Psychedelics are gathering momentum as compounds of potential therapeutic value within the scientific community,Reference McClure-Begley and Roth1–Reference Ko, Kopra, Cleare and Rucker3 in the mainstream mediaReference Jacobs4,Reference Prideaux5 and among patients searching for new and promising treatments, as more accounts of benefits are published.Reference Carpenter6 This is a welcome change from the predominantly negative narrative that was associated with psychedelics prior to the recent resurgence of interest in their therapeutic properties, and it is supported by promising results from early clinical trials.Reference Slomski7–Reference Goodwin, Aaronson, Alvarez, Arden, Baker and Bennett11 Larger studies needed to validate these results are currently in development, and a phase 3 programme for treatment-resistant depression is currently underway. However, there is a risk of replacing the stigma and historically predominantly negative narrative with an equally misleading and overwhelmingly positive narrative. This has already been explored within the scientific communityReference Butler, Jelen and Rucker12–Reference Noorani and Martell14 and is a factor that needs to be considered when working with these substances, to provide a balanced view of their benefits and harms, with a focus on science rather than media hype.
This case report was written on the basis of the authors’ involvement with COMP001, COMPASS Pathways’ phase 2b clinical trial of the investigational drug COMP360 (COMPASS Pathways’ proprietary synthetic psilocybin formulation) for treatment-resistant depression,Reference Goodwin, Aaronson, Alvarez, Arden, Baker and Bennett11 and COMP004, a long-term follow-up study (Fig. 1). In COMP001, psilocybin (1, 10 or 25 mg) was administered in a double-blind fashion under therapist supervision in a comfortable, non-clinical environment. This was preceded by two sessions of preparation, which included psychoeducation and building rapport, and followed by two sessions of integration, during which participants shared their experience with the therapist.
This participant was one of 12 who experienced serious adverse events during COMP001, having experienced two herself. It was felt that her case needed highlighting for several reasons:
(a) it demonstrates that suicidal ideation can worsen following psilocybin administration, even within a supportive clinical setting;
(b) it illustrates the complexity of the experience of patients with difficult-to-treat depression and demonstrates that participants can have prolonged adverse reactions following psilocybin experiences;
(c) it suggests that some patients classed as ‘non-responders’ can in fact have positive outcomes not expressed in the data, highlighting the limitations of quantitative studies in capturing paradoxical positive changes in affect that are not necessarily reflected in changes on depression rating scales.
Method
The participant was approached by the authors (M.W. and C.H.) to suggest writing the report. She gave her consent and offered to write a comprehensive account of her experience. This was analysed by M.K. using a thematic analysis,Reference Braun and Clarke15 themes were developed based on similarities, and identified themes were synthesised into a logic model.16 The participant was involved throughout the process to ensure accuracy, and the manuscript was shared with COMPASS Pathways, the trial sponsor, to enable them to provide relevant trial data and to comment on the manuscript before submission. Ethical approval was not required for this report.
Case presentation
Throughout this report, participant details have been changed to de-identify the individual. She will be referred to as ‘Zakara’.
ZakaraReference Skivington, Matthews, Simpson, Craig, Baird and Blazeby17 had a history of recurrent depression which started in 2012 and continued throughout her life, with the current episode being of 2.5 years duration with no response to citalopram or sertraline at adequate dose and duration. She had a history of chronic fatigue syndrome in 2017 and of meningitis as a baby, which had resolved without sequalae. Otherwise, she had no significant physical health history.
The Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview confirmed a primary diagnosis of moderate depressive disorder (recurrent) and social anxiety disorder. She reported suicidal thoughts at the time of screening, both in the past year and throughout her life, albeit without intent, and cited her family as a protective factor. She reported thinking about suicide as a fantasy of escape from her emotional pain and, despite having no intent to hurt herself, she had visited the train tracks to ‘see what they were like’ when she was particularly low in mood, in the year before dosing.
This did not meet the criteria for significant suicide risk as defined by (a) suicidal ideation as endorsed on items 4 or 5 on the Columbia Suicidality Severity Rating Scale within the past year, screening, or at baseline; or (b) suicidal behaviours within the past year; or (c) clinical assessment of significant suicidal risk during subject interview.
Her vital signs and electrocardiogram were normal, and there were no significant clinical abnormalities in her work-up. Other rating scales included the Mclean Screening Instrument for Borderline Personality Disorder, on which she scored 2, well below the cut-off to suggest a diagnosis of emotionally unstable personality disorder; and the Adult ADHD Self-Report Scale, where she scored 17, indicating a possibility of comorbid ADHD. At baseline, her Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression score was 25, indicating severe depression, and her Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) score was 33, indicating moderate depression.
On dosing day, she was randomised to 25 mg COMP360 (administered double-blind with respect to dose). After a good start, Zakara started to struggle and found the latter half of the day very distressing. Following the experience, she reported feeling that her existence was ‘pointless’ and her death by suicide was ‘inevitable’. She had no intent to act on these thoughts and had support from her mother for the night, with 2 × 1 mg of lorazepam provided to be used as required.
The following morning (1 July 2021), Zakara reported feeling ‘hung over’, described feeling ‘rocky’ and was unable to eat breakfast owing to persistent nausea. She also reported having thoughts of jumping out of the window the night before. She explained that her wish to be dead was now more intense and her suicidal thoughts now constant and more difficult to control, but she had no intent to follow through, with her protective factors still in place. She was offered the first of three additional integration sessions which were spread across the rest of the study and a handover was given to the local crisis team for support if required. At this point her MADRS was 43 (Fig. 2), indicating severe depression. Four days post-dosing, Zakara contacted the team reporting a significant deterioration in her mood, reporting it was ‘the worst she'd ever felt’. She was experiencing panic attacks, disrupted sleep and an inability to eat due to persistent nausea. She was also struggling with an increase in her suicidal thoughts, with some intent to act on them, although this fluctuated. She had impulses to go to the train tracks near her home, which she did, but only so ‘her brain would shut up’, as she was having thoughts of wanting to go. Zakara made it clear at the time that she had no intent of taking her life when she visited the tracks. She did, however, consider taking an overdose of her prescribed propranolol (see Table 1 for all medications prescribed). She reached out to ‘Breathing Space’ (a free, confidential, phone and webchat service for anyone in Scotland over the age of 16 experiencing low mood, depression or anxiety), and the study team referred her to the crisis team, who supported her until her next appointment (week 1). This was the first serious adverse event, consisting of suicidal ideation with some intent.
max., maximum.
Despite her struggles, Zakara was able to go to work 6 days post-dosing. She was supported with diazepam, which she found very helpful. She continued to struggle with low mood, but her suicidal thoughts were improving. One week post-dosing, her presentation was less acute and she reported feeling better although still worse than her baseline. Her panic attacks had stopped.
Two weeks post-dosing, Zakara continued to struggle, although she started making changes to her daily life. She joined a fitness club and reported that her suicidal thoughts were less constant. By 6 weeks post-dosing, Zakara was able to do all her usual work and activities (such as seeing friends and exercising) despite her low mood. She was looking to change to a more fulfilling job and felt that her concentration on things that she enjoyed was better than before dosing, suggesting some functional improvement despite MADRS scores remaining high.
Nine weeks post-dosing, Zakara had her second serious adverse event. Distressed by personal circumstances, which included friends leaving the city and family being away, she contemplated taking an overdose, counted the medication she had at home, and started writing a suicide note but stopped of her own accord. Twelve weeks post-dosing (the end of the COMP001 study), she felt she was managing better overall and was able to recognise a distance between her and her negative thoughts. She had no suicidal ideation and had significantly reduced death wishes, but she still struggled with her sleep and appetite. Zakara was then enrolled in COMP004.
Twenty-four weeks post-dosing, improvement continued as she reported being ‘generally well’. She had started a new job and was happy with the changes she made in her life. Her nausea and consequent inability to eat persevered for around 9 months before starting to improve and only ceased being of concern around 1 year after dosing (weight measurements were not included as per Zakara's preference). This was severe and significant in its impact, with her being unable to eat more than 300 calories per day, leading to hair thinning, rapid weight loss and fainting at one point. She did have a history of diet restriction a few years prior to enrolment, which she felt was ‘activated’ after the experience. She described not restricting intentionally but rather being physically unable to eat owing to severe nausea and her anxiety. There was a concern over anorexic cognitions returning a few months after dosing, given that she reported ‘having an internal voice that told her what she could and couldn't eat’, which was easier to ignore with the higher dose of quetiapine (these were not hallucinations).
One year after dosing, she felt she was in a better place overall, with her mood being more stable and appetite back to normal. She felt that despite the difficulties she encountered, the trial had been a positive experience for her. She summarised her improvement in a small, but meaningful change she had noticed, which was that she had brushed her teeth every day since dosing.
Thematic analysis
‘I don't want my experience to be used as a warning against the use of psilocybin therapeutically. But I also don't want it to be brushed aside as a fluke, or as a non-responder (Oh boy, did I respond)’
Twenty-nine themes were identified from the written account provided by Zakara, the most relevant of which are presented in Table 2 below (see Supplementary material available at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2024.768 for all themes). Themes were categorised as per logic model components: inputs, processes, outputs, outcomes and impact, to provide a context for the themes as portrayed in the original text.
Discussion
This case report illustrates that deterioration in mood and increased suicidal ideation can occur following psilocybin administration in the clinical setting. This is well reported in the non-clinical literature, where some recreational users of psilocybin mushrooms report the experience to have been among the most challenging of their lives,Reference Carbonaro, Bradstreet, Barrett, MacLean, Jesse and Johnson18 with a recent survey of psychedelics users highlighting that 8.9% of people reported impairment that lasted longer than a day, 4.6% reported severely impaired ability to function, and 6.7% reported thoughts or attempts of hurting themselves or others.Reference Simonsson, Hendricks, Chambers, Osika and Goldberg19 It is not unusual for depression treatments to be associated with an increase in suicidal ideation early in treatment,Reference Stone, Laughren, Jones, Levenson, Holland and Hughes20 and it is well established that within psychotherapy, clients can experience destabilisation before improvement, especially when confronting difficulties they had been avoiding.21 Using the same concept, and given that psychedelics are hypothesised to leave individuals feeling more open and less avoidant of internal processes, experiencing emotions that were previously numbed,Reference Gorman, Nielson, Molinar, Cassidy and Sabbagh22 it is not unexpected that periods of mood instability may occur after dosing.
Zakara's experience also calls attention to the possibility of prolonged adverse events following psilocybin therapy, given that she struggled with disordered eating that persisted for months following the experience. This has not been clearly captured in the clinical literature so far.
Another aspect to be highlighted is the limitations of quantitative methodology in capturing longitudinal change. Despite falling into the category of being a non-responder,Reference Goodwin, Aaronson, Alvarez, Arden, Baker and Bennett11 and not showing a clinical improvement response on rating scales until 1 year after dosing (shortly after starting duloxetine), Zakara was very clear about the earlier benefit of the experience in helping her reconnect with herself and ‘waking up’ to the reality she was living in but distracting herself from. A change in job, a focus on physical exercise and looking after her health, an increased awareness of her internal state and, above all, small daily changes in self-care all clearly show a significant impact on her day-to-day life, despite this not being reflected in her mood rating scale scores. The same concept applies to adverse events, which are not completely captured using quantitative methods. McNamee and others have highlighted the underrepresentation and inadequate investigation of adverse events and the importance of qualitative exploration.Reference McNamee, Devenot and Buisson23 One aspect underlined through qualitative exploration in this instance is the role of expectation in the treatment process. It has been argued that expectancy based on ‘media hype’ may inflate effects in clinical trials.Reference Butler, Jelen and Rucker12 This case illustrates the possibility that an anticipation of a ‘reset’ or ‘reboot’Reference Gallagher24,Reference Siddique25 may in fact have a detrimental effect if the experience is unexpected and the ‘reset’ is not attained.
Finally, Zakara's description of her changes post-dosing suggest a reduction in avoidance of negative emotions and having a fuller experience of her mental and emotional life, in line with suggestions that psilocybin reduces experiential avoidance.Reference Zeifman, Wagner, Watts, Kettner, Mertens and Carhart-Harris26 The lack of immediate response, however, raises the question of whether other elements are necessary, e.g. emotional breakthrough, which was correlated with improvement in this trial.Reference Goodwin27 Zakara's responses on the Emotional Breakthrough Inventory suggest that whereas she did face difficult emotions, she did not experience a sense of emotional release, nor did she feel she had an emotional breakthrough or a sense of closure on emotional problems. This could correlate phenomenologically with the salient moment in Zakara's experience, where she felt there was a ‘black cloud’ coming out, and feeling a sense of catharsis that was interrupted.
Recommendations
Context plays an important part in psilocybin therapy,Reference Carhart-Harris, Roseman, Haijen, Erritzoe, Watts and Branchi28 and a significant aspect of this is preparation. It is therefore recommended that managing expectation and providing information on possible outcomes following psilocybin therapy is well covered in the preparation phase. This should include the potential for destabilisation and increased suicidal ideation and the need for further support following the session. This allows participants to be well informed and better prepared for any potential after-effects that may occur, and it will help to reduce the idea of a ‘magic treatment’ with very limited adverse events. It remains unclear what the long-term effects of psilocybin are, and long-term follow-up will be necessary to gain a better understanding of these effects; this would also provide an opportunity for aftercare for those who require it.
In addition, given the richness of the psychedelic experience and the limitations of quantitative methodology in capturing this, it would be of value to include process evaluation and qualitative analysis of participant accounts, e.g. at baseline, the point of primary outcome and the end of the trial, with a special focus on those who suffered serious adverse events. This would help to highlight vulnerabilities and identify circumstances associated with such events and refine the screening and administration process. This is further supported by the Medical Research Council's guidance for complex interventions in care,Reference Skivington, Matthews, Simpson, Craig, Baird and Blazeby17 which recommends conducting a process evaluation alongside implementation of such interventions. Psilocybin therapy is considered a complex intervention, given the number of components involved and the significance of context and delivery for the outcome.Reference Carhart-Harris, Roseman, Haijen, Erritzoe, Watts and Branchi28
In conclusion, this case illustrates that psilocybin administration could be followed by a worsening in suicidal ideation and prolonged adverse events that long outlast its acute effects. Paradoxically, it may lead to an improvement in functional outcome that is not clear on depression rating scales. As this is a single case report, no conclusions can be drawn, and further assessment is required to understand this phenomenon. Another limitation to note is the likelihood that Zakara had guessed she had received an active dose given the intensity of the experience and was thus unblinded; this could have affected her long-term outcomes.
Supplementary material
Supplementary material is available online at https://doi.org/10.1192/bjo.2024.768
Data availability
Data availability is not applicable to this article as no new data were created or analysed in this study. Zakara's account is available; however, it will only be shared at her discretion owing to its personal nature.
Acknowledgments
We thank our participant for her courage and willingness to share her experience and her patience throughout the writing process. We also thank Professor Guy Goodwin, Chief Medical Officer at COMPASS Pathways, and his team, who were very helpful in providing the data requested and responded promptly to all requests. Zakara thanks her family and friends for all their support, particularly her mum and best friend for their love and constancy; the whole trial team for more than fulfilling their roles with an abundance of compassion and patience; Mourad and Caroline for always modelling honesty and integrity in healthcare; her dog Sam for all the cuddles; and God for not abandoning her after all.
Author contributions
M.W. led on writing the manuscript with contributions from C.H. M.K. analysed the participant's written account with support from M.W. and C.H. R.H.M.-W. supervised the writing of the manuscript, and was principal investigator for the trial in question.
Funding
No funding was received for this manuscript.
Declaration of interest
Both M.W. and C.H. were sub-investigators on the phase 2b trial sponsored by COMPASS Pathways, for which R.H.M.-W. was the principal investigator. M.W. was funded to work on the trial and carry out the medical responsibilities and is principal investigator for the current phase 3 trial.
Consent
Written and verbal consent were obtained from Zakara prior to the writing of the manuscript, and versions were regularly sent back for comments and approval throughout the writing process, including the final draft. All identifiable information was removed to maintain confidentiality.
Ethics
Treatment with psilocybin and all related assessments and data collection were part of COMP001 and COMP004, which were conducted in accordance with the International Council for Harmonisation, Good Clinical Practice guidelines and the ethical principles of the Declaration of Helsinki. The report was provided voluntarily by Zakara, who consented for it to be analysed and included in this paper.
eLetters
No eLetters have been published for this article.