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An international trip: Global experts weigh in on psychedelics


 

Potential indications

Psychedelics are currently under investigation as potential treatments for major depression, treatment-resistant depression, PTSD, pain management, and anorexia, among other conditions.

In France, Florian Ferreri, MD, PhD, at Hospital Saint-Antoine, Paris, is researching ketamine for treatment of patients with suicidal crisis/ideation and treatment-resistant depression.

In the United Kingdom, David Nutt, FMedSci, Edmond J. Safra Professor of Neuropsychopharmacology at Imperial College London, and his team have conducted studies of the use of psychedelics in conjunction with psychological support for patients with treatment-resistant depression, and they are currently exploring their use in the treatment of anorexia and various pain syndromes.

In Germany, Gerhard Gründer, MD, professor of psychiatry at the Central Institute of Mental Health, in Mannheim, noted that a study of psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression will launch sometime in 2021. In Italy, current research is focusing on MDMA and ketamine in the laboratory environment and in animal models for treating depression and drug abuse.

Researcher Helen Dolengevich-Segal, MD, a psychiatrist at Hospital Universitario del Henares, Madrid, noted that although research on esketamine for the treatment of severe depressive disorder with suicidal thoughts is underway, there is very limited published research from that country into the use of classic psychedelics for various psychiatric disorders, given their current illegal status.

Mexico’s Dr. Velásquez noted that although he is prohibited from prescribing psychedelics, he does have patients who take the drugs to augment medical treatment. For instance, he said, his patients frequently use psilocybin to help with severe depression, pain, and insomnia.

Environment is key

Most researchers agree that for psychedelics to be safe and effective, patient education and administration in a controlled environment by experienced clinicians are key to successful treatment.

Roland R. Griffiths, PhD, director of the Center for Psychedelic and Consciousness Research at Johns Hopkins, said that ongoing U.S. psilocybin research – primarily in major depressive disorder and psychological distress associated with life-threatening illness, drug addiction, anorexia nervosa, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and headache – generally includes one or two treatment sessions, each of which lasts 6-8 hours.

Such sessions typically involve oral administration of a moderately high dose of a psychedelic under what he characterizes as “psychologically supported conditions.”

For Dr. Griffiths, there are serious potential risks associated with the use of psilocybin and other psychedelics outside such environments.

“When taken in uncontrolled conditions, classic psychedelics can produce confusion and disorientation resulting in behavior dangerous to the participant and others, including life-threatening risk,” he said.

Dr. Gründer agreed.

“At the moment, I cannot imagine that you would go to the pharmacy with a prescription for psilocybin and get yourself a pill and then take it in a quiet little room,” he said. Dr. Dolengevich-Segal and Dr. Velásquez echoed these sentiments, noting the optimal location for administration is one that is quiet and secure and where patients feel safe.

Luís Fernando Tófoli, MD, PhD, professor of medical psychology and psychiatry at the University of Campinas, and Eduardo Schenberg, PhD, founder and CEO of Instituto Phaneros in São Paulo, Brazil, said more research is needed to determine the optimal therapeutic environment for individual agents.

“Most studies have a low number of participants (around 20 or 30), especially in neuroimaging, with high unblinding rates,” Dr. Schenberg said. “Therefore, novel methodological approaches are also necessary, as these substances do not easily fit into the traditional pharmacology epistemic model.”

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