A meta-analysis of 7 psychedelic therapy clinical trials found that, relative to baseline, psychedelic therapy was associated with large decreases in suicidality acutely (80–240 minutes) and at 1 day, 1–8 weeks, and 3–4 months (standardized mean differences ranging from −1.48 to −2.36). At 6 months, the effect was medium (SMD = −0.65). Reductions were significant at all time points except 7–8 weeks. Acute and post-acute elevations in suicidality were rare (6.5% and 3.0%, respectively). The authors note limitations including heterogeneous samples and interventions, and suggest that controlled trials specifically evaluating psychedelic therapy for suicidality may be warranted.
In a meta-analysis of patient-level data on psychedelics and suicidality, two serious adverse events occurred that the original study authors deemed unrelated to the drug. One participant in a very low-dose psilocybin condition (1 mg/70 kg) completed suicide 11 days after administration, having reported boredom and left the session early. Another participant attempted suicide about two months after an active psilocybin dose (21–25.2 mg/70 kg), following a partner's sudden death and subsequent methamphetamine and crack cocaine use, with a brief psychotic episode. These events highlight the need for close monitoring of all participants during and after psychedelic therapy trials.