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Guan Wang

University of Toronto

2 papers in the library · 20 citations · publishing 2022

Papers

Decreases in Suicidality Following Psychedelic Therapy

The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry January 13, 2022 Richard J. Zeifman, Dengdeng Yu, Nikhita Singhal et al. 18 citations

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.

Corrigendum to “Decreases in Suicidality Following Psychedelic Therapy

The Journal of Clinical Psychiatry May 9, 2022 Richard J. Zeifman, Dengdeng Yu, Nikhita Singhal et al. 2 citations correction

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.