A new British Medical Journal editorial analyses the polarised research on psychedelic drugs, highlighting the swing between enthusiasm and scepticism in psychopharmacology.
The British Medical Journal has published an editorial examining the contested evidence surrounding psychedelics in mental health treatment. The piece highlights how research findings swing between “overly enthusiastic and overly sceptical” interpretations.
Few areas of psychopharmacology attract as much attention as psychedelics, according to the BMJ analysis. The editorial unpicks evidence from studies investigating drugs like psilocybin and LSD for conditions including depression and PTSD.
The Research Landscape
Psychedelic research experienced a resurgence around 2006 after decades of regulatory restrictions. The Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 had effectively banned such studies for years.
Over 20 UK clinical trials involving psychedelics have been registered since 2015, according to the NIHR Clinical Research Network. But no psychedelics are currently licensed for routine psychiatric use in Britain – they remain Schedule 1 controlled drugs under Home Office classifications.
Compass Pathways’ COMP360 psilocybin trial for treatment-resistant depression showed a 29% response rate compared to 8% for placebo in a phase 2b study of 233 participants. Phase 3 results are expected in 2026.
Regulatory Caution
The MHRA and Home Office maintain cautious positions, prioritising safety data before considering rescheduling. NICE guidelines do not yet recommend psychedelics, though ongoing reviews consider evidence for depression and anxiety in palliative care.
Researchers remain optimistic about potential applications but call for larger, long-term studies to counter bias. Critics worry that hype could lead to unsafe recreational use, highlighting limited evidence and potential access inequities.
The editorial comes as UK antidepressant prescriptions reached 86 million items in 2023, according to NHS Business Services Authority data. Current treatment options remain limited for many patients with treatment-resistant conditions.
Safety Concerns
Local drug services warn of risks from unregulated psychedelic use amid rising public interest. The substances remain illegal outside approved clinical trials.
Officials emphasise the need for rigorous randomised controlled trials before any changes to current regulations. The research community continues to handle between promising early findings and the need for full safety data.
Source: @bmj_latest
Key Takeaways
- BMJ editorial highlights polarised interpretations of psychedelic research evidence
- Over 20 UK clinical trials registered since 2015, but no drugs yet licensed for routine use
- Psilocybin showed 29% response rate vs 8% placebo in major depression trial
What This Means for Kent Residents
Kent residents accessing mental health services through NHS Kent and Medway ICB can only access psychedelic treatments through national research trials, not local clinics. Patients requiring specialist treatment may need referrals to London centres like King’s College London. Anyone considering psychedelic treatments should speak to their GP about legitimate clinical trials rather than seeking unregulated alternatives, which remain illegal and potentially dangerous.