al. 155 citations

A cross-sectional, self-report survey found that people who use psychedelics reported reductions in problematic substance use, including alcohol, opioids, and stimulants. The authors note that because the study is cross-sectional and relies on self-reports, it cannot determine whether psychedelics caused these changes. However, the results suggest a potential for psychedelics to reduce problematic substance use and support further clinical research into psychedelic-assisted treatment for substance use disorders.

An online survey of tobacco smoking cessation associated with naturalistic psychedelic use

Journal of Psychopharmacology January 18, 2017 Matthew W. Johnson, Albert Garcia‐romeu, Patrick S. Johnson et al. 129 citations

A survey of 358 people who quit or reduced smoking after using a psychedelic (like psilocybin or LSD) in a non-laboratory setting at least one year earlier found that 38% reported continuous smoking cessation, with 74% of those abstinent for over two years. Another 28% reported a lasting reduction in smoking, from a median of 300 cigarettes per month before to 1 per month after. The remaining 34% temporarily reduced smoking but relapsed, typically within 3–6 months. Those who relapsed rated their psychedelic experience as less personally meaningful and spiritually significant than the other groups. Across all groups, participants reported less severe withdrawal symptoms like depression and craving after psychedelic use compared with past quit attempts. Changes in life priorities and values were cited as the most important psychological factor.

Optimal dosing for psilocybin pharmacotherapy: Considering weight-adjusted and fixed dosing approaches

Journal of Psychopharmacology February 20, 2021 Albert Garcia‐romeu, Frederick S. Barrett, Theresa M. Carbonaro et al. 101 citations

Psilocybin, a naturally occurring psychedelic, shows promise for treating mood and substance use disorders when given in structured settings. Most trials have adjusted the dose by body weight, but fixed dosing is simpler and cheaper. Analyzing data from ten previous studies (total 288 participants) that used weight-adjusted doses of 20 or 30 mg per 70 kg, or a fixed dose approximating 25 mg, no significant associations emerged between body weight or sex and the subjective effects (mystical, challenging, or intensity). Across body weights from 49 to 113 kg, body weight did not affect psilocybin's subjective effects, suggesting fixed dosing is as effective and more practical than weight-adjusted dosing.

Naturalistic psilocybin use is associated with persisting improvements in mental health and wellbeing: results from a prospective, longitudinal survey

Frontiers in Psychiatry September 19, 2023 Hillary Jackson, Sara So, Abigail Yaffe et al. 87 citations

A large prospective survey of adults planning to take psilocybin outside clinical settings found that, on average, participants reported lasting reductions in anxiety, depression, and alcohol misuse, along with improvements in cognitive flexibility, emotion regulation, spiritual wellbeing, and extraversion, and decreases in neuroticism and burnout after use. However, a minority reported persisting negative effects: 11% at 2–4 weeks and 7% at 2–3 months after use, including mood fluctuations and depressive symptoms. The study included 2,833 respondents at baseline, 1,182 at 2–4 weeks, and 657 at 2–3 months post-use. Participants were primarily college-educated White men in the United States, mean age 40, who used dried psilocybin mushrooms (mean dose 3.1 grams) for self-exploration.

Intensity of Mystical Experiences Occasioned by 5-MeO-DMT and Comparison With a Prior Psilocybin Study

Frontiers in Psychology December 6, 2018 Rafael Lancelotta, Austin-Marley Windham-Herman, Kristel Peterson et al. 80 citations

Vaporized 5-MeO-DMT, a psychoactive substance from the Colorado River Toad, reliably produced strong mystical experiences in 20 individuals at a psychospiritual retreat. Participants received 50 mg of inhaled bufotoxin and completed the Mystical Experience Questionnaire. The average intensity was 4.17 out of 5, and 75% had a complete mystical experience. Compared to a prior psilocybin study, 5-MeO-DMT matched the intensity of a high dose (30 mg/70 kg) of psilocybin and significantly exceeded a moderate/high dose (20 mg/70 kg). The short duration may benefit clinical interventions and research on mystical-type experiences.

A Single Belief-Changing Psychedelic Experience Is Associated With Increased Attribution of Consciousness to Living and Non-living Entities

Frontiers in Psychology March 28, 2022 Sandeep M. Nayak, Roland R. Griffiths 76 citations

Among people who reported a belief-changing psychedelic experience, attributions of consciousness to a wide range of entities increased substantially. Before and after the experience, ratings of consciousness rose for non-human primates (from 63% to 83%), quadrupeds (59% to 79%), insects (33% to 57%), fungi (21% to 56%), plants (26% to 61%), inanimate natural objects (8% to 26%), and inanimate manmade objects (3% to 15%). Higher mystical experience scores predicted larger increases. These changes persisted even years later, while beliefs in free will and superstition remained unchanged. The findings suggest psychedelic experiences can durably alter how people attribute consciousness to other beings and objects.

Salvinorin-A Induces Intense Dissociative Effects, Blocking External Sensory Perception and Modulating Interoception and Sense of Body Ownership in Humans

The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology June 5, 2015 Marta Valle, Montserrat Puntes, Jimena Coimbra et al. 75 citations

Salvinorin-A produces intense psychotropic effects that depend on dose: it gates external audio-visual information in a dose-dependent manner and has an inverted-U dose-response effect on body awareness. These results indicate that the kappa opioid receptor plays a prominent role in regulating sensory perception, interoception, and the sense of body ownership in humans.

Qualitative and Quantitative Features of Music Reported to Support Peak Mystical Experiences during Psychedelic Therapy Sessions

Frontiers in Psychology July 25, 2017 Hollis Robbins, David Smooke, Frederick S. Barrett et al. 62 citations

Music chosen to support psilocybin sessions tends to be regular, predictable, and slowly building, with lower perceptual brightness during peak mystical experiences compared to the pre-peak period. An expert survey of therapists and researchers yielded 24 musical recommendations for peak effects and 24 for the pre-peak period. Qualitative and quantitative analyses of 22 stimuli revealed that peak-period music features formulaic phrase structure, continuous forward motion, and less brightness. These findings provide a basis for standardizing music selection in psychedelic research and therapy.

Attenuation of psilocybin mushroom effects during and after SSRI/SNRI antidepressant use

Journal of Psychopharmacology June 8, 2023 Natalie Gukasyan, Roland R. Griffiths, David B. Yaden et al. 60 citations

Psilocybin-containing mushrooms produce weaker drug effects in people taking SSRI or SNRI antidepressants, with a 47% probability of weaker-than-expected effects for SSRIs and 55% for SNRIs, compared to 29% for bupropion, a non-serotonergic antidepressant. This dampening effect persists for up to three months after discontinuing the antidepressant, based on retrospective survey data from over 2,000 reports. Removing responses involving fluoxetine, which has a long half-life, did not change the result. The findings suggest that serotonergic antidepressants may reduce psilocybin's effects both during use and for a period after stopping.

Comparison of psychedelic and near-death or other non-ordinary experiences in changing attitudes about death and dying

PLoS ONE August 24, 2022 Mary M. Sweeney, Sandeep M. Nayak, Ethan Hurwitz et al. 60 citations

Psychedelic drug experiences and near-death or other non-ordinary experiences both change people's beliefs about death, but direct comparisons are rare. In a survey of 3,192 individuals who reported such experiences, those from non-drug causes (e.g., near-death) were more likely to involve unconsciousness, clinical death, or imminent danger. Both groups reported similar reductions in fear of death, high personal meaning, spiritual significance, and psychological insight. However, psychedelic participants scored higher on standardized measures of mystical and near-death features, while non-drug participants more often rated their experience as the single most meaningful of their lives. Among psychedelics, ayahuasca and DMT produced stronger positive enduring effects than psilocybin and LSD.