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Jessica L. Maples‐keller

8 papers in the library · 128 citations · publishing 2022-2026

Papers

A randomized controlled trial of 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) and fear extinction retention in healthy adults

Journal of Psychopharmacology February 15, 2022 Jessica L. Maples‐keller, Seth D. Norrholm, Mark Burton et al. 53 citations

A randomized placebo-controlled trial tested whether MDMA enhances fear extinction retention in healthy adults. Participants underwent fear conditioning, then received 100 mg MDMA or placebo before extinction training. Fear retention was tested 48 hours later. MDMA was well-tolerated with no serious adverse events. While the overall analysis showed no significant group difference in extinction retention between training and test sessions, a significantly larger proportion of the MDMA group retained extinction learning compared to the placebo group. The results provide a rationale for further research into MDMA's potential effects on fear extinction.

A framework for assessment of adverse events occurring in psychedelic-assisted therapies

Journal of Psychopharmacology July 31, 2024 Roman Palitsky, Deanna M. Kaplan, John Perna et al. 32 citations

A multidisciplinary working group identified 54 potential adverse events that warrant systematic assessment in psychedelic-assisted therapies, finding that existing measurement tools substantially fail to cover these constructs. The group developed recommendations for when and how to assess these adverse events across preparation, dosing, integration, and follow-up phases, and demonstrated a preliminary assessment protocol. The framework addresses the need to capture post-acute dosing adverse events, accounting for both the pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy components of psychedelic-assisted therapy, as well as documented impacts on worldviews and spirituality.

Spiritual health practitioners’ contributions to psychedelic assisted therapy: A qualitative analysis

PLoS ONE January 2, 2024 Caroline Peacock, Erin Brauer, Ali John Zarrabi et al. 27 citations

Spiritual health practitioners bring unique expertise to psychedelic-assisted therapy based on their training and professional experience. Interviews with 15 such practitioners revealed seven themes in two domains: unique contributions (competency with spiritual material, awareness of power dynamics, familiarity with non-ordinary states, holding space, counterbalancing biomedical perspectives) and general contributions (using general therapeutic skills and supporting interdisciplinary collaboration). Their skills complement other clinical team members, and psychedelic-assisted therapy teams may benefit from including them. Further work is needed to define roles, qualifications, and training for these clinicians.

Beliefs and Perceived Barriers Regarding Psychedelic-assisted Therapy in a Pilot Study of Service Members and Veterans With a History of Traumatic Brain Injury

Military Medicine December 24, 2022 Joshua C. Gray, Mikela A. Murphy, Sierra Carter et al. 10 citations

Service members and veterans with traumatic brain injury and co-occurring symptoms initially held neutral views of psychedelic drugs and psychedelic-assisted therapies (PAT). After a brief psychoeducation session, their views of psychedelic drugs and interest in PAT became significantly more positive. Most participants supported making PAT available in medical settings if proven beneficial and would support a loved one engaging in PAT. The most common health concerns were long-term effects (43%), fear of losing one's mind (33%), fear of personality changes (33%), and fear of traumatic brain injury complications (24%). Logistical barriers included time, transportation, finances, work, and childcare, though 48% reported no barriers.

A Framework for Assessment of Adverse Events Occurring in Psychedelic Assisted Therapies

March 5, 2024 Roman Palitsky, Deanna M. Kaplan, John Perna et al. 4 citations preprint

A multidisciplinary working group identified 53 potential adverse events (AEs) specific to psychedelic-assisted therapies (PATs) that current assessment tools miss. Existing measures cover only a fraction of these constructs. The group recommends new assessment methods—including patient, clinician, and informant reports—and specifies when to measure AEs across preparation, dosing, integration, and follow-up phases. The framework addresses gaps in capturing post-acute dosing effects, including changes in worldview and spirituality, which distinguish PAT from other treatments.

State of the Science: MDMA‐assisted psychotherapy for the treatment of posttraumatic stress disorder

Journal of Traumatic Stress March 12, 2026 Leslie A. Morland, B O Rothbaum, Lauren M. Sippel et al. 2 citations

MDMA-assisted psychotherapy for PTSD shows promising results in recent randomized controlled trials, with high response and remission rates, but the FDA declined to approve it in August 2024 due to insufficient evidence. This review examines the current scientific literature on MDMA-AT, covering proposed mechanisms, methodological strengths and limitations, evidence gaps, and clinical, ethical, and regulatory issues. Key limitations include challenges with blinding, lack of active comparator conditions, no head-to-head comparisons of different therapy models, inadequate safety monitoring, and limited sample generalizability. Emerging research integrates MDMA with established trauma-focused therapies like prolonged exposure and cognitive processing therapy to leverage MDMA's effects on cognitive behavioral mechanisms.

Perspectives on Trauma Treatment, Self-Management Strategies, and Attitudes Toward Psychedelic Therapies in Individuals with Psychological Trauma Symptoms

Psychiatry and Clinical Psychopharmacology August 14, 2025 Nadav Liam Modlin, Jessica L. Maples‐keller, Maria Sarang et al.

Among 873 people who reported trauma symptoms or a PTSD/CPTSD diagnosis, 94.8% had experienced psychological trauma and 73.4% had a formal diagnosis. Many had tried multiple medications and psychotherapies but were highly dissatisfied. Significant numbers used marijuana, psychedelics, or MDMA on their own to manage symptoms, with few physical or psychological complications. After learning about MDMA and psilocybin therapies, willingness to try them was high (0.81 and 0.83, respectively). Women and heterosexual individuals showed lower willingness, while younger and more educated respondents were more willing. The findings point to a need for further clinical research and public education about risks and harm reduction.

Reading the crowd: attitudes toward psychedelics and psychedelic therapies among attendees at a conference

Psychedelics. December 17, 2024 Zachary Bosshardt, Jessica L. Maples‐keller, Deanna M. Kaplan et al.

Attendees at a conference on psychedelics and spiritual care generally agreed that microdosing may have benefits and expressed modest concern about potential harm from therapeutic psychedelic use. Among 178 survey respondents, 40.2% agreed or strongly agreed that psychedelics could be harmful therapeutically, while 30.7% were unsure. A subset of 32 psychedelic care facilitators reported using psychedelics to treat a wide range of diagnoses with diverse psychotherapy approaches and endorsed a need for cultural adaptations in psychedelic treatments.