Home > Psilocybin for clinical indications: a scoping review.

Madden, Kim and Flood, Breanne and Young Shing, Darren and Ade-Conde, Michael and Kashir, Imad and Mark, Melanie and MacKillop, James and Bhandari, Mohit and Adili, Anthony (2024) Psilocybin for clinical indications: a scoping review. Journal of Psychopharmacology, 38, (10), pp. 839-845. https://doi.org/10.1177/02698811241269751.

External website: https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/0269...

BACKGROUND Psychedelic drugs have been of interest in medicine since the early 1950s. There has recently been a resurgence of interest in psychedelics.

AIMS The objective of this study is to determine the extent of the available literature on psilocybin for medical indications including the designs used, study characteristics, indications studied, doses, and authors' conclusions. We identify areas for further study where there are research gaps.

METHODS We conducted a systematic scoping review of clinical indications for psilocybin, encompassing psychiatric and medical conditions. We systematically searched Medline and Embase using keywords related to psilocybin. We reviewed titles and texts in duplicate using Covidence software. We extracted data individually in duplicate using Covidence software and a senior reviewer resolved all author conflicts. We analyzed data descriptively.

RESULTS We included 193 published and 80 ongoing studies. Thirty-seven percent of included studies were systematic reviews. Only 12% of included studies were randomized controlled trials. The median number of participants was 22 with a median of 18 participants who had taken psilocybin. Thirty-eight percent of studies reported at least one potential conflict of interest. The most common indication was depression (28%). Also commonly studied were substance use (14%), mental health in life-threatening illness (9%), headaches (6%), depression and anxiety (6%), obsessive-compulsive disorder (3%), and anxiety disorders (3%).

CONCLUSIONS Most studies involving the administration of psilocybin have small sample sizes and the most common focus has been psychiatric disorders. There is a need for high-quality randomized trials on psilocybin and to expand consideration to other promising indications, such as chronic pain.


Item Type
Article
Publication Type
International, Open Access, Review
Drug Type
New psychoactive substance
Intervention Type
Treatment method
Date
October 2024
Identification #
https://doi.org/10.1177/02698811241269751
Page Range
pp. 839-845
Publisher
Sage
Volume
38
Number
10
EndNote

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