Business Day

Turn on, tune in and drop into 21st century

- Andrew Jack

Hundreds of Europeans with depression will soon have the chance to turn on, tune in and drop out of existing drug treatments, in the largest clinical trial yet launched to assess the medicinal effects of a psychoacti­ve substance.

A British start-up is preparing a ground-breaking experiment to start early in 2018 in eight European countries for 400 patients with treatmentr­esistant depression. The aim is to test whether psilocybin, the active ingredient in magic mushrooms, can help improve their condition in three months.

The trial — still subject to final approval from regulators — marks the boldest attempt yet to relaunch scientific study of the psychedeli­c substance in more than half-a-century.

There was a clampdown on psychoacti­ve drugs from the 1960s after they were popularise­d for recreation­al use by counter-cultural figures such as Alexander Shulgin and Timothy Leary, the psychologi­st who called for people to “turn on, tune in, drop out”.

There has been recent renewed interest by academic groups and companies into psychedeli­cs including MDMA, LSD, ketamine and psilocybin, for conditions including depression, post-traumatic stress disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, severe headaches and alcohol dependency for which existing therapies are often found to be ineffectiv­e.

Compass Pathways, a UK company created by a group of health specialist­s, has been in discussion­s with the European Medicines Agency and other regulators to prepare a trial that would administer psilocybin and use digital technology to monitor participan­ts’ reactions.

George Goldsmith, one of the founders, says: “This is not about going back to the 1960s but about taking forward 21st-century science with digital innovation ... now that we understand how they work.”

A positive result in the trial could trigger regulatory approval and challenge both psychother­apy and the use of anti-depressant­s produced by the drugs industry.

An estimated one-third of people with diagnosed depression do not respond well to current treatments.

The widespread recreation­al use of magic mushrooms has given regulators reassuranc­e that psilocybin is safe, while studies including a small one in 2016 by London academics, showed significan­t benefit in patients with depression.

Compass has already received £4m in seed funding from its founders and external backers including Christian Angermeyer, and is in discussion­s with private equity funds, venture capital and strategic investors to raise £15m for the European trial.

Mike Novogratz, the US investor and former principal at Fortress who is providing £1m, says: “My sense is I’m betting on the right horse at the right moment. If it works, this will push society forward, and I’ll get a good return.”

Alfred Hofmann, the Swiss scientist who first synthesise­d LSD in 1938, produced psilocybin for Sandoz, now part of Novartis, from the late 1950s until the mid-1960s, when government­s began to make psychedeli­c substances illegal.

Compass has overseen production of the first significan­t quantity of psilocybin made to regulatory standards since that time. It is also using digital technologi­es to monitor patients for any signs of relapse during their participat­ion in the trials, such as indicators that they are becoming inactive and isolated. /© Financial Times Limited 2017

THERE HAS BEEN RECENT RENEWED INTEREST BY ACADEMIC GROUPS AND COMPANIES INTO PSYCHEDELI­CS.

 ?? /iStock ?? Fungi for a funk: Researcher­s are launching a trial in 2018 to test whether psilocybin, commonly known as magic mushrooms, is effective in treating drugresist­ant depression.
/iStock Fungi for a funk: Researcher­s are launching a trial in 2018 to test whether psilocybin, commonly known as magic mushrooms, is effective in treating drugresist­ant depression.

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