Connect with us

Research

Microdosing could be a tool for improving mental health, shows new study

The researchers say the data helps to expand understanding of how small doses of psychedelics could help mental health.

Published

on

Microdosing could be a tool for improving mental health, shows new study

New findings from a citizen science study suggest that microdosing psychedelics could be a valuable tool in the battle against poor mental health.

Findings from a new, international study suggest that regular microdoses of psychedelics – such as LSD or psilocybin – could be a beneficial for those struggling with anxiety and depression.

Published in the journal Nature: Scientific Reports and led by University of British Columbia Okanagan Campus (UBCO) researchers, the citizen science study reported fewer symptoms of anxiety and depression and greater feelings of wellbeing in individuals who had reported microdosing compared to those who did not.

See also  Microdosing: separating fact from fiction

UBCO doctoral student and lead author Joseph Rootman, commented: “In total, we followed more than 8,500 people from 75 countries using an anonymous self-reporting system — about half were following a microdosing regimen and half were not.

“In comparing microdosers and non-microdosers, there was a clear association between microdosing and fewer symptoms of depression, anxiety and stress — which is important given the high prevalence of these conditions and the substantial suffering they cause.”

Renowned mycologist Paul Stamets collaborated on the study, which is the first to systematically examine the practice of “stacking” – combining microdoses of psychedelics with other substances like niacin, lions mane mushrooms and cacao. Some believe these work in conjunction to maximise benefit. The authors note, however, that: “caution is warranted when interpreting claims related to the synergistic effects of stacked substances and psilocybin in humans” as empirical studies largely involve animal models.

Dr Zach Walsh, psychology professor in UBCO’s Irving K. Barber Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, added: “These findings highlight adults who are microdosing to treat their mental health conditions and enhance their wellbeing — rather than simply to get high.

“We have an epidemic of mental health problems, with existing treatments that don’t work for everyone. We need to follow the lead of patients who are taking these initiatives to improve their wellbeing and reduce suffering.”

The researchers say that the most commonly used substance in the sample was psilocybin at 85 per cent, and that both groups in the sample demonstrated rates of cannabis use and macrodoses of psychedelics that exceeded what might be expected in a general community sample in Canada, the USA and Europe.

According to the study, participant motivations for microdosing included reducing anxiety and depression, as well as increasing spirituality, and that the use of cannabis amongst the sample indicates therapeutic use. They highlight: “Future research that examines microdosing should more carefully examine the co-use of cannabis and microdosing and explicitly query therapeutic versus non therapeutic motivations for cannabis use. Similar considerations might also apply to the high levels of large-dose psychedelic use.”

Clinical studies on microdosing can be difficult to carry out – as both LSD and psilocybin are classed as Schedule 1 drugs in the US and the UK, asking participants to take controlled substances home is generally not feasible. 

Regarding the citizen science approach, study co-author Kalin Harvey, chief technology officer of Quantified Citizen, a mobile health research platform, commented: “The use of citizen science allows us to examine the effects of behaviours that are difficult to study in the lab due to regulatory challenges and stigma associated with the now discredited ‘war on drugs.’”

Walsh added: “These cross-sectional findings are promising and highlight the need for further investigation to better determine the impacts of factors like dosage and stacking. 

“While the data is growing to support the use of psychedelics like psilocybin in large doses to treat depression and addiction — our data also helps to expand our understanding of how psychedelics may also help in smaller doses.”

The study authors state: “Our results indicate health and wellness motives and perceived mental health benefits among microdosers, and highlight the need for further research into the mental health consequences of microdosing including studies with rigorous longitudinal designs.” And that “Carefully controlled clinical trials are required to more confidently elucidate the potential risks and benefits of psychedelic microdosing…”.

They also add that: “…although the present study identified statistically significant differences in psychiatric symptom severity based on microdose status, these effects were in the range of effects typically characterised as small. Any conclusions regarding the clinical import of these findings should consider these small effects and the limitations inherent in self-reported effects and cross-sectional design.”

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Research

Landmark UK trial to investigate psilocybin for opioid addiction relapse

Published

on

For the first time, a government-funded UK trial will investigate psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy for targetting relapses associated with opioid addiction, aiming to bring an innovative new therapy to the NHS if successful. 

Research shows that the UK had the world’s highest rate of opioid consumption in 2019, amounting to a serious public health concern. Further, figures show that around 140,000 people are accessing treatment for opioid dependence in the country. Despite the prevalence of opioid addiction, there are currently limited medicines to help prevent relapses during recovery.

Led by Imperial College London, the new study will use psilocybin combined with psychological support in people who have recently undergone detoxification from opioids such as heroin, methadone or buprenorphine.

While previous research into psilocybin has shown its potential as a treatment for conditions such as depression, anxiety PTSD and addiction, this is the first trial looking at the medicine for addiction relapse.

See also  Compass Pathways launches Phase 3 psilocybin trial in UK

The study is one of four projects focused on reducing drug deaths that have been funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) as part of the Addiction Healthcare Goals programme, led by the Office for Life Science (OLS). 

According to the NHIR, the programme forms part of the Department of Health and Social Care’s plan to deliver a world-class treatment and recovery system for people experiencing drug and alcohol addictions.

Dr David Erritzoe, Clinical Director and Deputy Head of the Centre for Psychedelic Research at Imperial College London, project co-lead, said in a press statement: “We know that up to 90% of people relapse back to opioid use within 12 months of finishing detox, so finding new and effective treatments is essential. 

“If this trial is successful, it offers hope for a new type of treatment that could make a significant difference to this group of people.

“If our initial trial is successful, we will work to enable the development of further clinical trials in larger populations, to bring a new treatment to patients and the NHS.”

Participants will attend Imperial’s NIHR Clinical Research Facility at Hammersmith Hospital campus to receive psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy and will receive functional MRI brain scans to enable investigation of the mechanisms of psilocybin in the brain.

Imperial has confirmed that participants will be monitored for up to six months following dosing to track any changes to their opioid use, cravings, mental health outcomes and psychological wellbeing. 

Study co-lead Dr Louise Paterson said in a press statement: “This trial will examine whether we can improve recovery in a severely under-served group of people – namely, those with opioid dependence during their most vulnerable post-detox phase. 

“Clinical studies, including those in our Centre for Psychedelic Research, have shown great promise for this type of treatment in other mental health conditions. We want to see if it works equally well for opioid use disorder.”

Professor Anne Lingford-Hughes, Chair of the Addiction Healthcare Goals, and who is also a Professor of Addiction Biology at Imperial, added: “New approaches to treat drug addiction and reduce drug-related deaths, particularly from overdose, are urgently needed. 

“The Addiction Healthcare Goals programme is pleased to fund promising innovations that have brought together partnerships between industry, academia and organisations involved in delivering treatment and care for those experiencing drug addictions.” 

Recruitment is expected to begin in Spring 2025.

Continue Reading

Research

Psilocybin versus escitalopram for depression shows positive results

Published

on

Compass Pathways launches Phase 3 psilocybin trial in UK

A six-month follow-up study of a Phase 2 clinical trial investigating psilocybin versus escitalopram for the treatment of major depressive disorder has shown positive results.

Around 30% of people living with depression in the UK are resistant to current treatments, highlighting an urgent need for new therapies. As the researchers of this study highlight, even for patients who have had their depression successfully treated, there is a high risk of relapse, with one in three patients relapsing within the year.

Equally, SSRI treatments often include side effects such as sexual dysfunction, weight gain, fatigue, and emotional blunting.

The authors note that a key consideration of any treatment of major depressive disorder “is its capacity to produce sustained antidepressant response or remission.”

Mounting evidence is increasingly pointing to psilocybin-assisted therapy as an innovative new treatment for the condition, with clinical trials showing that the therapy is capable of producing rapid and long-lasting antidepressant effects.

However, while clinical trials have investigated the treatment itself, they have not compared the treatment to the current gold standard in depression medications or looked at the long-term effects of the treatment.

This Phase 2 trial is the first to compare the long-term antidepressant effects of these two treatments alongside mental health measures including work and social functioning, connectedness, and meaning in life. 

In the trial, patients with major depressive disorder recruited from a UK hospital were administered either two doses of 25mg of psilocybin along with psychological support, or a six-week course of the selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor (SSRI) escitalopram in combination with psychological support.

The findings, published in eClinicalMedicine, revealed that both administered treatments saw sustained improvements in depressive symptoms, however, patients who were administered psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy saw greater lasting improvements. 

These improvements included psychosocial functioning, meaning in life, and psychological connectedness.

Dr James Rucker, Consultant Psychiatrist & Senior Clinical Lecturer in Psychopharmacology, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King’s College London, said: “The authors have tended to attribute differences observed in this study to comparative differences between the drugs themselves, however, it is also possible that the results reflect biased reporting between groups. 

“This is more likely here because A) studies involving psilocybin tend to attract those with positive preconceptions about psilocybin and negative preconceptions about conventional antidepressants, and B) study participants were unblinded during the long-term follow-up phase that is reported in the paper, so knew which condition they were allocated to.

“This said, the nature of depression varies hugely between individuals, and this calls for the development of a similarly varied suite of treatment paradigms. Psilocybin therapy is certainly a different paradigm of treatment to escitalopram. 

“The observation of similar levels of effectiveness to antidepressants here is encouraging to see alongside the much larger trials of psilocybin currently underway here in the UK, Europe and the US.”

The authors write: “Key limitations of the study include its suboptimal power to detect small but meaningful differences between treatments, missing data, the potential use of additional interventions during the follow-up period, and reliance on self-reported treatment assessments. 

“These factors may affect the interpretation of the study findings and should be considered when evaluating the results.”

With these considerations in mind, the researchers suggest that the findings warrant further investigation into psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy for the treatment of depression.

Continue Reading

Research

Shortwave Life Sciences psilocybin drug shows positive results in anorexia trial

Published

on

Shortwave Life Sciences psilocybin drug positive results anorexia trial

Shortwave Life Sciences has announced it has achieved a significant breakthrough in its ambitions to transform eating disorder care with positive pre-clinical results from its latest pharmacodynamics study, demonstrating the safety of its psilocybin-based drug combination for the treatment of anorexia nervosa.

Anorexia nervosa has one of the highest fatality rates. The condition is a complex mental health condition as well as a metabolic disease, yet no FDA-approved pharmacological treatments are currently available for the condition.

Shortwave Life Sciences in collaboration with Science in Action, an expert pre-clinical GLP-certified lab in Israel, has now tested the safety of buccal administration of Shortwave’s combination drug comprised of psilocybin and a beta-carboline.

The company says this novel treatment provides an expanded mechanism of action and a therapeutic effect superior to psilocybin alone, impacting more than one group of receptors in the brain.

For the study, three groups of rats were given varying doses of the combination drug (0.23ml, 0.5ml, and 1ml), with results showing no adverse effects, weight changes, or behavioural changes following the psychedelic effects.

See also  Short Wave Pharma: innovating eating disorder care with psychedelics

“This is a monumental step forward for Shortwave. Our relentless pursuit of breakthrough mental health treatments comes with the responsibility of ensuring safety at every stage,” commented Shortwave Life Sciences CEO Rivki Stern Youdkevich.

“We are proud of the positive outcomes from this rigorous pre-clinical trial, further validating our patent-pending drug combination and buccal delivery system.

“With this success, we are reaffirmed in our approach to addressing the global mental health crisis.”

In the pre-clinical pharmacodynamics study, all subjects remained healthy and unaffected during the trial, which Shortwave has stated marks a strong foundation for future clinical development.

Furthermore, no adverse events or vital sign changes were reported across all groups, and the results confirmed the safety profile for the psilocybin-based combination drug at elevated doses.

This achievement comes on the heels of the International PCT Examining Committee’s recent acknowledgment of Shortwave’s patent claims for its novel, non-obvious, and industrially applicable mucoadhesive buccal film.

Designed for rapid absorption and bypassing liver and gut degradation, the platform holds transformative potential for patients facing metabolic and psychiatric challenges. This method of administration is designed to be sensitive to patient needs, who may not want to swallow the medicine, and also provides higher bioavailability.

Continue Reading

Trending

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.

Copyright © 2023 Psych Capital Plc