Frontier mental health research: psychedelics & drug studies

Each month our editorial team sifts through hundreds of papers and curates notable findings—for practitioners and informed readers who want to stay current with the evidence. Subscribe to the monthly Research Digest for expert analysis and concise summaries of key papers.

3 papers

Depression

Based on 77 papers

Research on treating depression is moving fast. Right now the clearest clinical evidence is for ketamine and its FDA‑approved form esketamine, which can lift symptoms quickly but often only for days or weeks. Classic psychedelics like psilocybin, and related compounds such as DMT and 5‑MeO‑DMT, show strong early promise when given with psychotherapy. However, most psychedelic studies are still small or early‑stage and need larger, well‑controlled trials. Other approaches are being tested too. MDMA‑assisted therapy has strong, growing evidence for post‑traumatic stress disorder and can also reduce some depressive symptoms, but some pooled reports have been retracted and long‑term safety and broad applicability need more study. Brain‑stimulation methods (deep brain stimulation, vagus nerve stimulation, transcranial magnetic stimulation) and combined treatments (for example ketamine plus TMS) show mixed or preliminary results. Across all these lines of research, the therapy, setting, and careful medical oversight matter. Studies also often lack diversity and long‑term follow‑up, so we cannot assume the results apply to everyone yet.

Key findings

  • Ketamine can reduce depressive symptoms within hours and often peaks around 24 hours, but the effect commonly fades after about 10–12 days without repeated treatment. 15070 12156
  • An intranasal form of esketamine has been approved by regulators for treatment‑resistant depression and for depression with acute suicidal thoughts, and trials show it can speed symptom improvement when added to a new oral antidepressant. 15070 12156
  • Clinical trials of psilocybin given with psychotherapy have repeatedly shown benefits for major depression and for anxiety and depression in people facing life‑threatening illness, but authors say larger, well‑controlled trials are still needed before it becomes a standard treatment. 15132 15056 15060
  • Some late‑stage psilocybin trials received special regulatory attention (so‑called 'Breakthrough Therapy' status), which shows strong interest but not proof of broad effectiveness or safety yet. 15049
  • MDMA‑assisted psychotherapy has produced large, positive results in trials for PTSD and has reduced related depressive symptoms in some studies; however, a pooled analysis paper listed here was later retracted, and more transparent, confirmatory data are important. 15063 15086 13467
  • The success of psychedelic or entactogen treatments is strongly linked to non‑drug factors: people’s mindset, the therapy and preparation before and after the drug session, and the physical and social setting (often called 'set and setting'). 15086 15065 15096
  • Lab and animal studies show psychedelics and ketamine can boost brain plasticity (the brain’s ability to form new connections) and reduce some markers of inflammation; but a human meta‑analysis found no consistent change in blood BDNF levels after these drugs, highlighting limits of current biological measures. 15050 15091 15129
  • Brain‑stimulation treatments show mixed evidence: small deep brain stimulation studies reported big improvements in small groups, a large one‑year vagus nerve stimulation trial had mixed main results, and combining TMS with ketamine is an early idea that needs more testing. 10166 10163 10162
  • Safety and long‑term effects are not fully known. Reports include short‑term physical or psychological side effects in trials, rare but serious risks with some drugs (for example ibogaine's cardiac risks), and persistent perception problems after hallucinogens (HPPD) in case reports. 15135 15085 15048
  • Many psychedelic studies have included mostly White participants. Researchers point out a need for much better inclusion of people of color and diverse cultural perspectives before we can know how well these treatments work for everyone. 15095 15094

The Diagnosis and Management of Bipolar I and II Disorders: Clinical Practice Update

William V. Bobo
Mayo Clinic Proceedings Summary & key facts 2017 90 citations

This 2017 clinical review explains how bipolar I and II disorders are diagnosed and treated. It says bipolar illness involves swings between manic (or hypomanic) and depressive episodes. Treatment usually needs both medicines and psychosocial therapy, and care must be adjusted over time because relapses and incomplete responses — especially…

Bipolar Disorder and Treatment Electroconvulsive Therapy Studies Schizophrenia research and treatment

Triggers for acute mood episodes in bipolar disorder: A systematic review

Catarina Cordeiro, Beatriz Côrte‐Real, Rodrigo Saraiva, Benício N. Frey, Flávio Kapczinski, Taiane de Azevedo Cardoso

This systematic review looked for events that can trigger sudden mood episodes in people with bipolar disorder. The authors examined 108 studies published up to May 23, 2022. They found the strongest evidence that antidepressant use is linked to manic or hypomanic episodes. Other reported triggers for mania included brain…

Bipolar Disorder and Treatment Electroconvulsive Therapy Studies Schizophrenia research and treatment

Antidepressant Treatment and Manic Switch in Bipolar I Disorder: A Clinical and Molecular Genetic Study

Chih‐Ken Chen, Lawrence Shih-Hsin Wu, Ming‐Chyi Huang, Chian‐Jue Kuo, Andrew T. A. Cheng

Researchers studied 1004 people with bipolar I disorder who had at least one depressive episode. They found that people who received antidepressant treatment were more likely to have a manic episode within eight weeks after their depression got better. A genetic marker (rs10262219) showed a strong signal in the first…

Adolescent and Pediatric Healthcare Bipolar Disorder and Treatment Genetics and Neurodevelopmental Disorders
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