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.

1 paper

PTSD

Based on 29 papers

Researchers are studying several drug-based approaches for PTSD and related problems. The strongest clinical signal so far comes from MDMA given together with structured psychotherapy. Psilocybin and ketamine also look promising, but the studies are smaller or more mixed. Many papers say the drug is only part of the treatment; careful preparation, a safe setting, and follow-up therapy are essential to what happens. Overall, the field is growing fast but still early. Some trials show large benefits, but many studies are small, some analyses have been retracted, and no psychedelic medicine is fully approved for psychiatric use yet. There are also real safety, legal, and inclusion issues that researchers and clinicians are still working through.

Key findings

  • MDMA combined with psychotherapy has shown large benefits for PTSD in multiple controlled trials, but some pooled analyses were later retracted and regulatory approval has not been settled. 15063 15098 15085 13467 15078
  • Psilocybin given together with psychotherapy has reduced depression and anxiety in several small trials, but larger and more rigorous studies are needed before it can be considered standard treatment. 15056 15063 15098 15085
  • Ketamine can decrease depressive symptoms very quickly — sometimes within hours — and clinicians typically give it as a carefully controlled infusion; molecular studies link ketamine to short‑ and longer‑term brain changes that may matter for PTSD and depression. 10149 9521 15091
  • The drug experience alone is not the whole story. Preparation, the physical setting, the therapist relationship, music, and follow‑up therapy strongly shape outcomes for psychedelic and entactogen treatments. 15065 15086 15092 15063
  • Laboratory and animal studies show classic psychedelics can boost the brain’s ability to form new connections (called neuroplasticity), but a meta‑analysis of human studies found no clear rise in blood BDNF after these drugs — so blood tests may not tell the full story. 15050 15091 15129
  • Although many trials are underway worldwide and some later‑stage studies exist, no psychedelic medicine had full approval for psychiatric disorders at the time these papers were written, and much of the evidence is still early‑stage. 15078 15085 15098
  • Clinical trials conducted under medical supervision have generally reported acceptable safety profiles, but some substances have known serious risks (for example, ibogaine’s cardiac and neurological dangers), so safety monitoring is important. 15135 15085 15050
  • People of color and Indigenous groups have been greatly underrepresented in psychedelic therapy research. This limits how well study results apply across different ethnic and cultural groups. 15095 15094
  • The psychedelic therapy market and research environment are changing quickly. This growth brings investment and new clinics, but also legal, ethical, and scientific challenges that affect how and when treatments reach patients. 15087 15079 15078

The effectiveness of psychodynamic psychotherapies: An update

Peter Fonagy
World Psychiatry Summary & key facts 2015 241 citations

Researchers reviewed many outcome studies and meta-analyses of psychodynamic therapy, which is a type of talking therapy that explores feelings, relationships, and past experiences. They found that psychodynamic therapy often works better than doing nothing (for example being on a waitlist, getting only usual care, or a placebo) for depression,…

Mental Health and Psychiatry Personality Disorders and Psychopathology Psychotherapy Techniques and Applications
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