“Magic mushrooms” for the treatment of resistant depression and anxiety? Really?
Recent studies conducted by respected institutions on psychedelic-drug treatment of emotional and substance-abuse disorders have been reported in mainstream medical journals. Example publications are the New England Journal of Medicine, the Journal of Psychopharmacology, and the Journal of the American Medical Association. Authoring institutions include Harvard, Johns Hopkins, and New York University. This is in no way fringe science.
Various psychedelics demonstrate efficacy. However, the major research and treatment focus is on psilocybin, the psychoactive component in magic mushrooms.
Research on the therapeutic uses of psychedelics is not new, originating in the 1950s. It ended in 1970 with President Nixon’s “War on Drugs” (the Controlled Substances Act) when psilocybin and other drugs became illegal.
Treatment-resistant depression is the major condition studied. Also researched are resistant anxiety and PTSD; obsessive-compulsive disorder; alcohol, tobacco, and opioid abuse disorders; and end-of-life anxiety and depression, all with promising results.
Model psilocybin-treatment protocols for depression are very structured with pre-treatment preparatory consultations and very controlled treatment sessions. Medication administration is monitored by facilitators in a safe environment to eliminate harm from induced cognitive, psychological, and perceptual alterations followed importantly by post-treatment supportive psychotherapy.
The advantages of psilocybin treatment are that a single low dose (or possibly a second dose) produces long-term benefit ranging from months to years and that the medication is not given to the patient for home use, greatly reducing the potential for abuse and diversion. Also, psilocybin is a physiologically safe medication having an unattainable lethal dose and is non-addictive. It’s generally well tolerated, and side effects are transient. It’s safer than many other psychoactive medications.
A study by Johns Hopkins School of Medicine published in the Journal of Psychopharmacology is representative of studies demonstrating psilocybin’s durable efficacy for treatment-resistant depression. Significant decreases in depression were seen immediately and persisted during the 12-month duration of the study. Average severity of depression decreased by 300 percent at 12 months with a 75 percent response rate and a 58 percent remission rate.
Psilocybin acts on a specific serotonin receptor in the brain, which enables therapeutic benefits by producing a neurophysiologic window of “brain plasticity” creating greater receptiveness to healthy self-reflection, new ideas, and thought patterns. This underscores the importance of adding supportive psychotherapy to the medication treatment.
In 2018, the Federal Food and Drug Administration designated psilocybin as a “breakthrough medication” (having potential medical benefits beyond current therapies). This opened the door to permissible therapeutic use and FDA-approved research protocols.
In September the General Assembly’s Interim Public Health Study Committee, of which I am a lay member, heard compelling testimony regarding the therapeutic potential of psilocybin. The Committee voted to recommend that the legislature authorize “Indiana state research institutions to conduct a pilot clinical study … to explore the efficacy, safety, and feasibility of psilocybin-assisted therapy in Indiana.”
The breakthrough status also facilitates states in reclassifying psilocybin from an illegal schedule I drug (no accepted medical use with high potential for harm) to a legal schedule II drug even though the Drug Enforcement Agency has not reclassified its schedule I status federally. Reclassification also would support therapeutic use and research efforts.
At least 30 percent of depression is treatment-resistant and something I clinically see routinely. Many states are moving to make statutory changes to either decriminalize or more appropriately enable psilocybin research and treatment availability. Indiana should be one of them.
Richard D. Feldman, M.D. is an Indianapolis family physician and former Indiana State Health Commissioner who served in the administration of Governor Frank O’Bannon.