Psychedelic Medicine
October 28, 2022
Bruna Giribaldi, Sandeep M. Nayak, Bilal A. Bari et al.
15 citations
A Bayesian reanalysis of a trial comparing psilocybin (25 mg) to escitalopram (20 mg) over 6 weeks in 59 patients with major depressive disorder found that psilocybin outperformed escitalopram on three of four depression scales, though evidence was not uniformly clinically meaningful. Using skeptical priors that bias results toward zero, the analysis showed strong to extremely strong evidence favoring psilocybin on the BDI-1A, MADRS, and HAMD-17, while evidence on the primary outcome (QIDS SR-16) was indeterminate. For clinically meaningful superiority, evidence was moderate against it for the QIDS SR-16 but moderate to strong for the MADRS and HAMD-17. Psilocybin showed extremely strong evidence of noninferiority to escitalopram across all scales. The findings support further research on psilocybin's relative efficacy.
Psychiatry Research
February 13, 2026
Sean P. Goldy, Nathan D. Sepeda, Samantha Hilbert et al.
1 citation
Psilocybin has shown remarkable potential in reducing depressive symptoms, with a clinical trial involving 216 participants revealing a 60% reduction in these symptoms after treatment. In this randomized controlled trial, varying doses were administered, demonstrating significant improvements in mood and well-being. Additionally, participants reported lasting effects beyond the initial sessions, highlighting psilocybin's promise as a transformative medicine. These findings could reshape approaches in clinical psychology and pain management, offering new avenues for therapy and enhancing the understanding of psychedelics in mental health.
June 30, 2022
Sandeep M. Nayak, Bilal A. Bari, David B. Yaden et al.
1 citation
preprint
A Bayesian reanalysis of a trial comparing psilocybin (COMP360) to escitalopram for major depressive disorder found that psilocybin outperformed escitalopram, but not by a clinically meaningful amount. The analysis also found extremely strong evidence that psilocybin is non-inferior to escitalopram. Evidence for psilocybin's superiority varied by depression scale: indeterminate for one, strong for two, and extremely strong for another. For a clinically meaningful difference, evidence was moderate against it on one scale, indeterminate on two, and moderate supporting it on one. These results provide a more nuanced interpretation and support further research.