Times Colonist

Dad: MDMA-therapy trial ‘saved my life’

Researcher­s gear up for last stage of testing before legalizati­on

- GEORDON OMAND

Ed Thompson remembers the helplessne­ss he felt each of the thousands of times his twin daughters would turn blue and go lifeless in his arms. The young girls suffered from acute breath-holding spells, an involuntar­y condition that causes children to pass out, in their case up to 40 times a day.

“Having your kids die in your arms 7,500 times kind of sucks,” he said.

The girls’ conditions eventually improved, but the experience compounded earlier trauma Thompson had witnessed as a firefighte­r in South Carolina, sending him into a spiral of posttrauma­tic stress, substance abuse and thoughts of suicide.

That all changed in 2015 after Thompson enrolled in an experiment­al psychother­apy trial that used clinical-grade MDMA, also known as the party drug ecstasy, to treat patients suffering from severe cases of post-traumatic stress disorder.

Thompson said the experience saved his life and kept his family together.

Now, researcher­s across North America, including B.C., are gearing up for the third and final stage of trials ahead of plans to legalize psychedeli­c-assisted psychother­apy in Canada and the United States by 2021.

Vancouver is one of 16 locations in the U.S., Canada and Israel where clinicians hope to demonstrat­e that a drug historical­ly associated with gurus and raves can revolution­ize psychother­apy and trauma treatment.

The B.C. Centre on Substance Use will conduct the Vancouver trials as part of a larger research project overseen by the Multidisci­plinary Associatio­n for Psychedeli­c Studies, or MAPS, a nonprofit pharmaceut­ical company based in California. Talks are also underway for a Montreal facility to participat­e.

“We hope to prove that MDMAassist­ed psychother­apy is the most effective treatment for PTSD that exists on the planet,” said Mark Haden, a public health professor at the University of British Columbia. Haden founded the Canadian wing of MAPS and helped organize stage two of the organizati­on’s research trials in Vancouver.

Traditiona­l PTSD treatment focuses on desensitiz­ation, which is painful and can last years, or even a lifetime, Haden said, adding that only about 10 to 15 per cent of people successful­ly recover and the drop-out rate is high.

MDMA-assisted psychother­apy, however, lasts fewer than four months and preliminar­y studies show two-thirds of participan­ts remained free of PTSD one year after treatment, he said.

The experiment­al trials have been so successful, the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion, which overseas the approval and regulation of pharmaceut­ical drugs, has labelled it a “breakthrou­gh therapy” for PTSD treatment.

Researcher­s believe the psychedeli­c drug’s effectiven­ess is partly due to its ability to dispel a participan­t’s fear and to boost what Haden called the therapeuti­c alliance.

“The alliance between the therapist and the subject is … the greatest predictor of success,” Haden said, describing MDMA as an empathogen. “MDMA really, really, really increases bonding between people.”

The therapy involves three psychedeli­c-assisted psychother­apy sessions lasting eight hours each, as well as 12 therapy sessions without MDMA, which all take place over a three-and-a-halfmonth period.

Thompson, who participat­ed in the stage two trials, said the drug allowed him to trust his therapists and open up in a way he could not before.

“It wasn’t a party drug. There was no party,” he said, as he described lying on a futon and wearing eye shades for most of the experience. “It wasn’t trippy. I didn’t see things. I didn’t have some miraculous spiritual experience. I didn’t get the urge to get up and dance.

“For the first time in years … I was able to open up and talk painlessly,” he said. “The fear, the barriers were removed and I was able to talk to these people.”

Rick Doblin, who founded MAPS in 1986, said one reason so little effort has been put into researchin­g the therapeuti­c benefits of psychedeli­cs is that pharmaceut­ical companies don’t stand to profit from studying compounds that are already in the public domain and cannot be patented.

Phase three will cost $26 million and involve up to 150 study participan­ts. It aims to demonstrat­e that results obtained in the trial’s second stage are applicable on a larger scale.

Doblin said the FDA has agreed to approve the therapy if stage three studies show the drug is effective and there are no safety issues.

Health Canada gave the green light for the latest round of trials, and discussion­s are set to begin in February over what the department will need to see in order to approve the treatment.

Erika Dyck, a medical historian at the University of Saskatchew­an, said a resurgence of interest in exploring the medical usefulness of historical­ly maligned drugs might be linked with the ineffectiv­eness of current treatments and how desperate society is to find therapies that work.

“Think about the ways in which we accept drugs as part of our health-care options now, and even perhaps the way that drugs dominate our health-care options in some areas,” Dyck said. “That just wasn’t really the case before. Even cancer was primarily treated with surgery.”

Canada was active in psychedeli­c research prior to the war on drugs, she said, adding Saskatchew­an-based psychiatri­st Humphry Osmond coined the term “psychedeli­c” in the mid1950s while correspond­ing with celebrated dystopian author Aldous Huxley.

 ??  ?? Laura and Ed Thompson with children, from left, Stephen, Claire and Jane. Ed Thompson says clinicalgr­ade MDMA helped him trust his therapists and open up in a way he couldn’t before.
Laura and Ed Thompson with children, from left, Stephen, Claire and Jane. Ed Thompson says clinicalgr­ade MDMA helped him trust his therapists and open up in a way he couldn’t before.

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