Frontiers in Psychiatry
December 6, 2024
Jonathan Brett, Elizabeth Knock, Kathy Watson et al.
7 citations
A daily methamphetamine user, a 36-year-old transwoman, achieved sustained abstinence and improved mental health after a single session of psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy following inpatient withdrawal management. She reported increased self-esteem, mindfulness, and distress tolerance over three months. The case suggests that psilocybin-assisted therapy may offer a scalable, safe, and effective approach for treating methamphetamine dependence, though further research is needed to confirm generalizability.
Addiction
September 20, 2025
Elizabeth Knock, Krista J. Siefried, Gillinder Bedi et al.
4 citations
A single 25 mg dose of psilocybin combined with psychotherapy was safely delivered in an outpatient setting to 15 people seeking treatment for methamphetamine use disorder. No serious adverse events occurred; mild side effects included headache, nausea, and noise sensitivity. Methamphetamine use dropped from a median of 12 days in the prior month at screening to 0 days at 28 days and 2 days at 90 days after dosing. Craving decreased while quality of life, depression, anxiety, and stress scores improved at follow-ups. A larger randomized trial is needed to confirm efficacy.
Frontiers in Psychiatry
June 24, 2026
Kathryn Fletcher, Nadine Ezard, Krista J. Siefried et al.
People with methamphetamine use disorder who underwent ketamine-assisted psychotherapy described the treatment as a multi-stage process rather than a simple drug effect. Participants reported that ketamine created a temporary state of reduced emotional and cognitive reactivity, which they called 'psychological space,' making them more receptive to psychotherapy. However, behavioral changes—including reduced methamphetamine use—were variable and depended on ongoing therapeutic engagement, personal motivation, and life context. Participants were uncertain whether improvements came from the ketamine, the therapy, or the supportive environment. Acceptability was generally high when treatment occurred in a structured clinical setting.
Addiction
December 22, 2025
Jonathan Brett, Toby Lea, Elizabeth Knock et al.
People with methamphetamine use disorder who took part in psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy reported that the treatment was acceptable and often transformative. Before treatment, participants held tempered hopes for positive outcomes. During the psychedelic sessions, many confronted challenging emotional or psychic obstacles by deliberately 'leaning into' them, a process that led to new understandings of themselves, their personal histories, and their relationships. Resolving these obstacles was associated with a reduced importance of methamphetamine in their lives. The therapeutic relationship—characterized by concentrated attention and deep interpersonal intimacy between participant and therapist—was seen as critical to these positive changes.