A dose of psilocybin helps smokers quit in new study

A dose of psilocybin helps smokers quit in new study

Psilocybin mushrooms ready for harvest in a humidified chamber. Researchers have shown that a dose of psilocybin can help people quit smoking.

John Moore/Getty Images


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John Moore/Getty Images

The long-running campaign against smoking could find reinforcements from the new wave of research into psychedelics.

Though much of the attention around psychedelics has focused on depression and other mental health conditions, researchers believe these substances also hold the potential to transform addiction treatment.

A new study makes the strongest case yet for a psychedelic drug’s impact on smoking, which remains the leading cause of preventable death in the U.S.

The trial, conducted by a team at Johns Hopkins University, compared nicotine patches to the active ingredient in magic mushrooms, known as psilocybin.

At the end of six months, those who had taken just one dose of psilocybin had more than six times greater odds of being abstinent from cigarettes than their counterparts who relied on the nicotine substitute.

Everyone in the study also underwent cognitive behavioral therapy for smoking cessation over the course of 13 weeks.

“I was surprised by the sheer magnitude of the effect,” says Matthew Johnson, the study’s author and a professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins.

The findings, published in the medical journal JAMA Network Open on Tuesday, came from a sample of 82 current smokers, who were randomly separated into two groups.

Similar to other psychedelic trials, the participants had support from facilitators to make sure they were comfortable and prepared for their trip. They ingested a relatively high dose of pure psilocybin.

While under the influence, they lay in a room wearing eye shades and listening to soft music, but their overall experience was “self-directed,” says Johnson.

Because there was no placebo, everyone who took psilocybin knew they were getting the drug.

While this can skew the results, Johnson says ensuring that participants are properly blinded has been an ongoing challenge in the study of psychedelics, given the mind-altering effects, which is why they opted for a different study design.

In total, 17 participants who took psilocybin had stayed off cigarettes at the half-year mark; only four in the nicotine group had achieved that.

The findings will need to be replicated in a larger study — and ideally in a more diverse population — but they raise an “exciting” prospect, says Megan Piper, who directs the UW Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention and was not involved in the current research.

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