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Psychedelics could provide benefits for OCD

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Psychedelics could provide benefits OCD

A team of researchers has analysed the experience of people with Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD) who have taken psychedelics, finding 30% experienced relief from their symptoms. 

OCD affects around 2% of people across the globe, however, the current treatment of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) can be slow to produce results, and many people do not respond. 

Anne Buot, a post-doctoral fellow in cognitive neuroscience, explains that clinical research from the 1970s points to psychedelics – particularly LSD and psilocybin – as being a potentially beneficial treatment for the condition.

“But since these substances are banned in many countries, clinical studies are difficult to set up, and we don’t have robust data on their effectiveness yet,” said Buot.

To understand more, a team of researchers retrospectively analysed the experience of people who had previously used psychedelics. 

The team wanted to find out whether people had perceived an improvement in their symptoms after taking LSD or psilocybin, if the effect was long-lasting and if it could be predicted by different factors.

A total of 147 people with OCD who had used the substances filled out an online questionnaire, and were asked about mental health symptoms, socio-demographic characteristics and the treatments they received and the context in which they had taken psychedelics as well as dosing, the nature of their experience and the perceived effects on symptoms, said Buot.

According to the feedback from the questionnaire, participants reported the dissipation of obsessive thoughts, less need to engage in rituals, reduced anxiety and avoidance behaviour, and greater acceptance of OCD. 

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“30% of participants reported that these positive effects lasted for more than three months, which is very encouraging,” psychiatrist Luc Mallet stated. 

“Finally, we observed that the dose of LSD or psilocybin was positively correlated with the intensity of the psychedelic experience and its pleasantness.”

The authors warn that the results must be interpreted with caution as the subjective assessment of the therapeutic effects of psychedelics is susceptible to numerous biases, including the beliefs of the study participants. 

“The population we studied generally has a very positive and enthusiastic attitude towards these substances, sometimes independently of their therapeutic effect. In addition, many patients are in situations of therapeutic impasse and expect LSD or psilocybin to improve their lives. This can significantly influence their testimony,” added Mallet.

The authors highlight that the transformative symbolism of the psychedelic experience itself reinforces this bias. 

“Understanding the extent to which the very nature of the psychedelic experience—strongly influenced by people’s history, culture, and imagination—affects the therapeutic effects will be essential,” Buot concluded. “To do this, we will need complementary approaches, in ethnography and psychology, for example.”

To reap the full benefit of potential new treatments and establish good practices for use, it will be necessary not only to increase the number of rigorous clinical studies but also to understand the biological mechanisms underlying the long-term effects of psychedelics, the authors noted.

The research was carried out by the Paris Brain Institute and published in the journal Scientific Reports.

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FDA Grants Breakthrough Therapy Designation to The Psychedelic Luvesilocin for Postpartum Depression

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The U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted breakthrough therapy designation to psychedelic drug luvesilocin, from biopharmaceutical developer Reunion Neuroscience, for the treatment of postpartum depression. 

Luvesilocin is a recently-discovered proprietary psychedelic that can produce an acute subjective experience of around 3 to 4 hours shorter than that reported for some classic psychedelics such as LSD. 

It is the ninth psychedelic to receive breakthrough therapy designation by the agency, a qualification meant to to expedite the development and review of drugs that are intended to treat a serious or life-threatening condition, when preliminary clinical evidence shows that the drug could demonstrate a substantial improvement over available therapy. 

The Trial

Postpartum depression affects a substantial portion of people who have recently given birth. Globally, the condition is estimated to occur in roughly 10 % to 20 % of postpartum women.

According to the announcement from last week, Reunion’s clinical trial achieved its primary endpoint, showing a statistically significant reduction in depression seven days after administration.¡

Participants receiving a 30mg dose showed reductions in depressive symptoms as early as Day 1 that were maintained through Day 28 of follow-up, with 70 % of those patients in remission at both Day 7 and Day 28. 

With BTD status, luvesilocin is eligible for benefits associated with the FDA’s Fast Track program and will receive enhanced guidance and engagement with senior FDA leadership.

Reunion Neuroscience has said it plans to initiate a pivotal Phase 3 trial of luvesilocin in postpartum depression in 2026. The company is also enrolling patients in a Phase 2 trial for adjustment disorder related to cancer and other medical conditions, and anticipates beginning a Phase 2 trial in generalized anxiety disorder in early 2026.

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What Luvesilocin Is and How It Works

Luvesilocin belongs to a class of molecules known as substituted tryptamines. 

Tryptamines are a family of compounds derived from the amino acid tryptophan, which includes endogenous neurotransmitters like serotonin, as well as classical psychedelic agents such as psilocin and DMT. Many structurally related molecules share the same backbone and interact with serotonin receptors, producing altered perceptions and changes in mood and cognition.

Chemically, luvesilocin is a prodrug of 4-HO-DiPT, meaning the compound is metabolised in the body to release the active serotonin receptor agonist, in a similar way to how psilocybin is metabolized into psilocin, which is the active ingredient producing a psychedelic effect in humans.

The active moiety of luvesilocin, 4-HO-DiPT, itself is part of this broader class and was described in the scientific literature as early as the late 1970s. It differs slightly in structure from psilocin (the active form of psilocybin), which may influence its receptor interactions and subjective effects. 

Unlike many classic psychedelics taken orally, luvesilocin is administered via subcutaneous injection, which contributes to its more predictable and shorter duration.

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Psychedelics Clinical Trial Update: Positive Results from Psilocybin and DMT on the Road for FDA Approval

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Clinical updates from Compass Pathways and Helus Pharma from last week marked a significant step forward in the psychedelics development landscape, with new data emerging from late stage and mid stage programs targeting depressive disorders.

Compass reported positive results from its second Phase 3 trial of COMP360, a synthetic psilocybin therapy for treatment resistant depression, meeting the study’s primary endpoint at Week 6. The company said the 25 mg dose produced a statistically significant reduction in depressive symptoms versus a control group, with rapid onset and a safety profile consistent with earlier studies, supporting planned regulatory discussions.

Helus Pharma (formerly Cybin) reported positive results from a mid stage clinical trial of its DMT based therapy, SPL026, in people with moderate to severe depression. Participants who received the treatment showed significantly greater improvements in their symptoms than those given placebo, with effects emerging within a week and lasting for several weeks. No treatment related serious safety issues were reported.

Compass Pathways Posts Second Positive Phase 3 Result in Treatment Resistant Depression

Compass Pathways reported results from its second Phase 3 trial evaluating COMP360, a proprietary synthetic psilocybin formulation, in patients with treatment resistant depression. The study forms part of the company’s pivotal development program and follows earlier positive findings.

The company has advanced COMP360 through a development that now includes two positive Phase 3 trials in treatment resistant depression. The therapy previously received Breakthrough Therapy designation from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration and a comparable innovation pathway designation in the UK. Last month, Compass also announced an acceptance by the FDA of COMP360 for the indication of PTSD.

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Recently, CEO Kabir Nath told Psychedelic Health that based on the latest stream of positive clinical results, COMP360 “could potentially be looking at a launch in early 2027,” though the psychedelics spae is still recovering from the rejection of Lykos’ MDMA application in 2024.

According to Compass, the latest trial met its primary endpoint, demonstrating a statistically significant reduction in depressive symptoms compared with control at week 6, as measured by the Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale, or MADRS. Patients receiving a 25 mg dose showed a mean reduction that translated into a 3.8 point difference versus the 1 mg control group at the primary timepoint.

The antidepressant effect was observed rapidly, with separation from control evident as early as the day after administration. Treatment effects were sustained through at least six weeks. In a related Phase 3 study within the same program, a subgroup of participants maintained clinically meaningful reductions in MADRS scores through 26 weeks following one or two dosing sessions. Retreatment in eligible patients appeared to yield consistent response patterns, and no unexpected safety findings were reported across the studies.

Treatment resistant depression remains a major unmet need, defined generally as inadequate response to at least two prior antidepressant therapies. Compass has indicated that it intends to engage with the FDA to discuss next steps, including a potential rolling submission of a New Drug Application. The company has previously guided toward a possible submission timeline in late 2026, contingent on regulatory feedback and completion of required analyses.

Helus Pharma Reports Mid Stage Data Showing Rapid Symptom Improvement in Depression

In parallel, Helus Pharma, formerly known as Cybin, released detailed results from a Phase 2a randomized, placebo controlled study of SPL026, an intravenous formulation of N,N dimethyltryptamine, or DMT, in adults with moderate to severe major depressive disorder. The findings were published in the journal Nature Medicine and reflect one of the more advanced controlled studies of DMT in this indication.

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The SPL026 program was previously led by the company Small Pharma, which was acquired by Cybin in 2023. Earlier this year, Cybin announced it would change its name to Helus Pharma, following a recent trend of companies in the psychedelics space rebranding to reflect a more mature subsector within biotech.

By the second week of the study, people who received SPL026 showed significantly greater improvements in their depression symptoms than those who received a placebo. On average, the difference between the two groups was clear and clinically meaningful, with an even larger gap already visible after just one week.

At Week 2, about 35 percent of participants given SPL026 experienced a marked improvement in symptoms, compared with 12 percent of those on placebo. Nearly 29 percent of treated participants saw their symptoms ease to the point of remission, versus 12 percent in the placebo group. In a follow up phase where all participants could receive the treatment, many maintained their improvements for up to three months.

The safety profile was described as manageable, with no treatment related serious adverse events reported in the study population. Acute psychedelic effects were consistent with the pharmacology of DMT and were administered in a controlled clinical setting with psychological support.

Despite the positive data, Helus has indicated that it does not plan to advance SPL026 in its current intravenous format. Instead, the company intends to use the findings to inform development of next generation short acting serotonergic agonists within its broader pipeline. Topline data from a separate Phase 2 program targeting generalized anxiety disorder are anticipated in 2026.

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Together, the updates from Compass and Helus reflect continued maturation of the psychedelics field, with one company reporting confirmatory Phase 3 outcomes in treatment resistant depression and another publishing controlled mid stage data in major depressive disorder. Regulatory engagement and strategic portfolio decisions will shape the next phase of development as sponsors seek to translate controlled trial results into potential approvals and commercial pathways.

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Evegreen

Can A Psychedelic Experience Reshape Your Worldview? New Study Says Yes, It Can

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A new study investigates how so-called “self-transcendent” psychedelic states can trigger enduring changes in meaning-making, values, and perceptions of reality.

A new study published in Nature explores how psychedelic experiences can lead to lasting changes in how people understand themselves, others, and the world. Rather than focusing on symptom reduction or clinical outcomes, this new research examines something more foundational: how psychedelics may shift a person’s underlying worldview.

The research team used a mixed-methods design combining quantitative scales with qualitative analysis. Ninety participants who reported having undergone a transformative psychedelic experience completed questionnaires measuring awe and perceived connectedness, alongside open-ended questions about how their perspectives had changed. Around three-quarters of participants were based in the UK, with the remainder from other English-speaking countries and Europe.

 Breaking Mental Frameworks Through Awe

Researchers have previously argued for incorporating metaphysical philosophy into psychedelic therapy to help improve therapeutic outcomes.

At the core of the new study is the concept of awe. Awe is described as an “epistemic emotion”, one that arises when existing mental frameworks are insufficient to explain an experience. Psychedelic states often evoke this response through feelings of vastness, boundlessness, and deep interconnectedness. According to the authors, such experiences can force a re-evaluation of previously held assumptions about the self and the world.

Quantitative analysis showed that two aspects of awe recalled from the psychedelic experience, perceived vastness and connectedness, were significantly associated with greater perceived overlap between the self and others long after the experience had ended. In other words, participants who recalled more intense feelings of vastness and connection during their psychedelic experience were more likely to later report feeling less psychologically separate from other people, non-human life, and the world as a whole.

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The qualitative findings add further depth. Through thematic network analysis, the researchers identified three clusters of epistemic shifts commonly reported by participants. Previously, researchers have determined that a mystical and insightful psychedelic drug experience may be linked to long-term reductions in anxiety and depression symptoms.

The first involved an expanded awareness and greater openness to complexity. Many participants described becoming more comfortable with uncertainty and ambiguity, and less reliant on rigid or reductionist explanations of reality.

The second cluster related to the dissolution of boundaries, both social and natural. Participants reported weakened distinctions between self and other, human and non-human, and mind and environment. This often translated into a more holistic or systems-based way of thinking.

The third cluster centred on increased prosociality. Participants frequently described greater compassion, acceptance of difference, and concern for others and the wider ecological system. These changes were not framed as abstract beliefs, but as practical shifts in how people related to others and made everyday decisions.

The authors situate these findings within broader theories of psychedelic action, including predictive coding models, which suggest that psychedelics relax rigid top-down beliefs and allow new interpretations to emerge. From this perspective, psychedelic-induced awe may act as a catalyst for reorganising how meaning is constructed.

Importantly, the paper emphasises that such worldview shifts require integration. Without appropriate cultural, social, and psychological support, the authors note that profound experiences of “boundlessness” may be destabilising rather than beneficial.

As psychedelic research increasingly moves beyond symptom-focused outcomes, this study highlights the importance of understanding how these substances can reshape fundamental ways of knowing, with implications for mental health, social connection, and ecological awareness.

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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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