this informs us that the science for magic mushrooms is actually advancing rapidly. It will not take decades. Better yet it will produce published knowledge regarding dosage and direct results if any. This is valuable for personal usage.
Add in the present gold rush around the science of cannabis and we are seeing a huge drive around fully understanding all psycho active plants. This could not be more welcome and it also comes at a time when the tools have multiplied as well.
So from that, we can seriously predict full mastery of the whole palette by 2030 and full implementation during the next decade.
Expect the full roster of TCM (Traditional Chinese Medicine) to also be carefully vetted as well. This will serve to root out clear placebos and define general efficiency properly...
Psilocybin for major depression granted Breakthrough Therapy by FDA
The
FDA has awarded another Breakthrough Therapy designation for
psilocybin, this time focusing on research into the effect of a single
dose on patients suffering from major depressive disorder
The US
Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has granted psilocybin therapy a
Breakthrough Therapy designation for the second time in a year, this
time with a view on accelerating trials testing its efficacy treating
major depressive disorder (MDD).
Back in late 2018, the FDA granted Breakthrough Therapy status to the ongoing work from COMPASS Pathways investigating psilocybin, the key psychoactive compound in magic mushrooms, as a therapy for treatment-resistant depression. A large, multi-center Phase 2 trial spanning the US, UK and Europe is currently underway testing a variety of dosing strategies.
This new FDA Breakthrough Therapy approval focuses on a seven-site, Phase 2 trial currently underway in the United States. Coordinated by a non-profit research organization called the Usona Institute,
the trial is exploring the antidepressant properties of a single
psilocybin dose in treating patients with major depressive disorder.
Last
year’s Breakthrough Therapy designation was targeted at the drug’s
efficacy for treatment-resistant depression (TRD). That particular
clinical classification categorizes patients suffering from MDD who have
not responded effectively to at least two different pharmacological
antidepressant treatments during a current depressive episode. It is estimated between 10 and 30 percent of MDD patients fall into the category of TRD.
The
new FDA approval focuses on Usona’s research into the broader condition
of MDD, characterized by episodes of severe depression that last more
than two weeks. Hundreds of millions of people around the world suffer
from these kinds of acute major depressive episodes every year.
“The
results from previous studies clearly demonstrate the remarkable
potential for psilocybin as a treatment in MDD patients, which Usona is
now seeking to confirm in its own clinical trials,” says Usona’s
director of clinical and translational research, Charles Raison. “What
is truly groundbreaking is FDA’s rightful acknowledgement that MDD, not
just the much smaller treatment-resistant depression population,
represents an unmet medical need and that the available data suggest
that psilocybin may offer a substantial clinical improvement over
existing therapies.”
The FDA’s Breakthrough Therapy
designation was introduced in 2012 as a way of presenting a faster
pathway to approval for drugs that display treatment advantages over
current options for serious or life-threatening conditions. As well as
offering developmental assistance to whatever organization is sponsoring
the research, the designation is considered a positive endorsement
towards the veracity and social impact of a prospective treatment. To
date, roughly one in three treatments granted a Breakthrough Therapy
designation have ultimately moved to market approval.
The Usona Phase 2 trial
plans to enrol 80 subjects, randomized to receive either a single
active dose of psilocybin or an active placebo containing niacin. The
methodology being trialed is similar to other psilocybin therapy
studies, with a number of preparatory psychotherapy sessions preceding
the active psychedelic dose, and a number of integrative psychotherapy
sessions afterwards.
As the trial is investigating the effects of a
single psilocybin dose the research will offer some fascinating
insights into the potential broad applications of the psychedelic agent
in treating general depressive episodes, as opposed to other work
exploring efficacy in more severe cases with multiple doses.
Usona
estimates the current Phase 2 trial should be completed by early 2021,
and with the help of this Breakthrough Therapy designation from the FDA,
it should be able to swiftly move into larger Phase 3 trials if the
results are positive.
The previously discussed COMPASS trials
looking at psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression should be
completed sometime in 2020, suggesting the next 12 to 24 months will
offer some compelling and solid data into how effective this new
psychedelic therapy actually is in treating several different forms of
depression.
“Given that there is so much complexity with
psilocybin and that Usona is charting new ground, these interactions
will ensure that Usona and the FDA are aligned in approaching the
development program with acceptable best practices,” says Raison.
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