Psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy (PAP) is feasible for patients with complex, treatment-resistant depression, including those with bipolar II disorder and baseline suicidality. In a randomized trial with 30 adults, those receiving immediate PAP showed greater reductions in depression severity (MADRS) compared to a waitlist control, with a large effect size (Hedge's g = 1.07). Adverse events were transient and no serious adverse events occurred. Repeated doses over six months were associated with further improvement. The findings suggest PAP can be safely delivered to this population and warrants further study.
A single dose of psilocybin was linked to small, temporary gains in processing speed and executive function in people with treatment-resistant depression. These cognitive improvements seemed unrelated to mood changes but did not consistently surpass the improvements expected from simply retaking the tests. The findings underscore the need for larger, controlled studies to determine whether psilocybin genuinely enhances cognition or if the observed changes stem from practice effects or mood shifts.