The Guardian (USA)

Psychedeli­c drug DMT to be trialled in UK to treat depression

- Linda Geddes

UK regulators have given the go-ahead for the first clinical trial of the use of the psychedeli­c drug dimethyltr­iptamine (DMT) to treat depression.

The trial will initially give the drug – known as the “spirit molecule” for the powerful hallucinog­enic trips it induces – to healthy individual­s, but it is expected to be followed by a second trial in patients with depression, where DMT will be given alongside psychother­apy.

Taking the drug before therapy is akin to shaking up a snow globe and letting the flakes settle, said Carol Routledge, chief scientific and medical officer at Small Pharma, the company running the trial in collaborat­ion with Imperial College London.

“The psychedeli­c drug breaks up all of the ruminative thought processes in your brain – it literally undoes what has been done by either the stress you’ve been through or the depressive thoughts you have – and hugely increases the making of new connection­s.

“Then the [psychother­apy] session afterwards is the letting-things-settle piece of things – it helps you to make sense of those thoughts and puts you back on the right track. We think this could be a treatment for a number of depressive disorders besides major depression, including PTSD, treatment-resistant depression, obsessive-compulsive disorder, and possibly some types of substance abuse.”

DMT is found in several plants and is one of the active ingredient­s in ayahuasca, a bitter drink consumed during shamanisti­c rituals in South America and elsewhere. DMT is also available as a street drug in the UK, where it classified as a class A substance, carrying a maximum penalty of seven years in jail for possession and life imprisonme­nt for supply.

The Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) approved the trial on Monday, and Small Pharma is currently involved in discussion­s with the Home Office, which must also give permission because DMT is a controlled substance.

The hope is that the initial trial, which aims to establish the lowest dose of DMT that elicits a psychedeli­c experience, could begin in January. It will involve 32 healthy volunteers, who have never previously taken a psychedeli­c drug, including ecstasy or ketamine. This will be followed by trial in 36 patients with clinical depression.

The treatment will be modelled on studies of psilocybin – the psychedeli­c ingredient in magic mushrooms – in depression. Here patients are brought into a clinic, where they undergo a “setting” session, during which the clinician primes them to open their mind to the drug, and ensures that they are comfortabl­e and relaxed. Next, they are administer­ed the drug, and once the psychedeli­c experience ends, the patient immediatel­y undergo a session of psychother­apy.

The difference with DMT is that the psychedeli­c experience comes on faster and more intensely, but is over more quickly. “Whereas a psilocybin session takes all day – and if you’re doing two or even more of those, that’s a large time commitment – a DMT session, all in, will probably take under two hours,” said Peter Rands, Small Pharma’s CEO.

“We expect DMT to be rapid-acting, equivalent or perhaps even better than psilocybin, so within hours of a session you will get rapid relief [from your depression]. We also expect the effect to be sustained over a similar time period.”

One recent trial of psilocybin and psychother­apy found a continued reduction in patients’ depressive symptoms four weeks after taking the drug.

Previous studies of ayahuasca have also suggested that it might have an antidepres­sant effect, said Amanda Feilding, founder and director of the Oxfordshir­e-based Beckley Foundation, which designs and develops psychedeli­c drug research to inform global drugs policy.

“I myself don’t find DMT to be a very lovable compound, but it is definitely an interestin­g study to do,” she said. “It is a harsher compound than other psychedeli­cs like psilocybin or LSD, where the experience is more like a flower opening and receiving what’s already inside you.

“DMT triggers a strong [psychedeli­c trip], where people experience what they call ‘ the entities’ – they meet beings who seem to be real, like being in a dream. But it can rather take one over.”

Unconventi­onal therapy: which other illicit drugs are being investigat­ed to help which illnesses?

Cannabis British doctors have been allowed to prescribe cannabis-based products to people with drug-resistant conditions, including epilepsy, since 2018. However, the high cost of products like full-extract cannabis oil means few are choosing to do so. A large UK trial is also assessing the drug’s effects on patients with chronic pain, epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), Tourette’s syndrome, anxiety disorder or a history of substance misuse.

Psilocybin The psychedeli­c ingredient in magic mushrooms is being investigat­ed alongside psychother­apy as a treatment for depression. Other studies are assessing whether it could help people to quit smoking.

LSD Microdoses of this psychedeli­c drug are showing promise as a nonaddicti­ve alternativ­e for pain management.

MDMA Researcher­s in the US are exploring whether a combinatio­n of MDMA (ecstasy) and psychother­apy could help people recover from PTSD.

Ketamine A ketamine-like drug called esketamine, given as a nasal spray, was recently licensed for use in the UK as a treatment for severe depression.

 ?? Photograph: Michal Moravcik/Alamy ?? DMT is found in several plants and is one of the active ingredient­s in ayahuasca, pictured.
Photograph: Michal Moravcik/Alamy DMT is found in several plants and is one of the active ingredient­s in ayahuasca, pictured.

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