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Lena Elise Wessing

Department of Global Public Health, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden.

1 paper in the library · publishing 2026

Papers

Child and maternal health outcomes following antenatal exposure to classic psychedelic substances: a systematic review.

Research square May 19, 2026 Sunjuri Sun, Claudia Hanson, Peter S Hendricks et al.

The evidence on child and maternal outcomes after exposure to classic psychedelics during pregnancy is very sparse and of very low certainty. A systematic review of 42 studies, mostly case reports from high-income countries, found that LSD was the most commonly reported substance. Outcomes reported included spontaneous abortions (2 studies), stillbirth (1 study), neonatal mortality (16 studies), preterm birth (17 studies), birthweight (15 studies), and congenital malformations (26 studies). No maternal deaths were reported. Because of small sample sizes and varied study designs, no meta-analysis was possible. The authors conclude that methodologically rigorous research on psychedelic use during pregnancy is urgently needed.