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

MDMA

Based on 29 papers

Research shows that MDMA given together with structured therapy can help some people with hard-to-treat mental health problems. Most evidence and trials focus on post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and many studies report big symptom drops when MDMA is used inside carefully run therapy programs (not as a daily pill) [15063,15135,15086]. Scientists agree the drug is given in a supervised clinical setting with hours of preparation and follow-up therapy. They also agree that safety looks acceptable in these controlled trials, but there are important limits: harms may be underreported, the exact brain mechanisms are not fully known, and trials so far include mostly white participants and are still growing in size and scope [15096,15065,15061,15095,15078].

Key findings

  • Most MDMA research for mental health focuses on treating post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). 15063 15135 15081
  • Researchers have also tested MDMA and other psychedelic drugs for depression, anxiety, and addiction, but those areas are less developed than the PTSD work. 15098 15135 15068 15058
  • In trials, MDMA is almost always given together with psychotherapy, plus hours of preparation before the drug session and follow-up sessions afterward. 15096 15065 15063 15087
  • Studies usually use one or a few supervised drug sessions inside a wider therapy program rather than daily medication. 15086 15063
  • Clinical trials report large or clinically meaningful symptom reductions for PTSD after MDMA-assisted therapy in several studies and later-stage trials. 15063 15135 15086
  • Under controlled research conditions, safety profiles are generally reported as acceptable, but reviewers warn that side effects and harms are often not tracked consistently and may be underreported. 15135 15061 15046
  • How MDMA helps is still debated: ideas include boosting social openness, easing fear or rigid patterns in the brain, and promoting short-term plasticity, but the exact biological and psychological mechanisms are not settled. 15086 15135 15091 15081
  • Important unknowns and debates remain: trials need larger and more diverse groups of people, standard ways to report side effects, clearer rules about who will be helped, and regulators have not made universal approvals yet. 15095 15061 15078 15079

The psychedelic renaissance and the limitations of a White-dominant medical framework: A call for indigenous and ethnic minority inclusion

Jamilah R. George, Timothy I. Michaels, Jae Sevelius, Monnica T. Williams
Journal of Psychedelic Studies Summary & key facts 2019 212 citations

This paper reviews the recent comeback of psychedelic research and points out that much of that work borrows from indigenous healing traditions. The authors say Indigenous people, ethnic and racial minorities, women, and other marginalized groups are often left out of research and the mainstream story about psychedelic medicine. The…

Biochemical Analysis and Sensing Techniques Chemical synthesis and alkaloids Psychedelics and Drug Studies MDMA Psilocybin
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