
Rick Doblin, June May Ruse, John Halpern, and Michael Mithoefer listen attentively during a
meeting with the officials at the Israeli Anti-Drug Authority. Photo by Jose Carlos Bouso.
The March 24, 2005 Israeli MAPS conference may have
been the most "mainstream" psychedelic research conference
in decades. Held under the auspices of the Israeli
Ministry of Health and the Israeli Society of Addiction
Medicine, the one-day event also brought representatives
from the Israeli Anti-Drug Authority (equivalent to the
Office of National Drug Control Policy), and even Israeli
legislator Roman Bronfman's office to learn about psychedelic
research projects around the world.
MAPS organized the conference to educate Israeli
researchers and regulators about the proposed MAPS-
sponsored Israeli MDMA/PTSD pilot study (see page
3). The study would be under the direction of Dr. Moshe
Kotler, Chair, Department of Psychiatry, Tel Aviv University,
Sackler School of Medicine. The speakers included most
of the few researchers in the world who have permission to
give psychedelics to humans.
Here is a summary of the speakers' presentations, in
the order they were given. You can also watch videos of
the talks at http://www.maps.org/avarchive/. In addition
to the "usual gang" of MAPS-sponsored researchers, like
Dr. Michael Mithoefer and Dr. John Halpern, we had the
opportunity to hear from researchers in Israel, Spain, and
Germany. All have exciting projects in the field of psychedelic
or marijuana research.
Rick Doblin, Ph.D.
Opening the event, MAPS President Rick Doblin
discussed MAPS' seven-year effort to start MDMA/PTSD
research in Israel. After meeting Dr. Moshe Kotler in 1998,
MAPS organized two scientific conferences to pave the
way for an Israeli study. In 1999, MAPS brought to Israel
at least one person from every scientific team in the world
that had permission to administer MDMA to human
subjects. The second conference, in 2002, brought all the
researchers who had conducted MDMA/PTSD research, as
well as other scientists and researchers. Now that the U.S.
MDMA/PTSD pilot study has generated promising results
and the FDA has approved an MDMA/cancer anxiety
study at Harvard, Doblin said he hoped that this third
conference would be sufficient to start the formal protocol
design and review process for an Israeli pilot study.
Michael Mithoefer, M.D.
The principal investigator of the MAPS-sponsored
MDMA/PTSD study in South Carolina, Dr. Mithoefer discussed
the preliminary results from the first five subjects
who have completed the entire study, as well as two others
who have completed everything but the final follow-ups.
While no conclusions can be drawn from such a small
sample, the data is extremely promising. There have been
no adverse physiological responses or measurable neuro-cognitive problems.
Five of these seven participants were
given MDMA and two were given placebo; all five subjects
who received MDMA and one who received placebo
improved on scales that measure PTSD symptoms.
The fact that these subjects improved, particularly since
all were resistant to conventional therapy and medications,
is very promising. The fact that one placebo subject
improved shows that the team's approach can be beneficial,
with or without the drug. If the rest of the data is similar
to that already gathered, the pilot study will be a strong
testament that MDMA can be used safely in this patient
population and to the likelihood that MDMA-assisted
psychotherapy is therapeutic.
Raphael Mechoulam, Ph.D.
Dr. Mechoulam is the Israeli scientist who identified
THC as the psychoactive compound in marijuana, and
decades later he discovered the brain's endocannabinoid
system and the endogenous neurotransmitter anandamide.
He is one of the most respected Israeli neuroscientists and
has been a senior advisor to the Israeli government on
marijuana policy and the ethics of research with human
subjects. He discussed his experiments demonstrating the
neuroprotective effects of the endocannabinoid system
in mice that have had traumatic injuries to the brain. He
believes the neuroprotective effects of marijuana may
eventually have applications for other neurological and
psychiatric conditions, including Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease.
Another fascinating discovery, one with implications for
PTSD, is that the cannabinoid system is integrally related
to memory, specifically to memory extinction. Memory
extinction is the normal, healthy process of removing
associations from stimuli. Dr. Mechoulam explained that
an animal which has been administered an electric shock
after a certain noise will eventually forget about the shock
after the noise appears alone for a few days. Mice without
cannabinoid systems simply never forget - they continue
to cringe at the noise indefinitely.
This has implications for patients with PTSD, who
respond to stimuli that remind them of their initial
trauma even when it is no longer appropriate. By aiding in
memory extinction, marijuana could help patients reduce
their association between stimuli (perhaps loud noises or
stress) and the traumatic situations in their past. Working
with Army psychiatrists, Dr. Mechoulam has obtained the
necessary approvals for a study on PTSD in Israeli veterans,
and hopes to begin the study soon.
This theoretical model is in some senses the opposite of
the one underpinning MDMA research, as people report
remembering their trauma more clearly with MDMA. By
processing painful emotions that were too difficult
without the MDMA, people can move past the trauma. This is
not through forgetting, but through accepting and realizing
that the present moment carries with it the scars of the
past but that the past trauma does not necessarily have to
be repeated in the present.
Dr. Mechoulam also obtained permission from the
Israeli Ministry of Health for some hospitals to administer
marijuana to patients under limited circumstances. The
patient's doctor must submit a request to a hospital committee,
and usually within 24 hours the patient can receive
the medication. Marijuana has so far been used for cancer-related nausea,
eating disorders, Tourette's syndrome, and
depression.
Jose Carlos Bouso, Ph.D. candidate
Jose Carlos Bouso is a Ph.D. candidate at the Autonomous
University of Madrid, and the principal investigator
for the MAPS-sponsored MDMA/PTSD does-response
study in Spain, which was the first legal MDMA psychotherapy
study in the world. The Madrid Anti-Drug Authority,
after favorable media reports about the initial subjects
treated in the study, pressured the hospital hosting the
study to shut it down. MAPS is working with Bouso to
submit a new protocol with several changes to the Ministry
of Health.
The new study will be at a private hospital, making it
easier to resist political pressure than at the public hospital
at which the initial study took place. It will also use higher
doses of MDMA, since appropriate dosing (one of the questions
in the earlier dose-response study) has been determined by other projects.
June May Ruse, Psy.D.
Dr. Ruse is the director of MAPS' MDMA/PTSD treatment manual project.
The treatment manual serves not
only as a teaching guide for therapists, but also as a way to
formalize and standardize the treatment method for the
FDA, the National Institue of Mental Health (NIMH), and
the scientific community. This is a necessary step to obtain
federal funding for future MDMA-assisted therapy studies
and particularly if MDMA is to become a prescription
medicine.
The manual (available at http://www.maps.org/research/mdma,
look under "Clinical Research") covers all
stages of treatment, including initial assessment, establishing
a therapeutic relationship, creating a safe space,
preparation, facilitating the MDMA-assisted sessions, and
following-up to help the subject integrate insights from the
process.
MAPS submitted a grant application on June 1, 2005 to
NIMH seeking $50,000 a year for two years for the development of our treament manual, and for the creation of a
standardized system to evaluate compliance of therapists
to the principles set out in the manual. NIMH was a major
funder of psychedelic psychotherapy research in the 1960s
but hasn't funded any such research for over 35 years.
Valerie Mojeiko
MAPS staffer and Clinical Research Associate Valerie
Mojeiko discussed her proposed outcome study of the use
of ibogaine in treating substance abusers. She described
different ibogaine treatment options and explained the
necessity of an evaluation component of ibogaine treatment
programs. After explaining the measures used to
evaluate patients' recovery, she reported on promising preliminary
data gathered from patients of the Iboga Therapy
House in Vancouver.
The Addiction Severity Index will be the primary
outcome variable in the study. While many outcome studies
on substance abuse report only whether patients have
maintained abstinence or not, the proposed MAPS-sponsored
study would measure relapsed patients' quality of
life and substance use patterns, avoiding the "zero tolerance"
approach and examining whether the treatment was
helpful even if patients have returned to use. In some cases,
patients may have moved to less destructive patterns or
improved other aspects of their lives. The study will also
employ the Peak Experience Profile, to show whether a
more intense psychedelic experience (whether pleasant or
unpleasant) is more beneficial or not.
Udi Bastiaans, M.D.
Dr. Bastiaans is a clinical researcher who recently
moved to Israel from the Netherlands. His thesis for
medical school, "Life after Ibogaine," is the first longitudinal
study of ibogaine treatment's effects. He also used
a variation on the Addiction Severity Index, examining
both drug use patterns and other factors of healthy living
in the 21 patients he surveyed. The study found that 24%
of the participants were drug free at the time they filled
in the questionnaire, with an average abstinence period
of over three years. Another 43% of the participants were
not using their primary and secondary drugs (which they
were treated for), but were using other substances (often
marijuana or alcohol). The remaining 33% of the sample
were using either primary or secondary drugs. All participants
reported using less of their substances of abuse than
before the study.
Although the study's conclusions are based on a relatively
small number of subjects who completed a self-reported
Internet questionnaire, the project serves to
support the need for more controlled studies into ibogaine's
potential for treating drug dependence.
Dr. Bastiaans' grandfather, Dr. Jan Bastiaans, was the
first physician to work with ibogaine for drug dependence.
He was also the therapist who pioneered the use of LSD in
the psychotherapeutic treatment of concentration camp
survivors. He worked with Ka-Tzetnik, the Holocaust survivor
who describes his LSD psychotherapy in the autobiographical
Shivitti. (Shivitti may be ordered from MAPS: see
page 23 for more information.)
John Halpern, M.D.
The Assistant Director of Substance Abuse Research at
Harvard Medical School's McLean Hospital, Dr. Halpern
spoke about two research projects with MDMA. The first
is his study on the neurocognitive profile of moderate and
heavy MDMA users. Unlike previous studies, this one
compares a population of non-drug using young people
who attend raves with a population of MDMA users
who also attend raves, and who do not use other drugs or
alcohol. Participants must have taken MDMA 20 or more
times.
MAPS provided the initial $15,000 for this study, and
based on the pilot data on over 40 subjects, the National
Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) provided a five-year
$1.8 million grant for its completion. The study will eventually
include 200 participants, a much larger group than
has been used in most studies of MDMA users.
The data from the pilot study indicates no differences
between the control group and the moderate user group
(20-55 exposures to MDMA), and only slight differences
in the heaviest users (60 or more exposures). These differences
are not in verbal memory deficits, as some studies
have shown, but in strategic thinking. These users' scores,
however, remain in the normal range. It remains to be seen
whether this difference will be significant in the larger
study.
Dr. Halpern is also the principal investigator for the
proposed MAPS-sponsored research on MDMA for anxiety
in patients with advanced-stage cancer. The research is
already approved by the FDA and two institutional review
boards (IRB), and awaits DEA registration.
Jordi Riba, Ph.D.
A pharmacologist at the Autonomous University of
Barcelona, Dr. Riba studied ayahuasca users for his Ph.D.
dissertation. While not directly related to therapy, Dr.
Riba's research paves the way for studies on beneficial uses
of ayahuasca by providing information about its safety and
mode of action. He discussed the chemical composition
of ayahuasca, noting that three basic alkaloids are present -
harmine, harmaline, and DMT. His first study was
a single-blind pilot study of six males, given placebo then
three doses in increasing size, leading to 1 mg/kg. After
this pilot study, a second study included eighteen participants
in a double-blind, placebo controlled, randomized design.
Dr. Riba's team is studying a number of different factors,
including cardiovascular effects, cerebral blood flow,
hormone levels, and immune system effects. Future studies
will include a repeat dose to test tolerance.
Interestingly, only one volunteer in the study experienced
vomiting as a side effect. The study employed encapsulated,
freeze-dried preparations of the ayahuasca brew,
indicating that the common side effect may be closely
related to the taste and smell of the tea.
Torsten Passie, M.D.
Dr. Passie is a German researcher who studies psilocybin,
ketamine, and other psychoactive substances. He first
talked about a current study on psilocybin intended to
measure subjective effects of psilocybin, and visual effects
in particular. It is a double-blind study in which participants
spend their experience lying on a couch with little
outside intervention.
Dr. Passie also discussed his plans for an upcoming
study using MDE (methelenedioxyethylamphetamine, a
substance similar to MDMA) and/or MDMA as an adjunct
to couples therapy. Dr. Passie noted that the World Health
Organization considers troubled relationships to be a
significant health problem, and studies have found that a
satisfying relationship is the strongest marker for a high
quality of life. The study is still in the design phase and
MAPS has pledged $25,000 to this project.
Outcomes
The conference was a success. Soon after the event, Dr.
Kotler submitted the study protocol to the local ethics committee
at Beer Yaakov Mental Health Center, and on June
6, 2005, the hospital's committee approved it, sending it
on for review to the national ethics committee. The conference
also sparked a favorable article in a prominent Israeli
newsmagazine (see page 7). In fact, the article concluded
with the endorsement of the study by Dr. Rachel Bar-Hamburger,
chief scientist of the Israeli Anti-Drug Authority.
We now hope that the next MAPS conference in Israel
will include the presentation of data from an Israeli
MDMA/PTSD pilot study.
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