Psychiatry and Clinical Neurosciences
October 1, 2024
Shakila Meshkat, Fatemeh Gholaminezhad, Eric Vermetten et al.
24 citations
A systematic review of 20 studies with 2,959 participants found that psilocybin's effects on cognitive function are mixed. Global cognitive function and processing speed remained mostly unchanged in healthy individuals, while improvements in sustained attention, working memory, and executive function were reported in patients with treatment-resistant depression. Emotional processing and empathy were positively modified, especially in these patients, but cognitive empathy and social cognition were not significantly altered. Cognitive flexibility and creative cognition initially declined but could improve over time. Psilocybin improved semantic associations and associative learning, but effects on episodic and verbal memory were less pronounced than with other cognitive enhancers.
Pharmaceutics
March 25, 2025
Shakila Meshkat, Huda Al-Shamali, Argyrios Perivolaris et al.
22 citations
Psilocybin is rapidly converted to its active metabolite psilocin after oral intake. Psilocin reaches peak concentration in blood plasma between 1.8 and 4 hours, with maximum concentration ranging from 8.2 ng/mL in plasma to 871 ng/mL in urine, depending on dose. Its bioavailability is about 53%, and it distributes extensively into tissues, with volume of distribution between 277 and 1016 liters. Metabolism involves CYP2D6 and CYP3A4 enzymes, plus monoamine oxidase A, producing 4-hydroxyindole-3-acetic acid and 4-hydroxytryptophol. Elimination half-life ranges from 1.5 to 4 hours. These pharmacokinetics vary with dosage, route, and species, and the role of CYP enzymes indicates possible drug interactions.
Journal of Clinical Medicine
February 20, 2025
Shakila Meshkat, Taha Malik, Jennifer Swainson et al.
3 citations
A systematic review examined whether psychedelic therapies can rapidly reduce suicide risk. Four randomized controlled trials reported significant reductions in suicidal ideation with psilocybin (three studies) and MDMA-assisted therapy (one study), with effect sizes (Cohen's d) ranging from 0.52 to 1.25 and no safety issues. Five additional randomized trials also showed reductions. Among 24 non-randomized and cross-sectional studies, results were mixed: psilocybin reduced suicidal ideation (odds ratios 0.40–0.75), MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD showed a pooled effect of d = 0.61, while LSD was associated with increased odds of suicidality (odds ratios 1.15–2.08). DMT studies showed no significant effects. The evidence remains inconclusive, underscoring the need for further trials.
European Psychiatry
January 1, 2026
Shakila Meshkat, Qiaowei Lin, Rachel Sousa-Ho et al.
Control groups in psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy trials show substantial symptom improvement, likely due to non-specific factors such as expectancy and concurrent psychotherapy. A meta-analysis of 14 randomized controlled trials (643 participants) found that treatment groups had greater symptom reductions than control groups for depressive symptoms, PTSD symptoms, and anxiety symptoms. For PTSD, inactive placebo groups showed larger within-group improvements. The findings underscore the need for robust control conditions and careful interpretation of treatment effects in psychedelic research.
The International Journal of Neuropsychopharmacology
August 1, 2025
Nicolo Fabila, Nimshitha Pavathuparambil Abdul Manaph, V Rudkowsky et al.
Psilocybin, at a dose of 2 mg/kg, did not reduce compulsive eating in a rat model of binge eating disorder. Female rats given intermittent access to a high-fat/high-sugar diet for 10 weeks showed no change in how quickly they started eating or how much they ate after psilocybin treatment, compared to saline. The compound may have affected freezing behavior, suggesting possible modulation of fear-related learning and memory circuits, though analysis is ongoing. Binge eating disorder is the most common eating disorder and current treatments are limited. Psilocybin is known to promote neuroplasticity, but at this dose it did not alter compulsive-like eating behavior in the conditioned suppression test.