The Daily Telegraph

Alcoholics could benefit from doses of ecstasy to conquer their addiction, study finds

- By Laura Donnelly Health editor

THE drug MDMA, better known as the party drug ecstasy, could be successful­ly used to treat alcohol addiction, research suggests.

Early findings from the trial – the first study to use the drug for such purposes – indicates that it could prove better than standard treatments.

Psychiatri­sts are testing a programme which combines a few doses of MDMA in conjunctio­n with psychother­apy, After nine months, around half of those in the small study remained “completely dry” with just one suffering a full relapse. The results also found the drug was safe to use as part of therapy, with no physical or psychologi­cal problems identified.

Dr Ben Sessa, an addiction psychiatri­st and senior research fellow at Imperial College London, who led the trial, said: “With the very best that medical science can work with, 80 per cent of people are drinking within three years post alcohol detox.”

Eleven people have so far completed the safety and tolerabili­ty study, which involves nine months of follow-ups. “We’ve got one person who has completely relapsed back to previous drinking levels, we have five people who are completely dry and we have five who have had one or two drinks but wouldn’t reach the diagnosis of alcohol use disorder,” he told The Guardian.

The first stage of the new study was only designed to show the therapy is safe. Further trials will compare results with a randomised control group who receive a placebo instead of MDMA.

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