Journal of psychoactive drugs
January 1, 2019
Anne C Wagner, Michael C Mithoefer, Ann T Mithoefer et al.
92 citations
Combining Cognitive Behavioral Conjoint Therapy for PTSD (CBCT) with MDMA-assisted psychotherapy in a small pilot trial can reduce PTSD symptoms and improve relationship satisfaction. A case study of one couple with a severe trauma history, representative of the trial participants, details the integrated methodology and the couple's treatment experience. The article describes how these two therapeutic modalities were merged and demonstrates that the combination produces positive outcomes, including symptom reduction and enhanced relationship functioning.
European journal of psychotraumatology
December 7, 2020
Candice M Monson, Anne C Wagner, Ann T Mithoefer et al.
90 citations
A small pilot study tested whether adding MDMA to cognitive-behavioural conjoint therapy (CBCT) for PTSD is safe and effective. Six couples, where one partner had PTSD, completed a condensed 7-week CBCT protocol that included two sessions where both partners received MDMA. No serious side effects occurred. PTSD symptoms improved substantially, as rated by clinicians, patients, and partners (effect sizes d = 1.85–3.59). Patients also showed improvements in depression, sleep, emotion regulation, and trauma-related beliefs. Relationship adjustment and happiness improved for both patients and partners (d = 0.64–2.79). MDMA may enhance CBCT's benefits for individuals with PTSD and their partners.
Journal of affective disorders
August 1, 2023
Richard J Zeifman, Anne C Wagner, Candice M Monson et al.
56 citations
In a double-blind randomized controlled trial comparing psilocybin therapy (two 25 mg sessions plus daily placebo for six weeks) with escitalopram (two 1 mg psilocybin sessions plus 10-20 mg daily escitalopram for six weeks) among 59 individuals with major depressive disorder, reductions in experiential avoidance mediated improvements in well-being, depression severity, suicidal ideation, and trait anxiety only in the psilocybin group. Exploratory analyses indicated that these improvements (except for suicidal ideation) occurred serially through increased connectedness. Experiences of ego dissolution and psychological insight predicted reductions in experiential avoidance. The findings support reduced experiential avoidance as a mechanism underlying psilocybin therapy's positive outcomes.
Frontiers in psychiatry
January 1, 2021
Anne C Wagner, Rachel E Liebman, Ann T Mithoefer et al.
40 citations
Healing from trauma happens in relationships, and PTSD affects more than just the diagnosed individual. In a pilot trial of Cognitive Behavioral Conjoint Therapy (CBCT) for PTSD combined with two MDMA psychotherapy sessions, six romantic couples where one partner had PTSD showed improvements across multiple areas. Both partners reported increases in post-traumatic growth, relational support, and social intimacy. Partners also reported less behavioral accommodation and conflict, while patients with PTSD reported better psychosocial functioning and empathic concern. These gains lasted through a 6-month follow-up. The findings suggest that combining CBCT with MDMA can improve relational and growth outcomes, supporting a dyadic approach to holistic trauma recovery.
European journal of psychotraumatology
January 1, 2024
Richard J Zeifman, Hannes Kettner, Stephen Ross et al.
34 citations
Therapeutic alliance—the quality of the relationship between therapist and client—predicts improvement in PTSD symptoms after MDMA-assisted psychotherapy. Among 22 adults with chronic PTSD who received MDMA during a clinical trial, stronger therapeutic alliance measured at sessions 4 and 9 (but not before the third session) was associated with lower clinician-assessed PTSD severity after treatment, even after accounting for initial symptom severity. Self-reported PTSD severity was also predicted by alliance at baseline, session 4, and session 9, though the baseline finding did not survive correction for multiple comparisons. These results provide initial evidence that common psychotherapeutic factors like alliance contribute to outcomes in MDMA-assisted therapy.