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.

2 papers

MDMA for Sadness or low mood

Based on 23 papers

Researchers are studying MDMA mostly as part of a therapy program where the drug is given together with lots of preparation and follow-up counseling. The clearest evidence so far is for treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). For sadness or general low mood, the research is much smaller and still early. Studies and reviews say MDMA shows promise, but we do not yet have strong, broad proof that it reliably helps ordinary depression. Scientists also agree on important limits. Most trials are small, they happen in tightly controlled medical settings, and many groups of people (for example, people of color) are underrepresented. Scientists say more large, careful studies are needed to know how well MDMA works for low mood, who it helps, and what risks might show up later on.

Key findings

  • The strongest clinical evidence for MDMA-assisted therapy is for PTSD, not for ordinary sadness or low mood. 15063 15135 15078
  • MDMA-assisted psychotherapy means giving MDMA together with structured therapy sessions before and after the drug experience. 15063 15086 15065
  • For depression or general low mood, only small or early-stage studies exist so far. These suggest possible benefit but are not conclusive. 15091 15070 15086
  • MDMA is mainly an 'entactogen' — it boosts serotonin and tends to increase social openness and the ability to recall emotional memories, rather than causing classic psychedelic hallucinations. 15086 15091
  • Clinical trials done in controlled medical settings generally reported acceptable short-term safety, but long-term risks and rare harms are not fully known and regulators have not approved MDMA for broad psychiatric use. 15135 15078 15091
  • How the treatment is given matters a lot: preparation, the physical setting, trust in the therapist, and follow-up therapy strongly shape outcomes and safety. 15065 15086 15063
  • Researchers have not found a clear change in a common blood marker of brain growth (BDNF) after so‑called psychoplastogen drugs, which means simple blood tests are not yet reliable signs of treatment effects. 15129
  • Many studies are small, use different methods, and often include mostly white participants, so we cannot be sure results apply to everyone or to normal clinical settings. 15064 15095 15087

Psychedelic medicine: a re-emerging therapeutic paradigm

Kenneth W. Tupper, Evan Wood, Richard Yensen, Matthew W. Johnson

Researchers around the world have started clinical studies again to see if psychedelic drugs can help treat serious mental health problems. This work picks up after research that stopped around the 1950s. Scientists are running controlled studies to test whether these substances can safely reduce problems like depression, anxiety, addiction…

Chemical synthesis and alkaloids Neurotransmitter Receptor Influence on Behavior Psychedelics and Drug Studies Ketamine LSD

Ayahuasca and Its Main Component N,N-Dimethyltryptamine (DMT) for the Treatment of Mental Disorders: Mechanisms of Action, Clinical Studies, and Tools to Explore the Human Mind

Alice Melani, Giorgia Papini, Marco Bonaso, Letizia Biso, Shivakumar Kolachalam, Nicola Luigi Bragazzi, et al.
Biomedicines Summary & key facts 2026 0 citations

This paper reviews research on ayahuasca and its main ingredient, DMT, and how they might help with mental health. Ayahuasca is a plant brew that makes DMT work when you drink it because it also contains chemicals that stop the body from breaking DMT down. Lab studies and a small…

Alkaloids: synthesis and pharmacology Forensic Toxicology and Drug Analysis Psychedelics and Drug Studies Ayahuasca MDMA
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