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FDA MDMA therapy advice may be a setback, but it is not the end of the road

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FDA MDMA therapy advice may be a setback, but it is not the end of the road

An advisory body to the U.S Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has recommended against the approval of Lykos Therapeutics’ MDMA-assisted therapy – but the development is not deterring the industry.

Four months ago the psychedelics industry was abuzz when Lykos Therapeutics (formerly MAPS Public Benefit Corporation) announced it had received FDA acceptance and priority review for a New Drug Application (NDA) concerning its MDMA-assisted therapy for PTSD.

While the final decision on the matter is not expected until 11 August 2024, the FDA’s Psychopharmacologic Drugs Advisory Committee (PDAC) has delivered a major blow to the development.

The committee voted “no” on the question of whether the data shows the treatment’s effecitveness as well as on the question of whether the benefits outweigh the risks, with concerns raised over trial design, data gaps, and the potential for abuse and unethical practice.

As highlighted by Lykos, the FDA is not bound by PDAC’s guidance but it does take its advice into consideration – meaning the outcome is not looking good for the FDA’s final decision later this year.

Lykos has expressed its disappointment on the vote outcome given “the urgent unmet need in PTSD”, however, the organisation has acknowledged that the committee “faced a challenging and atypical assignment, which was to evaluate a therapeutic approach that combines drug therapy (MDMA) and psychological intervention.”

Amy Emerson, Chief Executive Officer of Lykos Therapeutics, stated: “We remain committed to working with the FDA to address outstanding questions so that we may find a path forward to ensure the responsible and careful introduction of MDMA-assisted therapy into the healthcare system, if approved.”

Not the end of the road

While the advisory vote may not bode well, industry stakeholders believe this is not the end of the road for MDMA-assisted psychotherapy.

With the advice concerning only the Lykos trial, there may be scope for concerns raised by the committee to be addressed in further trials, as well as other MDMA analogues or therapy designs to make it to approval.

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Christian Angermayer, Founder of atai Life Sciences, believes that there is still a strong chance that, with a properly conducted Phase 3 trial, MDMA-assisted therapy will get approved.

“I (still) believe MDMA is a promising drug with tremendous therapeutic potential for patients with severe mental health issues,” wrote Angermayer.

“It isn’t MDMA itself that was rejected per se, but the specific, poor data set provided by Lykos; the committee particularly cited discrepancies in clinical trial design and conduct, inadequate collection of safety and other relevant data, bias in the evaluation of patients, and cases of patient abuse during the trials.”

Rivki Stern Youdkevich, Co-founder and CEO at Shortwave Life Sciences (SWLS), which is developing psychedelic medicines for the treatment of anorexia nervosa, has said the decision is not deterring their developments.

Youdkevich commented: “We were disappointed to learn of the panel’s recommendation but we are not discouraged.

“Mental ill health is growing at an alarming rate with an increasing number of conditions affecting more people in every age group worldwide. This necessitates novel approaches to medication and treatment, as existing therapies do not suffice. So our enthusiasm for development of psychedelics-based treatments and medicine remains undiminished.

“In fact, we are doubling down on it. Shortwave Life Sciences’ goal is to become a leader in the origination, development and operation of innovative solutions in the field of mental health. Like other psychedelics drug makers, we remain unwavering in our commitment to overcome the expected challenges on the way to approval and wide acceptance of this new field as safe, effective and viable.”

Youdkevich emphasised that the FDA’s advice will not affect Shortwave’s chances of approving its drug product for anorexia nervosa.

“Specifically at Shortwave we have several strengths in our clinical and development approach which would lead us, I believe and hope, to a positive reception,” explained Youdkevich.

“Our team of experienced clinical experts led by Dr. Nadya Lisovoder designed our clinical strategy to anticipate and meet the most stringent requirements from the regulator. We are undergoing a full set of pre-clinical studies to create a robust base of evidence and research which will illuminate our clinical trials design.

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“Furthermore, our by-the-book clinical trial design will be further wisened by real-time data and learnings from our partners at the Sheba Medical Center Department of Eating disorders’ Phase 1 psilocybin-assisted therapy trial for anorexia patients.

“Our anorexia programme is based on a combination of psilocybin and additional APIs. We initially designed this combination to extend the mechanism of action of the drug, giving us flexibility in dosing of the scheduled component, psilocybin. Our drug delivery method allows for efficient administration and absorption which is currently being tested, thus maximising the effect even in a potentially lower dose of psilocybin.

“Anorexia nervosa is a life-threatening disease, with the highest mortality rate of mental health conditions and with no FDA-approved medication.

“Today, treatment for anorexia nervosa is psychotherapy based, with no standardised protocol. Our novel drug product and delivery method would naturally fit into this mode of care with the aim of achieving remission in a relatively short period, and reducing the need for years of therapy and treatment. So, although psychotherapy adds complexity to the process of regulatory approval, in our case, it is the incumbent standard of care.

“We applaud and look up to the pioneers in psychedelics drug development who are the avant-garde in creating this “new field of medicine”. They are facing head on the challenges and hurdles of evaluation and acceptance into mainstream medicine.

“Our strategy at SWLS has always been to follow in the regulatory path created by the first-comers and implement their learnings vis-a-vis the regulators. Such learning may include special attention to communication at all stages and on all aspects of trial methodology design and implementation with the regulators, to the degree trial participants are novice to the drug, as well as consideration of all aspects and the possibility of conducting blind studies with psychedelic compounds.”

MDMA is gaining global traction

While it remains to be seen if MDMA-assisted therapy will gain approval in the United States in August, the compound is gaining traction as a treatment for mental health conditions including PTSD elsewhere across the world.

See also  2025 in Psychedelics: Big Pharma Entry, Patient Access in Germany, Czech and Australia, Governments Expand Conversation With Stakeholders

Canada added MDMA-assisted therapy to its Special Access Programme in 2022 for the treatment of PTSD, and in 2023 Australia rescheduled the compound to allow authorised access to the therapy for select patients living with PTSD.

In fact, just days following the FDA’s advice, a Dutch advisory committee, which conducted a multidisciplinary analysis of the health risks of MDMA to advise the Dutch Cabinet, recommended the Government should allow access to MDMA-assisted therapy for people living with PTSD.

The independent State Commission was established by the Dutch Parliament to research the legal status of MDMA and provide advice on its medical use.

The report produced by the committee specifically advises on the pros and cons of the medicinal use of MDMA for the treatment of PTSD, advising that there appears to be sufficient scientific evidence for the effectiveness and safety of this form of therapy.

The committee has now recommended developing the medical use of MDMA for PTSD as quickly as possible, advising that regulatory frameworks are established.

In a statement, Minister Pia Dijkstra, Minister for Medical Care of the Netherlands, commented: “I am pleased that the report is now available, because it provides tools to further develop the therapeutic application of MDMA.

“Research into the therapeutic use of MDMA is promising. It is possible that MDMA as a therapy-supporting medication can help, especially for mental health patients who have been dealing with their problems for years and have not been helped by the current range of therapies.

“However, more scientific, clinical research needs to be done. With regard to the recreational use of MDMA, the report emphasises the principle of Dutch drug policy, which primarily emphasises health, prevention and reducing the harmful consequences of use, for example through monitoring and testing.

“It is therefore good that this report is now available and supports the need for substantiated policy and further scientific research.”

Markets & Industry

Trump Issues Executive Order to Accelerate Psychedelics for Mental Health 

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President Donald J. Trump signed an executive order on Saturday aimed at speeding up the development and approval of psychedelic-based treatments for serious mental illness in the United States.

The directive targets a range of conditions, including major depressive disorder and substance use disorders, specifically for patients who have not responded to traditional therapies.

The order signals a significant shift in federal drug policy by prioritizing the evaluation of substances like psilocybin and ibogaine, which are currently classified as Schedule I controlled substances. While advocates have hailed the move as a breakthrough for mental health innovation, medical experts have raised questions regarding the safety profile of some compounds and the practicalities of their implementation.

“Today’s Executive Order reflects growing recognition that modern mental health challenges demand new approaches,” said Betty Aldworth, Co-Executive Director of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic Studies (MAPS).

Key Provisions

The primary objective of the order is to streamline the regulatory pathway for “Breakthrough Therapy” drugs. Specifically, the directive instructs the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to issue Commissioner’s National Priority Vouchers for psychedelic drugs that have already received breakthrough designations. These vouchers are designed to accelerate the review process, potentially reducing wait times for federal approval from months to weeks.

Furthermore, the order expands the “Right to Try” framework to include investigational psychedelic compounds. This provision is intended to allow patients with life-threatening or severely debilitating conditions to access experimental treatments—including ibogaine—provided they have met basic safety requirements and are currently under FDA review.

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To bolster research at the local level, the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) has been directed to allocate $50 million through the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H). This funding is earmarked to match state-level investments in psychedelic research programs. The move appears to follow the lead of states like Texas, which recently authorized state-funded research into ibogaine for veterans.

Federal Coordination and Scheduling

The executive order also mandates increased inter-agency cooperation. The HHS, FDA, and Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) are required to sign data-sharing agreements to pool clinical trial results. The goal is to provide the FDA with a more robust evidence base to facilitate timely evaluations.

Addressing the legal status of these substances, the order directs the Attorney General to initiate a review of relevant products immediately following the successful completion of Phase 3 clinical trials. This is intended to ensure that if a drug is approved by the FDA, the process of rescheduling it under the Controlled Substances Act can occur as quickly as possible.

What the Order Doesn’t Do

Despite the sweeping language of the directive, several legal and medical hurdles remain. The order does not immediately legalize or “deschedule” psychedelics. Substances such as MDMA, LSD, and psilocybin remain in the most restrictive federal category for illegal drugs. Any rescheduling remains contingent on the completion of rigorous Phase 3 clinical trials and subsequent FDA approval.

Importantly, the order does not mandate insurance coverage for these experimental therapies. Industry analysts noted that because these treatments remain largely unapproved, they are unlikely to be covered by private or public insurance in the near term, potentially limiting access to those who can afford out-of-pocket costs at private clinics.

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“Today, people desperate for healing are traveling abroad or self-medicating with impure substances and little support. Efforts like today’s Executive Order must be paired with regulated psychedelics, provider training, and robust insurance coverage,” said Aldworth.

Finally, the order does not bypass existing safety protocols. While it seeks to “accelerate” the process, drugs must still demonstrate safety and efficacy through the standard clinical trial pipeline.

Medical and Scientific Context

The administration’s focus on ibogaine has drawn particular attention. Derived from a West African shrub, ibogaine has been studied for its potential to interrupt opioid addiction and treat post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD). However, it is also known for potential cardiac toxicity. Some researchers expressed concern that emphasizing ibogaine over other psychedelics with more established safety profiles could be premature.

“As federal agencies move to reduce longstanding barriers to research, it is essential that progress across this broader class of compounds remains grounded in rigorous science, careful evaluation, and a commitment to patient safety,” said Ismail L. Ali, J.D., Co-Executive Director of MAPS. 

The advocate has called for “alignment with global public health principles” when working with ibogaine and the Iboga plant from which it’s extracted.

“Ibogaine has the potential to address the devastating crisis of opioid use disorder. However, because iboga is a limited resource, mass production of ibogaine can harm the people, traditions, and land where iboga is grow,” he said.

The order represents a rare area of emerging bipartisan interest, as lawmakers from both parties have expressed support for expanding research into how psychedelics might assist veterans and those struggling with treatment-resistant depression. However, the success of the initiative will ultimately depend on the results of ongoing clinical trials and the ability of federal agencies to navigate the complex safety and regulatory requirements involved in bringing Schedule I substances to the medical market.

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Market Impact

The news provided a boost for companies in the psychedelics sector that are publicly traded, reflecting growing investor confidence in the field. Shares from Compass Pathways, a company with a Phase 3 program in psilocybin, were up 43% on Monday. AtaiBeckley was up 24% and GH Research 16%.

Picture: courtesy of the White House.

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Evegreen

Europe’s Regulatory Body Signals Shift To ‘Weight of Evidence’ Model For Drug Approvals—How Does It Affect Psychedelic Medicines?

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The European Medicines Agency is taking steps to rethink how certain high-need medicines reach patients, with a new concept paper proposing a more flexible, evidence-based pathway for cancer therapies. While the focus is paediatric oncology, the implications may extend far beyond cancer, raising questions about whether similar approaches could eventually support the development of psychedelic treatments.

The “Weight of Evidence” Model

Published last month, the EMA’s concept paper outlines plans for a reflection paper on how “proof-of-concept” data should be used to guide early-stage drug development. At its core is a shift away from rigid data requirements toward a “weight of evidence” model, where regulators assess the totality of available data, including non-clinical studies, early clinical signals, and biological rationale.

This approach is already gaining traction in oncology, particularly in paediatric settings where patient populations are small and traditional large-scale trials are often unfeasible. In such cases, regulators are increasingly willing to rely on mechanistic understanding and preclinical evidence to justify moving into clinical trials earlier, provided there is a strong scientific rationale and unmet medical need.

The EMA’s concept paper emphasises that development decisions should be grounded in several key domains, including mechanism of action, disease biology, pharmacology, and safety, as well as the broader clinical context. Rather than requiring exhaustive datasets upfront, the agency is signalling openness to iterative development, where evidence is built progressively and regulatory decisions evolve alongside the data.

For the psychedelics field, this raises a clear question: could a similar framework accelerate the path to approval?

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A shift toward mechanism-of-action–based regulation in psychedelics could, in theory, reduce the need to pursue separate approvals for each diagnostic category, such as depression or PTSD, by anchoring use to a shared underlying biology.

If regulators accept that psychedelic therapies exert their primary effect through defined pathways, for example 5-HT2A receptor activation leading to increased neuroplasticity and network-level brain changes, then the relevant treatment population could be framed around patients exhibiting that dysfunction rather than a specific DSM label. In this model, a single approval could cover multiple conditions where the same mechanism is implicated, provided there is sufficient evidence linking that pathway to clinical benefit across those populations.

This would shift development away from duplicative, indication-by-indication trials toward demonstrating consistent mechanistic effects and reproducible outcomes in biologically defined subgroups.

There are other parallels between the regulatory paths described in the paper and psychedelics. Psychedelic therapies are often being developed for conditions where unmet need remains high and patient populations can be difficult to study using conventional trial designs. Like paediatric oncology, these indications may benefit from more flexible approaches that incorporate multiple forms of evidence.

However, important differences remain.

Oncology drug development is underpinned by well-established biological models and biomarkers, allowing regulators to link mechanism of action to clinical outcomes with a relatively high degree of confidence. In contrast, the mechanisms underlying psychedelic therapies are still being defined, spanning pharmacological effects, neural network changes, and the subjective therapeutic experience itself.

The EMA’s framework places significant weight on the relevance and reliability of non-clinical models, an area where psychedelics currently face limitations. Translating findings from animal studies to complex psychiatric outcomes in humans remains a challenge, and there is no widely accepted biomarker that can serve as a proxy for therapeutic response.

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Endpoints also differ. Cancer trials can rely on objective measures such as tumour progression or survival, whereas psychedelic studies typically depend on subjective scales and patient-reported outcomes. This makes it more difficult to integrate different sources of evidence into a unified regulatory decision.

Even so, the direction of travel is notable. By formalising a weight-of-evidence approach and emphasising mechanism-driven development, the EMA is signalling greater flexibility in how innovative therapies are assessed. If these principles are applied more broadly across therapeutic areas, they could eventually lower some of the structural barriers facing psychedelic drug development.

For now, the concept paper remains focused on oncology, and significant scientific and regulatory hurdles would need to be addressed before such a model could be extended to psychedelics. But as regulators continue to adapt to emerging forms of medicine, the boundaries between therapeutic areas may become less rigid.

In that context, the EMA’s latest move may not just reshape cancer drug development, but also offer an early glimpse of how the next generation of psychiatric treatments could be evaluated.

Picture: EMA headquarters in Amsterdam. Courtesy of EMA.

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Evegreen

2025 in Psychedelics: Big Pharma Entry, Patient Access in Germany, Czech and Australia, Governments Expand Conversation With Stakeholders

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In 2025, the psychedelic medicine sector reached a more defined phase of maturity, as Big Pharma entry, late-stage clinical readouts, and incremental regulatory shifts began to reshape investor expectations, policy debates, and the direction of research across business, government, and academia.

Business and Investment

Big Pharma joins the sector as key companies push research goals forward 

2025 saw pivotal corporate developments across the major psychedelic medicine companies, uplifting investor expectations and clarifying some regulatory pathways. A slow but steady loosening of regulatory hurdles and positive clinical results have breathed new life into the sector, with some analysts reporting refreshed investor interest and a possible end to the capital drought that has slashed the space in recent years.

Big Pharma giant AbbVie, known for blockbuster drugs in immunology and oncology, agreed to acquire Gilgamesh Pharmaceuticals’ lead experimental therapy, bretisilocin, in a deal reportedly worth $1.2 billion. Bretisilocin is a novel psychedelic targeting major depressive disorder. The event is a signal of Big Pharma entering the space and prioritising shorter-acting serotonin-2A modulators for depression.

Compass Pathways reached a major clinical inflection point, reporting positive results in its first Phase 3 COMP360 trial and accelerating commercial launch planning. CEO Kabir Nath recently told Psychedelic Health that positive talks with the FDA indicate that the company “could potentially be looking at a launch in early 2027” for its flagship program with synthetic psilocybin.

Beckley Psytech, which is supported by Atai Life Sciences secured a Breakthrough Therapy designation by the FDA for BPL-003, a novel intranasal formulation of 5-MeO-DMT, reinforcing regulatory momentum the compound known as “toad venom.” The FDA’s decision follows promising results from a Phase 2b clinical trial, which demonstrated that a single dose of the compound led to rapid and sustained reductions in depressive symptoms within 24 hours, with effects lasting up to eight weeks.

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Cybin advanced multiple clinical programs, completing enrollment milestones for CYB004, a version of DMT targeting generalised anxiety disorder and maintaining progress on CYB003, a 5-HT2A receptor agonist similar to psilocybin for major depressive disorder. The company secured financing to extend runway and protect intellectual property across its portfolio.

MindMed reported faster than expected enrollment in its Phase 3 MM120 program, an analog of LSD targeting generalised anxiety disorder, updating timelines for topline readouts and emphasising oral LSD analogs as a differentiated regulatory route. 

Policy and Regulation

Major global players reschedule psychedelics for medical use

2025 marked a year of uneven but consequential movement in psychedelic policy and regulation, with a small number of jurisdictions taking concrete steps toward medical access while others remained in exploratory or preparatory phases.

The UK’s regulatory landscape for psychedelic medicine continued to evolve through policy dialogue and research initiatives, although no formal legalisation or medical scheduling changes occurred. The Royal College of Psychiatrists published a position statement reviewing evidence on psilocybin, MDMA, LSD, and ketamine, concluding that current data are promising but insufficient to recommend routine clinical use outside licensed settings, emphasising the need for more robust trials and caution against premature adoption.

This year, the UK government agreed in principle with key Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs (ACMD) recommendations to ease barriers to Schedule 1 psychedelic research. Part of the recommendations included allowing universities and hospitals to conduct research without a Home Office domestic licence, and ethically approved clinical trials to be exempt from additional licensing. Though these changes are not in effect yet, they could be enacted after a pilot program takes place.

Australia continued to stand out as a global pioneer in medical access. Since 1 July 2023, MDMA and psilocybin have been rescheduled from strictly prohibited status to controlled medicines, meaning authorised psychiatrists can legally prescribe them for treatment-resistant depression and post-traumatic stress disorder. From 6 January 2025, new quality standards for MDMA and psilocybin products came into force, requiring compliance for all supplied APIs and finished products. The Department of Veterans’ Affairs approved funding for psychedelic-assisted psychotherapy for eligible veterans, marking a first step toward public payer support.

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In Europe, Germany became the first EU country to establish a formal compassionate use access programme for psilocybin, enabling adults with treatment-resistant depression to receive psilocybin therapy at specialised centres under a regulated framework prior to full regulatory approval. This initiative, supported by the German Federal Institute for Drugs and Medical Devices and implemented at facilities in Mannheim and Berlin, marks a landmark step in European psychedelic policy.

The Czech Republic is set to become one of the first European countries to legalise medical use of psilocybin from January 1, 2026. The outgoing government approved legislation late in 2025 allowing psychiatrists and psychotherapists to administer psilocybin for conditions such as cancer-related depression and serious clinical depression when other registered treatments have failed or are not tolerated. Psilocybin therapy will be introduced under controlled clinical conditions at qualified facilities.

In the United States, action remained at the state-level. Oregon and Colorado, having already legalised regulated access to natural psychedelics including psilocybin and launched supervised service programs, continued to refine implementation and data collection frameworks in 2025. Meanwhile, numerous state legislatures introduced bills to advance psychedelic therapy access, and Massachusetts held legislative hearings on psychedelic therapy programmes, reflecting growing political engagement despite the absence of federal reclassification.

Science and Research

New data from real-world applications and feedback from regulatory agencies inform research 

In the academic side of the equation, 2025 consolidated a transition from exploratory efficacy signals to confirmatory, regulation-relevant evidence, while underscoring persistent limitations: small sample biases, variable control conditions, and unresolved questions about long-term safety and scalability.

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One of the most significant published findings came from a phase 2 trial in cancer patients, where a single dose of psilocybin combined with therapy produced sustained reductions in depression and anxiety, with many participants maintaining benefits up to two years later. 

Alongside observational outcomes, mid-stage clinical studies have found LSD may ease anxiety symptoms for up to three months in people with moderate-to-severe generalised anxiety disorder, with a significant proportion of participants still in remission at 12 weeks.

For the first time, data from real-world application of psilocybin treatment under a regulated program was published by one of the Oregon clinics providing treatment, sharing insights into how the legal, real-world version of the treatment works, who can access it, and whether the benefits observed in trials translate to broader populations.

Longitudinal data strengthened claims of sustained benefit in selected cohorts. Multiple follow-up reports published in 2025 described durable antidepressant effects at extended intervals after single or limited psilocybin administrations, although most samples remained small and non-randomised. These findings have prompted calls for larger, controlled long-term studies. 

The FDA’s public release of the complete response letter on Lykos Therapeutics’ trials on MDMA therapy highlighted durability and safety questions, prompting re-examination of trial design and participant selection in MDMA and related programmes.

Cambridge Psychedelic Research Group formally launched in 2025, creating a new hub for clinical trials and interdisciplinary research in the UK, including pathways for patient recruitment and academic-industry collaboration.

Illustrated image made using AI tools.

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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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