Depressive DisordersAnxiety DisordersObsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)Substance Use Disorders (SUD)Eating DisordersChronic PainPalliative & End-of-Life DistressSafety & Risk ManagementImplementation & Service Delivery

Can pragmatic research, real-world data and digital technologies aid the development of psychedelic medicine?

The paper argues that conventional confirmatory trials alone are insufficient to establish safety and best practice for psychedelic therapy and risks being overtaken by hype and regulation. It recommends complementing these trials with pragmatic trials, real‑world data initiatives and digital health technologies to accelerate discovery of optimal, personalised, safe and cost‑efficient treatment protocols.

Authors

  • Robin Carhart-Harris
  • David Nutt
  • David Erritzoe

Published

Journal of Psychopharmacology
meta Study

Abstract

Favourable regulatory assessments, liberal policy changes, new research centres and substantial commercial investment signal that psychedelic therapy is making a major comeback. Positive findings from modern trials are catalysing developments, but it is questionable whether current confirmatory trials are sufficient for advancing our understanding of safety and best practice. Here we suggest supplementing traditional confirmatory trials with pragmatic trials, real-world data initiatives and digital health solutions to better support the discovery of optimal and personalised treatment protocols and parameters. These recommendations are intended to help support the development of safe, effective and cost-efficient psychedelic therapy, which, given its history, is vulnerable to excesses of hype and regulation.

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Research Summary of 'Can pragmatic research, real-world data and digital technologies aid the development of psychedelic medicine?'

Editorial

βBlossom's Take

This commentary is useful because it asks how psychedelic medicine can be studied once the field moves beyond tightly controlled proof-of-concept trials. The case for pragmatic designs, real-world data and digital follow-up is persuasive as a methods agenda, especially given how much current evidence still depends on narrow samples and intensive support.

Introduction

Mental disorders and substance misuse impose a vast global burden, with mental illness among the most costly and prevalent health problems in many high-income countries. Despite rising use of psychiatric medications and psychotherapies, population-level prevalence of mental illness has not declined and existing treatments often produce modest benefit, limited tolerability or restricted access. Carhart-Harris and colleagues situate psychedelic therapy—a psychologically supported administration of classic serotonergic psychedelics (agonists at the serotonin 2A receptor)—within this context, arguing it is a biopsychosocial intervention with promise for depression, end-of-life anxiety, addiction, OCD and possibly other conditions such as eating disorders and chronic pain. They note features that distinguish psychedelic therapy from conventional psychopharmacology: a novel mechanism, rapid and sometimes enduring effects after one or a few doses, low addiction potential, and a safety profile that centres on the need for careful psychological preparation and supervised contexts rather than toxicological hazard alone. Building on this background, the paper advocates supplementing traditional confirmatory double-blind randomised controlled trials (DB-RCTs) with more pragmatic research approaches, real-world data collection and digital technologies. The authors argue that pragmatic trials, basket protocols (single-protocol studies that test one intervention across multiple linked indications), electronic registries and smartphone-based outcome capture could accelerate learning about optimal dosing, psychotherapy integration, patient selection and safety across diverse populations. They position these approaches as complementary to DB-RCTs: useful early in the development pathway to avoid premature regulatory “lock-in” of suboptimal practice and to generate large datasets for prediction-of-response modelling, harm reduction and personalised care.

Discussion

Carhart-Harris and colleagues interpret their review as a call for a pluralistic research strategy that pairs confirmatory RCTs with pragmatic trials and large-scale real-world data to inform the safe, effective and cost-efficient rollout of psychedelic therapy. They contend that pragmatic designs can address questions that DB-RCTs typically constrain, such as variability in dose, number and timing of sessions, broader eligibility criteria, and the role of post-dosing psychotherapy. The authors also highlight single-case (n = 1) experimental designs and citizen-science initiatives as complementary methods that can generate high-frequency, idiographic data amenable to aggregation and Bayesian or multilevel analysis, enabling more nuanced modelling of treatment effects over time. In positioning these recommendations relative to earlier research, the paper stresses that DB-RCTs remain essential for regulatory approval and for convincing sceptical stakeholders, but argues that over-reliance on the traditional evidence hierarchy risks missing clinically relevant parameters early in development. The authors emphasise the potential of digital tools and biometric sensors to produce objective, scalable outcome measures and to support centralised registries that can feed prediction-of-response algorithms and safety surveillance. The authors acknowledge several practical and ethical constraints. They warn against relaxing contraindication-based screening designed to reduce adverse events, and they note that progressive policy changes will be needed to permit many of the proposed pragmatic approaches. Funding and incentives are identified as major barriers: a multi-site pragmatic programme would likely require payer or industry engagement, and mainstream institutional funding for psychedelic research remains limited. They also stress the risk of a hype cycle—rapid expansion of access prior to sufficient evidence—using the medical cannabis experience as a cautionary example. For future research and implementation, the paper recommends designing pragmatic trials and registries with careful attention to data quality and fitness for purpose, setting reasonable limits on dosing frequency to deter bad practice, and engaging diverse stakeholders—including the public, policymakers, clinicians and investors—to ensure sustainable development. The authors suggest that aggregated real-world data could help define ‘‘no-go’’ screening criteria, personalise treatment parameters, monitor safety across demographics and ultimately protect the long-term credibility and utility of psychedelic medicine.

References (20)

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