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The harms of psychedelics: separating anecdotes and misinformation

Classic psychedelics fall into the lowest-risk category for drugs, say experts.

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Phase 2 LSD for major depression trial shows positive topline data

A new narrative review of systematic evidence has been published by leading researchers at Drug Science to get the facts on the adverse effects of classic psychedelics.

Classic psychedelics fall into the lowest risk category for drugs, the review findings show. This means they are non-toxic to the human body and have a very low dependence rate.

Published by non-profit organisation Drug Science in the Journal of Psychopharmacology, the paper highlights that policy has yet to catch up with the science – attributed largely to misinformation.

The authors focus on classic psychedelic compounds – serotonergic psychedelics such as psilocybin, DMT, ayahuasca, mescaline and LSD. 

Authors include Dr Katrin Anne Schlag of Imperial College London and King’s College London, Jacob Aday of Central Michigan University and the University of California, Davis, Iram Salam, Professor Jo Neil of the University of Manchester, UK and Professor David Nutt of Imperial College London.

An unwarranted reputation 

Decades of anecdotes have given psychedelic substances a reputation for being dangerous. Sensationalist reports of people losing their minds, getting hallucinogenic flashbacks or jumping off buildings have contributed to negative public attitudes towards these compounds.

In recent years, despite costly regulatory barriers, scientists at institutes such as Imperial College London, Harvard University, Johns Hopkins and many more, have been able to look more closely at them – revealing strong therapeutic potential in the areas of mental health and addiction.

Speaking to Psychedelic Health, paper co-author Dr Anne Katrin Schlag, head of research Drug Science, department of brain science, Imperial College London, and department of geography, King’s College London, commented: “Psychedelics previously received quite a bad reputation within the media and within the public domain, unreservedly so.

“One concern that people tend to have is that they are addictive and you can become dependent on them. Their scheduling as Class A together with heroin and cocaine would suggest this, but this is not based on scientific evidence.

“However, with the recent research, especially the past decade, and media reports of people who have actually have been helped and healed by various types of psychedelics, it seems there is now a move towards a more favourable attitude towards these substances From the public, as well as politicians, doctors and potential prescribers who are looking at the research in-depth.

“In our review, we are presenting the scientific evidence of various harms and look in detail at which of these are supported by the current science, and which are merely based on previous myths and negative perceptions.

“These substances are not new, and they have been studied before.”

See also  Findings give new insight into how psychedelics help mental health

The counterculture movement in the 60s saw an explosion of cultural liberation and experimentation with fashion, music and drugs. Prominent figures including Ken Kesey, Allen Ginsberg, Timothy Leary, Richard Alpert and Aldous Huxley – as well as popular musicians such as Jim Morrison, Jimi Hendrix, Gerry Garcia and Janis Joplin – were all experimenting with LSD.

Frequent reports of their use led to the perception that the compounds had a high dependence rate. In 1971 Nixon declared the worldwide “war on drugs”, labeling drug abuse as “America’s public enemy number one”. The same year, psychedelics were scheduled in the highest category of the UN Convention on Psychotropic Substances. 

By this time there was a large body of research into the use of LSD in humans, reporting largely positive effects but with significant shortcomings. The paper highlights: “The emergence of 1960s counterculture, led to a media frenzy and sensationalised representations of these substances, contributing to the halt of promising scientific research and national and international [under the 1971 UN Conventions] bans on LSD”.

Schlag commented: “Before Nixon declared the war on drugs there was quite a lot of promising research with psychedelics such as LSD, but due to their increasingly bad reputation within the counterculture movement, and sometimes not sufficiently high ethical research standards, this research came to a standstill.

Find out what the decriminalisation of psychotropic substance cultivation means for the Right to Science

“We found some of this earlier research, in addition to the current research, and looked at it in detail, to actually find that there were few medical risks reported – and there were thousands of patients during that period of time as well.

“All drugs or substances – legal or illegal – have risks but we do know that if you look at the medical risks, such as toxicology, neurotoxicity, hypertension, cardiovascular disease, classic psychedelics consistently rank very low in comparison to other substances.

“When there are issues, these tend to be resolved very quickly – within the session usually – and are transient.

“The potential for addiction is very low as well. Some of these substances have now been shown to be anti-addictive and could actually help people with addiction very substantially.”

Psychedelics are undeserving of their current scheduling

Timothy Leary, Richard Alpert and Ralph Metzner’s work, The Psychedelic Experience, based largely on the Tibetan Book of the Dead, emphasises “set and setting” as fundamental to the positive psychedelic experience. 

The new paper echoes this importance for clinical outcomes when using these compounds: “Looking at differences between clinical vs non-clinical uses and users, we stress that whilst these categories are blurred and use and users might be overlapping between categories, notable differences can be discerned in users’ set and setting, as well as the pre- and aftercare experienced – both areas where above adverse effects are potentially exacerbated.”

Schlag et al highlight some of the common challenging experiences induced by classic psychedelics are “bad trips”, but these are quite rare and “are often found to be extremely cathartic”.

See also  Global coalition launches to push for psilocybin rescheduling 

“When we are looking at medical uses of psychedelics in a clinical environment – in a safe setting, under supervision, where the patient is fully supported before, during, and after the session with integration by a fully trained psychiatrist or therapist – then these adverse effects are extremely rare,” said Schlag.

“What has also been shown globally now with the multi-criteria decision analysis work that Drug Science is doing, which was first published in The Lancet in 2010, they consistently rank very low. 

“Especially for magic mushrooms – classic psychedelics are undeserving of their current scheduling. We have done multi-criteria analysis regularly to analyse the harms of drugs, and not just the individual health harms and physiological harms, but also the societal harms and the harms to others.”

More research is needed

The authors conclude that it is vital that clinicians and therapists keep to the highest safety and ethical standards and that balanced media reporting is also key in “avoiding future controversies, so that much needed research can continue”.

Schlag said: “We need more research to be funded and to reschedule psychedelics so that the research can actually happen easier and become less costly. I think we have only just started to see their potential, but this has to be done extremely carefully in a regulated environment.

“People reading about it and taking a psychedelic to heal their PTSD, for example, could potentially be very damaging if they are in an unsafe environment because these are very strong drugs – they need to be administered and taken in a safe set and setting.

“However, that is not to say that there’s no room for non-clinical applications, because a lot of these plant medicines have been used for millennia, very successfully, within various cultures.

“I think we are really very much at a crossroads – psychedelics will be able to help a lot of people but we have to be cautious, because a lot of these people are also very ill and need to be treated correctly within the medical – or otherwise safe – environment.

“At the moment, the main issue is that’s not really possible because our Western society does not allow access to these medicines.”

To read the full paper please visit journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/02698811211069100.

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Is connection key? How clinicians impact patient outcomes in psychedelic therapy

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A wealth of research is showing how psychedelic-assisted therapy holds promise for the treatment of mental health conditions such as depression, but what role does the therapist play in a patient’s outcome? A new study has suggested it may be a big one.

Psychedelics have piqued huge interest due to their effects on the brain. Research points to their ability to induce neuroplasticity in the brain as one of the key reasons they may help with conditions such as depression and anxiety.

However, set – the individual’s (or patient’s) mental state – and setting – the individual’s environment during a psychedelic experience – are hugely impactful on the outcome of these experiences.

In the traditional use of psychedelic medicines, shamans help to guide set and setting throughout the experience with singing, drumming and ritual. Today, in scientific research, trials, and in clinics, the clinician is essentially playing this role.

Senior author of a new study, Alan Davis, associate professor and director of the Center for Psychedelic Drug Research and Education in The Ohio State University College of Social Work, has highlighted that the impact of clinicians on patient outcomes is not new, with research consistently showing that a trusting relationship between patients and clinicians has been key to better outcomes. This concept is known as a “therapeutic alliance”.

Understanding the therapeutic alliance

To find out more about the impact of this therapeutic alliance in psychedelic therapy, researchers from Ohio State University College of Medicine analysed data from a clinical trial that investigated psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy for the treatment of major depressive disorder (MDD).

In the trial, participants received two doses of psilocybin and 11 hours of psychotherapy, completing a therapeutic alliance questionnaire afterward, which assessed the strength of the therapist-participant relationship.

Participants also completed questionnaires about any mystical and psychologically insightful experiences they had during the drug treatment sessions. In psychedelic research, the mystical experience has often been shown to be related to the continuing positive effects of this therapy.

The Ohio team looked at the depression outcomes alongside patient reports about their experiences with the medicines as well as their connection with their therapists.

They found that a stronger relationship between patient and clinician led to a better clinical outcome for the patient – with improved depression scores up to 12 months following the experience.

Lead author Adam Levin, a psychiatry and behavioral health resident at Ohio State University College of Medicine, stated: “What persisted the most was the connection between the therapeutic alliance and long-term outcomes, which indicates the importance of a strong relationship.”

Analysis results revealed that over time, the alliance score increased, and in fact demonstrated more acute mystical experiences for the patient. The team also found that acute effects were linked to lower depression four weeks following treatment, but were not associated with better depression outcomes a year after the trial.

“The mystical experience, which is something that is most often reported as related to outcome, was not related to the depression scores at 12 months,” Davis stated.

“We’re not saying this means acute effects aren’t important – psychological insight was still predictive of improvement in the long term. But this does start to situate the importance and meaning of the therapeutic alliance alongside these more well-established effects that people talk about.”

According to the team, the analysis showed that a stronger relationship during the final therapy preparation session predicted a more mystical and psychologically insightful experience – which in turn was linked to further strengthening the therapeutic alliance.

“That’s why I think the relationship has been shown to be impactful in this analysis – because, really, the whole intervention is designed for us to establish the trust and rapport that’s needed for someone to go into an alternative consciousness safely,” Davis stated.

“This isn’t a case where we should try to fit psychedelics into the existing psychiatric paradigm – I think the paradigm should expand to include what we’re learning from psychedelics,” Levin added.

“Our concern is that any effort to minimise therapeutic support could lead to safety concerns or adverse events. And what we showed in this study is evidence for the importance of the alliance in not just preventing those types of events, but also in optimizing therapeutic outcomes.”

The authors emphasised that efforts to minimise negative experiences in future studies of psychedelics is vital, and that therapy is critical to creating a supportive environment for patients.

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Phase 2a trial to investigate 5-MeO-DMT candidate for alcohol use disorder

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Beckley Psytech and Clerkenwell Health are collaborating on a Phase 2a trial investigating Beckley’s synthetic 5-MeO-DMT candidate combined with psychological support as a treatment for alcohol use disorder (AUD).

AUD is estimated to affect around 237 million people across the globe and over 7.5 million people in the UK.

Treatment options for the harmful use of alcohol are not always effective – there are high relapse rates and there are around three million deaths each year attributed to the substance’s misuse.

Increasing research is showing that psychedelics may hold promise as innovative treatments for addiction, including substances such as ketamine and psilocybin.

See also  How psychedelics could help those living with alcohol use disorders

BPL-003 is Beckley Psytech’s short-duration and fast-acting synthetic formulation of 5-MeO-DMT – a psychedelic found in several plant species and the glands of at least one toad species – which is administered intranasally via an FDA-approved delivery device.

The compound has shown in Phase I data to be well-tolerated with a reproducible and dose-linear pharmacokinetic profile.

The Phase 2a trial

Beckley and Clerkenwell have confirmed that the collaborative Phase 2a open-label trial will evaluate the safety, tolerability and pharmacodynamic effects of a single dose of Beckley BPL-003 combined with abstinence-oriented psychological support in participants with AUD.

Currently taking place at King’s College London, Clerkenwell Health’s clinic near Harley Street, London, will provide an additional trial site.

According to Beckley, BPL-003 has been successful in eliciting psychedelic experiences of “similar intensity but shorter duration than psilocybin”.

Dr Henry Fisher, Chief Scientific Officer at Clerkenwell Health, stated: “An estimated 600,000 people are dependent on alcohol in England. This, coupled with an alarming increase in alcohol-related deaths of 89% over the past 20 years, shows the status quo isn’t working.

“Conventional treatments for alcohol dependency aren’t producing meaningful improvements and new avenues must be explored. This trial will assess whether psychedelic-assisted treatment can be an effective therapy for alcohol use disorder, with the hope of rolling out the treatment widely.

“Health professionals and policymakers should seriously consider such treatments, which could be genuinely ground-breaking for the NHS and for the hundreds of thousands of people being treated for alcohol use disorder in the UK.”

Beckley Psytech and Clerkenwell have emphasised that the results of the trial may be used to provide support for further study of psychedelic-assisted treatment for alcohol dependency.

Dr Rob Conley, Chief Medical and Scientific Officer at Beckley Psytech, added: “We’re committed to developing a transformative and effective treatment option for individuals struggling with alcohol use disorder.

“Based on our preclinical and Phase I data, we are optimistic about the potential therapeutic benefits of BPL-003 for substance use disorders and we are excited to evaluate the compound further in this clinical trial.

“I want to extend my thanks to the team at Clerkenwell Health and King’s, as well as to the patients who have joined, and will join, this study. Their participation, support and collaboration are absolutely critical to furthering research into this area of huge unmet need.”

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The Entourage Effect in Mushrooms: Natural psilocybin may outperform synthetic

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The Entourage Effect in Mushrooms: Natural psilocybin may outperform synthetic

A new study from the Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical Center has indicated that natural psilocybin extracts may demonstrate superior efficacy to synthetic psilocybin extracts.

Recent years have seen a boom in research into psilocybin for the treatment of mental health conditions such as anxiety and depression.

Many of the clinical trials investigating psilocybin use synthetic extracts rather than natural ones. This is because synthetic extracts will contain psilocybin alone, whereas natural psilocybe mushroom extracts will contain several different compounds such as psilocybin, psilocin, baeocystin and norbaeocystin.

Having multiple compounds can pose a challenge when running clinical trials as identifying which compounds are active and what their impact is becomes difficult to measure, and the concentrations of these compounds can vary depending on factors such as growth conditions and processing techniques.

This makes the standardisation of multi-compound medicines a huge challenge, as medicine consistency, reproducibility and dosing become difficult. However, these are essential factors when it comes to conducting clinical trials and receiving approval for medicines from regulators.

The Entourage Effect

In 2011 Dr Ethan Russo put forward the theory of the Entourage Effect in cannabis. 

The cannabis plant contains over 400 different cannabinoids that have so far been identified, such as THC, CBD, CBN and CBG.

Russo hypothesised that these different cannabinoid compounds work synergistically to create a therapeutic effect, as opposed to compounds such as THC or CBD working in isolation.

This hypothesis has been touched on only a few times in the scientific literature in relation to psychedelic mushrooms.

For example, in Dr Jochen Gartz’s 1989 paper ‘Biotransformation of tryptamine derivatives in mycelial cultures of Psilocybe’ which proposed a synergistic relationship between compounds in the mushrooms, and a 2015 paper by Zhuck et al, ‘Research on Acute Toxicity and the Behavioral Effects of Methanolic Extract from Psilocybin Mushrooms and Psilocin in Mice’, which observed that the effect of psychedelic mushroom extracts on mice was much stronger than pure psilocybin.

There has been very limited research on this hypothesis in mushrooms since. 

A new study: Natural may outperform synthetic

Now, a research team from Hebrew University-Hadassah Medical Center BrainLabs Center for the Psychedelic Research have compared a natural psilocybin extract to a chemically synthesised version.

Published in Molecular Psychiatry, results from the study indicate that the natural extract increased the levels of synaptic proteins associated with neuroplasticity in key brain regions, including the frontal cortex, hippocampus, amygdala, and striatum.

The ability of psilocybin to induce neuralplasticity has been indicated as one of the key features that contribute to its therapeutic effects.

The researchers suggest that these new study results indicate that nautral psilocybin extracts may offer unique therapeutic effects that may not be not achievable with synthesised, single-compound psilocybin alone. 

Metabolomic analyses also revealed that the natural extract exhibited a distinct metabolic profile associated with oxidative stress and energy production pathways.

The researchers write: “In Western medicine, there has historically been a preference for isolating active compounds rather than utilising extracts, primarily for the sake of gaining better control over dosages and anticipating known effects during treatment. The challenge with working with extracts lay in the inability, in the past, to consistently produce the exact product with a consistent compound profile. 

“Contrastingly, ancient medicinal practices, particularly those attributing therapeutic benefits to psychedelic medicine, embraced the use of extracts or entire products, such as consuming the entire mushroom. Although Western medicine has long recognised the “entourage” effect associated with whole extracts, the significance of this approach has gained recent prominence.”

However, compared to cannabis, the researchers suggest that mushroom extracts present a unique case, as they are highly influenced by their growing environment such as substrate, light exposure temperature and more.

“Despite these influences, controlled cultivation allows for the taming of mushrooms, enabling the production of a replicable extract,” the team writes.

The researchers emphasise that this research underscores the superiority of extracts with diverse compounds, and also highlights the feasibility of incorporating them into Western medicine due to the controlled nature of mushroom cultivation.

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