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I began using Ketamine Psychedelic Psychotherapy (KPP) for clinical
applications in my private practice and, between fall of 1996 and
spring of 1999, treated more than 70 clients. |
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Eleusis Offers Ketamine Psychedelic Psychotherapy
Eli Kolp, M.D.
Dear friends, colleagues and MAPS supporters:
I’m pleased to let you know that I have returned to my research
in the field of psychedelic psychotherapy. Toward that end, I established
Eleusis, a not-for-profit foundation dedicated to both scientific research
and clinical application of Ketamine Psychedelic Psychotherapy (KPP).
Planned research activities include evaluating the efficacy of KPP
for recovery from alcohol, drug and food addictions and its potential
for acceleration of psychospiritual growth. In the clinical area,
the center specializes in the treatment of the above addictions, as
well as treatment of existential and psychospiritual problems.
The treatment program at Eleusis combines KPP with a variety of additional
alternative therapies and self-help techniques that support the insights
gained from the psychedelic experience. These techniques include
existential and transpersonal group psychotherapies, guided imagery
and visualization, Holotropic Breathwork, yoga and meditation, among
others. The three-week program offers more than 90 hours of encounter
groups, interactive classes and didactic lectures in a peaceful residential
setting.
I would also like to update you about my past efforts in this area
that led to the foundation of Eleusis in 2003. Some of you may recall
my previous reports in the Autumn 1995 and Summer 1996 MAPS Bulletins,
where I shared with you the progress of my research protocol for the
use of KPP in the treatment of alcoholism. The original protocol,
entitled The Ketamine-Assisted Therapy of Alcoholism, was presented
to the Safety Committee of the James A. Haley Veterans Hospital and
was approved on March 26, 1996. It was then reviewed by the Research
and Development Committee of the Department of Veterans Affairs and
was approved on May 6, 1996. The research protocol was further submitted
to the Research Committee of the Department of Psychiatry at the University
of South Florida College of Medicine and was approved on May 31, 1996.
It was then sent to the Institutional Review Board of the University
of South Florida Health Science Center, where it was approved on July
3, 1996. Finally, the protocol was forwarded to the U.S. Food and
Drug Administration, which issued to me an Investigational New Drug
permit (IND #52,053) on November 29, 1996.
Due to organizational restructuring, however, implementation of
the protocol was delayed for three years. Administrative leadership
of Psychiatry Services at the Veterans Hospital changed three times,
which ultimately delayed the beginning of the study. In addition,
the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Treatment Program (ADATP) involved in the
original protocol was re-organized during the same period. As a result,
the inpatient substance abuse ward was closed, and the ADATP began
providing only outpatient treatment, which required the protocol to
be restructured.
While waiting for the changes at the Veterans Hospital to take place,
I began using Ketamine Psychedelic Psychotherapy (KPP) for clinical
applications in my private practice and, between fall of 1996 and
spring of 1999, treated more than 70 clients. My initial success rate
was approximately one-third lower than the one reported by MAPS-funded
Russian Ketamine researcher Evgeny Krupitsky, M.D., in 1992, however,
and, after repeated communication about the problem, we eventually
identified the cause of this discrepancy. Psychedelic substances
were virtually unknown in the former Soviet Union, and the vast majority
of Dr. Krupitsky’s patients had never had a psychedelic experience,
while a significant number of my alcoholic clients had a history of
abuse of psychedelic drugs. We eventually agreed that the novelty
of the psychedelic experience is essential to more successful outcomes
of KPP. Karl Jansen, M.D., another European scientist specializing
in Ketamine research, confirmed this conclusion and recommended that
we exclude patients with a past history of abuse of psychedelic substances.
I tightened my exclusion criteria and began accepting clients with
no history of use of psychedelic substances, a past history of experimental
use of psychedelic substances, or a history of sacramental use of
psychedelic substances.In addition, I restructured my treatment protocol.
Initially, I used KPP as a part of individual psychotherapy administered on an outpatient basis; however, I discovered that KPP is
more effective when administered in a group setting in the structured
environment of a residential program. Eventually, I started using
KPP as a centerpiece intervention in my alternative residential rehabilitation
program that incorporated existential and transpersonal group psychotherapies,
and my success rate immediately began matching the one reported by
Dr. Krupitsky in the Alcoholism Treatment Quarterly.
In the beginning, I planned to admit to my program only patients
with Alcoholism. I quickly discovered, though, that more than 90 percent
of my clients had concurrent addictions and nearly half of my clients
had co-existing psychological problems. During the same time, in 1997,
Dr. Krupitsky published an extensive review of the results of his
Ketamine research in the Journal of Psychoactive Drugs. He reported
that Ketamine Psychedelic Therapy is a safe and effective treatment
not only for alcohol dependence, but also for other drug dependencies
(heroin, ephedrine), as well as reactive depression, neurotic disorders,
post-traumatic stress disorder and avoidant personality disorders.
I became encouraged by this report and started accepting clients
with other drug addictions, food addiction and dual diagnosis patients,
as long as their primary diagnosis was Alcohol Abuse or Alcohol Dependence.
I discovered that two-thirds of my clients responded well to KPP and
recovered from Alcoholism. The same clients also maintained abstinence
from their concurrent addictions, most commonly addictions to caffeine,
sugars, fats, nicotine, cannabis, benzodiazepines, opiates and amphetamines.
They also showed significant or good improvement of their co-existing
psychological disorders and psychosomatic illnesses, most commonly
generalized anxiety disorder, social phobias, primary insomnias, acute
and repeated stress disorders, pain disorder, panic disorder, depressive disorder, posttraumatic stress disorder, tension and migraine
headaches, somatization disorder and chronic fatigue syndrome. Additionally,
I determined that more than half of those clients who did not respond
favorably to KPP had a long history of severe control issues and/or
persistent difficulties in maintaining long-term interpersonal relationships.
Based on my practical medical experience, I verified Dr. Krupitsky’s
findings and empirically learned that Ketamine Psychedelic Psychotherapy
is an effective tool in the treatment of a variety of addictions,
psychological disorders and psychosomatic illnesses, as indicated
above. After gaining personal experience in the clinical application
of this highly effective procedure, I eventually stopped using other,
less effective modalities in my private practice and started specializing
in Ketamine Psychedelic Psychotherapy only. In 1998, TBS/CNN featured
our KPP residential program on the American Frontiers program entitled
Psychedelic Revisions.
Meanwhile, organizational restructuring of the Veterans Hospital
Psychiatry Services was completed, and the research protocol was scheduled
to begin in June of 1999. Unfortunately, in 1999, I sustained repeated
injuries that left me totally disabled for the next two-and-a-half
years. After extensive rehabilitative therapy, while still partially
disabled, I returned to part-time practice in June of 2002. I immediately
asked the James A. Haley Veterans Hospital to allow me to complete
the original Ketamine research protocol. Regrettably, the new administrative
leadership of the Veterans Hospital Psychiatry Services was not at
all supportive of this important study and declined to allow me to
continue my research. I spent another year appealing this negative
decision before eventually accepting the new chief’s unsupportive
attitudes toward psychedelic psychotherapy.
I also attempted to secure help from Parke-Davis Pharmaceutical,
the maker of the brand name of Ketamine. Unfortunately, the Parke-Davis
license for exclusive use of the Ketamine brand had already expired
and the company had no financial incentives to fund my study. Finally,
I accepted the fact that neither a governmental agency nor a private
corporation would assist me in the Ketamine research. The Department
of Veterans Affairs would not allow me to complete my study due to
the controversy of psychedelic psychotherapy, and the corporation
would not fund my research without an ironclad guarantee of profit.
For these reasons, I have resolved to continue pursuing my goals
independently and established Eleusis, a research center and freestanding
residential facility for alternative treatment of alcohol, drug
and food addictions. Eleusis is also obtaining status as a 501(c)(3)
tax-exempt organization and is currently in the process of applying
for two National Institutes of Health grants through the office of
Complementary and Alternative Medicine. One grant will be submitted
to NIAAA to request funding for a study entitled “Ketamine-Enhanced
Psychotherapy for the Treatment of Alcohol Abuse and Dependence.”
The second grant will be submitted to NIDA to request funding for
a study entitled “Ketamine-Enhanced Psychotherapy for the Treatment
of Opioid Abuse and Dependence.”
I will continue to keep you informed about my progress in both the
research and clinical arenas. If you would like to learn more about
Eleusis, please visit our web site at www.eleusis.us
Sources
Krupitsky, E. M. (1992). The Combination
of Psychedelic and
Aversive Approaches in Alcoholism Treatment: The Affective
Contra-Attribution Method. Alcoholism Treatment Quarterly
9 (1): 99–105.
Krupitsky, E. M. (1997). Ketamine Psychedelic
Therapy (KPT):
A Review of the Results of Ten Years of Research. Journal of
Psychoactive Drugs 29(2): 165–183.
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