Journal of Psychoactive Drugs
June 1, 2017
Álvaro José Palma-Conesa, Mireia Ventura, Liliana Galindo et al.
65 citations
New psychoactive tryptamines, which mimic the effects of regulated hallucinogens, pose a potential public health risk. Analysis of 25,296 samples submitted to a harm-reduction organization from 2006 to 2015 identified 436 tryptamines, of which 232 (53.21%) were not regulated. The most common unregulated tryptamine was 4-AcO-DMT, for which no human studies exist. Unregulated tryptamines were more likely to contain a single unadulterated substance. The number of tryptamine samples increased over time, and there were significant differences between client expectations and actual analysis results for regulated versus unregulated groups. Further research is needed to address health risks.
Drug Science Policy and Law
September 1, 2025
David Nutt, David Erritzøe, Anne Katrin Schlag et al.
9 citations
The field of psychedelic research lacks standardized terminology for clinical development, dosing, safety monitoring, and regulatory classification. A comprehensive framework is proposed that classifies psychedelics by pharmacology (serotonergic, glutamatergic, kappaergic, GABAergic, and atypical), introduces dose-dependent categories (microdose, minidose, mididose, macrodose), and standardizes terms like “short-acting” with specific pharmacokinetic parameters. Safety considerations include cardiovascular and psychological effects, with risk mitigation protocols for higher-risk compounds like ibogaine. A three-phase treatment model—preparation, dosing, and integration—is recommended as a minimum standard. The lack of comparative research on psychotherapy modalities is identified as a critical gap.
European Psychiatry
April 1, 2017
Amira Trabsa, E. Monteagudo, D.d. Mariona et al.
2 citations
Among 8324 drug samples submitted to a Spanish harm-reduction organization between 2014 and 2015, nine were gummy formulations—a novel delivery form for psychoactive substances. Analysis by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry showed that 55.5% of these gummies contained multiple drugs. The most common substance was 25N-NBOMe, found in 66.7% of samples; other detected substances included 2C-E, 2C-D, allylescaline, cocaine, THC, ketamine, MDMA, and caffeine. Only 25N-NBOMe was present in an active dosage. Two-thirds of the gummies did not contain the substance the consumer expected, indicating risks of unintended effects.