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Mydecine signs psychedelic research agreement with Johns Hopkins

The agreement aims to advance research on novel psychedelic therapies to treat mental health and addiction disorders.

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Mydecine signs psychedelic research agreement with Johns Hopkins

Mydecine Innovations Group has signed a five-year psychedelic research agreement with Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

The agreement between emerging biotech and life sciences company Mydecine and Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine (JHU) will allow for collaboration on numerous research initiatives in the coming years. The agreement aims to advance research on novel psychedelic therapies to treat mental health and addiction disorders.

Advancing psychedelic research 

Mydecine Innovations Group develops and commercialises innovative solutions for treating mental health problems and enhancing vitality, and is building an R&D pipeline of nature-sourced psychedelic-assisted therapeutics, novel compounds, therapy protocols, and unique delivery systems. The company has exclusive access to a full cGMP certified pharmaceutical manufacturing facility, and is able to import, export, cultivate, extract, isolate, and analyse active mushroom compounds with full government approval through Health Canada.

The partnership with Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine will see the collaborative research led by professor of psychiatry and behavioural sciences at the University, Dr Matthew Johnson, PhD, who has extensive experience conducting clinical research related to the therapeutic use of psychedelics.

Mydecine CEO Josh Bartch commented: “We are excited to expand on the current work we are conducting with Dr Matt Johnson and his team at JHU in regards to smoking cessation to include numerous other projects over the next five years. The researchers at JHU have proven their incredible depth of knowledge in the field.”

“The long-term potential of this research agreement is captivating for us here at Mydecine,” said Mydecine CSO and co-founder, Rob Roscow. “It demonstrates our commitment to advancing psychedelic medicine by exploring multiple molecules and medicines for a variety of indications.”

See also  Breaking Convention: bringing together leading minds in psychedelics

Mydecine CMO, Dr Rakesh Jetly added: “Despite the recent attention to opiate and dependance on other illicit substances, we sometimes forget about the incredible burden that nicotine dependence has on our societies.

“According to the CDC, cigarette smoking is the leading cause of preventable disease and death in the United States, killing more than 480,000 Americans each year. Despite all the public education and dire warnings, cigarette smoking remains one of the most difficult addiction to treat and contributes to more deaths than all the other substances combined, making research like this vital.”

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Evegreen

Compass Pathways’ CEO on Potentially Being the First To Bring a Classic Psychedelic To Market

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Compass Pathways is one of the companies spearheading clinical development of synthetic psilocybin, the compound naturally found in psilocybin mushrooms. 

Founded in 2016, Compass Pathways built its company around COMP360, a proprietary synthetic psilocybin formulation. Currently ready to begin a second phase 3 trial in treatment-resistant depression, Compass is expecting to potentially lead the first approval of a classic psychedelic by the U.S. FDA.

Psychedelic Health sat down with Compass Pathways CEO Kabir Nath, to discuss the company’s most recent milestones and plans for the future, ahead of the company’s stage appearance at PSYCH Symposium: London 2025, happening at Conway Hall, December 4.

In its most recent quarterly call, Compass emphasized the successful primary endpoint in its first Phase 3 trial, positioning COMP360, as the first psychedelic treatment to reach this milestone in treatment-resistant depression. 

The company reported plans to accelerate commercial readiness, expand provider education, and continue learning from their clinical delivery collaborations to support regulatory submission and launch timelines, underscoring its transition from experimental research toward potential market entry.The company recently announced that based on recent successes and developments, it’s pulling forward the projected launch date for COMP360 by about one year.

“We had a good discussion with the FDA about the potential for a rolling submission and rolling review, which for the psychiatry division would definitely be something they have not historically done,” said Nath.

These measures could put the drug in a fast track status with the FDA, allowing it to reach the market sooner than previously expected.

See also  Use of psychedelics among psychedelic therapists may be common

Nath says that because Compass has already completed enrollment in their second psilocybin study, they’re now looking to have a significant data release in the first quarter of next year.

“That suggests we could potentially be looking at a launch in early 2027,” he said, which would mean a pull forward of roughly one year from previous projections of a launch in 2028.

“We have runway into 2027, so we have cash to see us through all of our phase 3 readouts,” he said.

In its most recent financial results, the company reported having $185.9 million USD (£140.7 million) in cash or cash equivalents.

Dealing With Lykos Therapeutics’ FDA Rejection

Last year, the U.S. FDA rejected an application from Lykos Therapeutics, formerly MAPS, for the approval of MDMA therapy. The event marked a low point in the history of the recent psychedelic renaissance, taking many activists and investors to wonder when one of these compounds would finally reach approval by a major regulating body.

Nath made a point to separate Compass’ pipeline from that of Lykos.

“MDMA is not a classic psychedelic, MDMA is more of a pathogen, and so the therapy component is really important for MDMA, the actual dialog, the interaction with a therapist. For classical psychedelics like psilocybin or LSD, that’s not the case” he said.

While Lykos were trying to get a drug/therapy combination approved, Compass is trying to get a drug with monitoring and support approved. This marks a major difference from how the two companies present their results to the FDA.

Since Lykos was a spin-off from MAPS, which is an NGO working for decades to gather data on MDMA treatment, this could have led to issues around “some of the basics around safety, safety reporting, and collection of adverse events,” said Nath.

See also  First subject dosed in Phase 1 DMT stroke study

While Compass is looking at the U.S. market first, it has designed its studies with scientific advisors from Europe and the UK.

“We know that if these studies are successful, they would meet regulatory standards in Europe, but obviously that would be a separate application,” Nath said.

How Does Compass See Its Role and Influence As a Market Leader?

If COMP360 becomes approved, it will invariably influence the broader psychedelics space since it would be the most significant event since psychedelics came back into mainstream attention for healthcare use, starting in the early 2000s.

How does Compass see its ability to influence the broader market and levels of excitement moving investors and the general audience to become interested in these drugs?

“We are focused on executing this ourselves and, getting COMP360 across the finish line. But I completely recognize that, because we are likely to be the first, by some way, what we do and how we set about commercializing and being successful, is going to influence how others do,” says Nath.

Still, Nath is sure to point out that “the infrastructure that’s already been established for Spravato is actually the infrastructure that most of us in psychedelics will be plugging into.”

That means that treatment with COMP360 could potentially be provided by the same clinics currently providing treatment with ketamine, which means the drug could count with an existing infrastructure of thousands of clinics across the U.S., the UK and Europe ready to provide its treatment.

See also  Braxia to conduct landmark psilocybin clinical trial for depression
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Evegreen

Can Ego Death Be Measured? New Study Finds Link in Brain Activity After One DMT Dose

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A new study in The Journal of Neuroscience has shed light on how the psychedelic N,N-Dimethyltryptamine, or DMT, changes brain activity during its most intense psychological effects.

The research focuses on a key experience reported by many users of the drug, the temporary disappearance of the sense of self, often called ego-dissolution.

DMT is known for producing rapid, vivid and immersive psychedelic states that unfold within minutes. The study, led by Mona Irrmischer and colleagues, set out to identify what happens in the brain during this altered state, and how those changes relate to subjective feelings of becoming “less of a person,” or losing individual identity.

Dr Christopher Timmermann, one of the study’s co-authors, will be a panelist at the upcoming PSYCH Symposium: London 2025, on December 4 at London’s Conway Hall, where key figures in the psychedelics space will meet to discuss the future of policy, research and patient roll out.

To investigate this, the researchers used electroencephalography, EEG, which records electrical activity from the scalp. Twenty-seven healthy volunteers took part in two separate clinical sessions. In one, they were injected with DMT. In the other, they received a placebo saline injection. Neither participants nor experimenters were told which session was which at the time. EEG was recorded before and after injection, and participants later rated their subjective experience, including whether they felt the boundaries of their self dissolve.

The team measured what they call “criticality,” a property of brain activity that reflects the balance between order and randomness. A near-critical brain is thought to be versatile, able to shift fluidly between different states. It maintains patterns across long periods of time, which helps organize thought, perception and the experience of continuous identity. When the brain moves away from this balance, signals may become either too rigid or too chaotic.

See also  First-of-its-kind psilocin for major depression trial approved by UK’s MHRA

To quantify this, the researchers used two tools. One, detrended fluctuation analysis, or DFA, measures how consistent brain rhythms remain over longer timescales. Higher values indicate more structured, temporally coherent activity. Lower values show more noise and unpredictability. The other measure, the functional excitatory-inhibitory ratio, distinguishes whether changes push the brain toward suppressed subcritical states or toward unstable supercritical activity.

Under DMT, DFA values dropped significantly across several frequency bands, especially alpha rhythms. This means brain signals became less temporally organized and more entropic. The effect was widespread, not limited to a small region, indicating a broad shift in how neural networks behave over time.

The excitatory-inhibitory analysis provided further clarity. Rather than showing runaway excitation, the changes suggested that DMT pushed brain dynamics toward subcritical states, especially in parietal and occipital regions. These parts of the brain help integrate sensory information and support internal models that anchor a person’s sense of being a continuous self. Under DMT, their activity became less structured and less stable.

Critically, these neural shifts were directly tied to how people felt. Participants who reported stronger ego-dissolution also showed the biggest reductions in criticality, particularly in theta and alpha bands. This correlation suggests that the breakdown of long-range, temporally organized brain activity is closely linked to the subjective loss of self.

The authors emphasize that these effects do not resemble unconsciousness. Instead, they reflect a brain that cannot maintain its usual long-term patterns of self-representation. Without the steady temporal scaffolding that normally supports identity, experience becomes immediate, immersive and unanchored.

See also  UK advisory body issues rapid response on psychedelics for anxiety

The study challenges a simple picture of psychedelics as increasing brain flexibility by moving closer to a balanced critical state. Under DMT, entropy does increase, but the rhythms most involved in self-processing move away from balanced dynamics. The result is not random chaos but a specific weakening of the neural patterns that hold the self together.

By showing how a psychedelic alters the brain in real time, the research provides a clearer biological explanation for one of the most mysterious psychedelic effects. It points to ego-dissolution not as a vague spiritual idea, but as a measurable change in how the brain organizes its activity over time.

Image made using AI tools.

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Events

PSYCH Symposium: London 2025—What To Expect At Europe’s Landmark Psychedelic Gathering

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On 4 December 2025, London’s Conway Hall will host the third PSYCH Symposium, bringing together leaders across science, policy, investment and clinical medicine to chart the next phase of psychedelic healthcare in Europe.

Organised by Prohibition Partners in partnership with Drug Science, the gathering follows two sold out editions in 2022 and 2023.

The 2025 programme will explore the latest developments in psychedelic research, regulation and clinical delivery. Confirmed speakers include Drug Science’s Chair, Professor David Nutt, who’s also Professor of Neuropsychopharmacology and Head of the Centre for Psychedelic Research at Imperial College London, Jeff Smith MP, Co chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Drug Policy Reform, Professor Celia Morgan, Chair of Psychopharmacology at the University of Exeter, Dr Chris Timmermann, Research Fellow at University College London, and Nige Netzband, Founder of Athletes Journey Home UK, among many others.

Panels, keynotes, workshops and fireside interviews will examine new clinical data on psilocybin, MDMA, ketamine and emerging compounds, as well as policy frameworks, regulatory considerations, patient access and ethics within psychedelic assisted therapies.

Attendees at PSYCH Symposium London 2025 will engage in a fireside conversation titled “Are We Ready? The Future of Psychedelic Medicine in Mainstream Healthcare,” where Professor David Nutt and Dr Guy Goodwin, Chief Medical Officer at Compass Pathways, will examine whether psychedelic-assisted therapies can scale beyond specialist clinics and trials. 

Another key session, “MDMA-Assisted Psychotherapy: Working Out How It Works,”, features Professor Sunjeev Kamboj and Elisa Liberati presenting UCL’s latest MDMA trial (in collaboration with Drug Science)

See also  Netherlands Phase 1 DMT clinical trial doses first patients

 In “Disrupting Dependency: Psilocybin Therapy for Opioid Use Disorder,” experts will present early evidence from clinical trials that explore psilocybin as a treatment for opioid addiction, a pressing public health concern in the UK and beyond and in “Designing Breakthroughs: A New Human Study for Anorexia Treatment,” Dr Nadya Lisovoder of Shortwave Life Sciences and Roei Zerahia of MSICS Pharma outline a feasibility study exploring psychedelic assisted treatment for anorexia nervosa.

Two panels, including “Bridging the Gap Between Indigenous Wisdom and Modern Science” and “The Jungle vs. The Journal: What Western Science is Missing” examines the divide between clinical research and traditional indigenous practices. 

Organisers position the symposium as a forum designed to shape realistic and responsible pathways for psychedelic medicine in the UK, Europe and abroad. London’s role is central because the city hosts leading research institutions, an active investment community and an environment where regulatory innovation is closely monitored by international stakeholders.

Stephen Murphy, founder and CEO of Prohibition Partners, has characterised PSYCH Symposium as a focal meeting point for Europe’s psychedelic medicine sector, bringing investors, regulators, researchers and clinical leaders together in one place. He also emphasised the importance of grounding the conversation in patient needs and health outcomes, a theme he has carried through his broader work in emerging health industries.

“The sector is entering a phase where evidence, governance and clinical standards matter more than headlines. At PSYCH Symposium we want to create a space where scientists, policymakers and practitioners can examine what is working, what is not, and what must be built next for psychedelic treatments to serve patients safely and effectively,” said Murphy.

See also  Research reveals role of DNA on therapeutic effect of psychedelics

Professor David Nutt recently said to Psychedelic Health that he continues to strive for the regulation and equitable access of psychedelics because he believes they’re are “the most exciting new treatments for mental health disorders and addictions in half a century.”

Attendees at PSYCH Symposium can expect a curated and focused environment. The symposium is designed to facilitate meaningful exchanges between clinical trial leaders, policymakers, funders and practitioners, with attention to the specific regulatory and clinical context of the UK.

As psychedelic medicine moves toward more formal integration into mental healthcare systems, PSYCH Symposium London 2025 aims to consolidate current progress, present new evidence and support informed discussion on pathways to wider patient access. 

The full agenda for the event can be found at https://www.psychsymposium.com/agenda

Picture: PSYCH Symposium 2022 edition

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Psychedelic Health is a journalist-led news site. Any views expressed by interviewees or commentators do not reflect our own. We do not provide medical advice or promote the personal use of psychedelic compounds. Please seek professional medical advice if you are concerned about any of the issues raised.

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