RecruitingPhase 3psilocybin

Psilocybin Microdose for Psychological and Existential Distress in Palliative Care (PSYCHED-PAL-RCT)

Sponsored by Bruyère Health Research Institute.

NCT ID
NCT07063862
Target Enrollment
120 participants
Start Date
2026-01
Est. Completion
2027-09

About This Study

About 30-50% of patients with advanced illness experience depression, anxiety, or decreased sense of purpose and autonomy. Together, these are called psychological distress. Treatment options such as medication and therapy are available; however, they do not always work and can be time-consuming and expensive. We need treatments that work well, quickly, and can be available to all patients with advanced illness who have psychological distress. Psilocybin, a psychedelic medication (commonly called 'magic mushrooms') works well for improving psychological distress in people with cancer or chronic illness when given in high doses with specific forms of therapy. However, psilocybin has not been well-studied among people with advanced illness, and there are concerns about safety and side effects in people approaching the end of life. However, reports on psilocybin microdosing, which involves taking small doses that do not cause hallucinations and do not require therapy, suggest that this may be effective, safer, and more acceptable for people with advanced illness. We recently completed a small study of psilocybin microdosing. Our results showed psilocybin microdose improved psychological distress in most participants with advanced illness, without serious side effects. Our next step is to do a randomized clinical trial where some patients receive psilocybin microdose and some receive placebo (a drug that contains no medicinal ingredients). By comparing these two groups, we can remove the possibility that improvements in symptoms are only because patients thought they were getting treatment. We will enroll 120 patients from inpatient, outpatient, and community care settings across seven sites. Participants in the microdose psilocybin group will receive 2 or 3 mg of psilocybin daily, 4 days per week, for two consecutive weeks. The placebo group will receive placebo with the same treatment schedule. All participants will be offered microdose psilocybin after 2-week follow-up. If this study is successful, we have the potential to change how psychological distress is managed in patients with advanced illness.

Conditions Studied

Psychological Distress

Interventions

  • Psilocybin
  • Placebo

Eligibility

Age:18 Years - N/A
Healthy Volunteers:No
View full eligibility criteria
Inclusion Criteria:

1. Patients \>/=18 years of age with advanced illness under palliative care management, defined as having an estimated 2 to 12 months life expectancy (in the judgment of the palliative care provider)
2. Experiencing psychological distress, defined as a score of 7 or greater on the Depression, Anxiety, or Well-being item of the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System-revised (ESAS-r)
3. Living situation falls under one of two categories:

   1. Living in the community (i.e., receiving palliative care as an outpatient or through community home visits)
   2. Living in a chronic care inpatient facility (i.e., receiving long-term supportive care because care is unable to be provided in a community home - e.g., ALS) and have a family member who can administer the psilocybin/placebo medication to the patient
4. Ability to understand and communicate in English or French
5. For patients in community settings, patients must be able to have another individual present with them during and for 2 hours after they take their psilocybin/placebo dose for the first week of the intervention period

Exclusion Criteria:

1. Current or previously diagnosed, or first-degree relative with, psychotic or bipolar disorder
2. Previously deemed eligible for MAiD with intention to proceed with MAiD regardless of study intervention effectiveness (this criteria is meant to exclude patients who would be unlikely to complete follow-up - those considering or being assessed for MAiD will still be eligible)
3. Documented or suspected delirium in the past 3 months without a clearly defined reversible cause (e.g. opioid toxicity, infection) and resolution
4. Documented moderate or severe dementia diagnosis
5. Inability to provide first-person informed consent
6. Inability to complete assessments via telephone or video-conferencing platform
7. Severe or unstable physical symptoms based on the judgment of the palliative care provider
8. Palliative Performance Scale (PPS) \<50%\*
9. Cancer with known central nervous system (CNS) involvement or other CNS disease
10. Use of high-dose psychedelic substances in the past year
11. Taking lithium at any dose
12. Taking tramadol at any dose
13. Taking tapentadol at any dose
14. Taking any monoamine oxidase inhibitor at any dose \[American Hospital Formulary Service (AFHS) group 28:16.04.12 or 28:36.32, including, but not limited to, moclobemide, tranylcypromine, phenelzine, selegiline, rasagiline\]
15. Taking any atypical antipsychotic (aripiprazole, asenapine, brexpiprazole, clozapine, lurasidone, olanzapine, paliperidone, quetiapine, risperidone, ziprasidone)

    a. Note: patients can be included if their atypical antipsychotic is stopped or, if appropriate, substituted with haloperidol 48 hours prior to the start and for the duration of the intervention period and follow-up.
16. No enteral route of drug administration available
17. Pregnancy or lactation

    * Does not apply to the open-label access or open-label extension phases (since participants are expected to decline in overall health and function from baseline due to natural disease progression towards the end of life).

Individuals with dementia (assessed at baseline by the treating team - no formal screening of dementia will be done during the intervention or follow-up period) or delirium are excluded. While the safety and effects of psilocybin have not previously been studied in these populations, it can be reasonably assumed that hallucinogenic substances could exacerbate or lead to worsening of delirium or dementia symptoms common among people at the end of life (e.g., confusion, agitation).

The use of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) and antipsychotic medications (other than atypical antipsychotics) is a relative contraindication. For participants taking either an SSRI or an antipsychotic medication, there are several conditions for participation: (1) the palliative care provider must approve their participation in the study; (2) the SSRI/antipsychotic medication dose cannot change for the duration of the intervention trial and follow-up, and; (3) the patient must not be taking more than the maximum allowable trial dose for each SSRI.

The decision to not include SSRI and antipsychotic medications as an absolute contraindication was three-fold. Firstly, there is no empirical evidence from psilocybin microdosing literature that supports these medications as absolute contraindications. Risks related to serotonin syndrome are theoretical in nature for microdosing protocols, with no actual cases being observed. Secondly, the physician investigator team has estimated the risk to participants of rebound syndrome and associated symptoms from being taken off SSRIs and/or antipsychotics to be similar to or greater than that of serotonin syndrome. Lastly, to safely have participants stop taking SSRIs and/or antipsychotic medications, this would require a relatively long period of time (weeks to months) to taper the medication, which is not feasible for palliative care and end-of-life populations.

All trial participants must agree to not take any other psychedelic substance for the duration of the clinical trial and follow-up, and to notify the investigative team of any medication changes during intervention or follow-up. Participants must also notify the investigative team if any cannabis products are consumed during the treatment days. Participants must also agree not to take their benzodiazepine or antipsychotic medication, if applicable, within 12 hours (6 hours pre and 6 hours post) of taking their study dose. Participants must also agree not to drive or operate any heavy machinery on any treatment day after taking the drug (psilocybin or placebo) for the duration of the 2-week intervention. Lastly, for patients in the community setting, participants must agree not to take the study dose alone for the first week of the intervention; at least one individual must stay with the participant at the time they take their dose and for at least 2 hours following dose administration. This is to ensure participants are not alone in the event of a serious adverse drug reaction.

Study Locations (7)

William Osler Health System
Brampton, Ontario, Canada
Providence Care Hospital
Kingston, Ontario, Canada
St. Joseph's Healthcare
London, Ontario, Canada
South Lake Regional Health Centre
Newmarket, Ontario, Canada
Bruyere Health
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
The Ottawa Hospital
Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
McGill University Health Centre
Montreal, Quebec, Canada

Interested in this trial?

Contact the study team to learn more about eligibility and enrollment.

James Downar, MDCM, MHSc
CONTACT
613-562-6262jdownar@toh.ca
Julie Lapenskie, MSc
CONTACT
613-562-6262jlapenskie@bruyere.org
View on ClinicalTrials.gov
Data Source
ClinicalTrials.gov

Last updated from source