Older adults (65+) account for less than 1.4% of participants in psychedelic clinical trials, despite these compounds showing potential for conditions common in this age group, such as depression, anxiety, and existential distress. A systematic review of 36 trials involving 1,400 patients found only 19 were aged 65 or older. Safety data for 10 of these older adults showed no serious adverse events; only transient mild-to-moderate effects like anxiety, gastrointestinal upset, and hypertension occurred during dosing sessions. The authors conclude that psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy appears safe and well tolerated in older adults and warrants more rigorous investigation for psychiatric treatment in this population.
Older adults are severely underrepresented in clinical trials of psychedelic-assisted therapies. A systematic review of 36 studies with 1,400 patients found that only 19 participants were aged 65 or older, less than 1.4% of the total. Detailed safety data for 10 of these older adults showed no serious adverse events; only mild-to-moderate side effects such as anxiety, gastrointestinal upset, and hypertension occurred during dosing sessions. The evidence, though limited, suggests that psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy is safe and well tolerated in older adults and should be more rigorously studied for treating psychiatric conditions in this population.