Eating Disorders

Therapeutic uses of psychedelics for eating disorders and body dysmorphic disorder

This review (2022) evaluates the potential use of psychedelics in treating body dysmorphic disorder and other eating disorders.

Authors

  • Muhammad Ishrat Husain

Published

Journal of Psychopharmacology
meta Study

Abstract

Background

Clinical use of psychedelics has gained considerable attention, with promising benefits across a range of mental disorders. Current pharmacological and psychotherapeutic treatments for body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) and eating disorders (EDs) have limited efficacy. As such, other treatment options such as psychedelic-assisted therapies are being explored in these clinical groups.

Aims

This systematic review evaluates evidence related to the therapeutic potential of psychedelics in individuals diagnosed with BDD and EDs.

Methods

Following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines, we conducted a systematic review of all study designs published to the end of February 2022 that identified changes in ED/BDD symptom severity from psychedelics using validated measures to assess symptom changes.

Results

Our search detected a total of 372 studies, of which five met inclusion criteria (two exploratory studies, two case reports, and one prospective study). These were included in the data evaluation. Effects of psychedelics on BDD and various ED symptoms were identified mostly through thematic analyses and self-reports.

Conclusions

Our findings highlight that more research is needed to determine the safety and efficacy of psychedelics in BDD and EDs and we suggest avenues for future exploration.

Unlocked with Blossom Pro

Research Summary of 'Therapeutic uses of psychedelics for eating disorders and body dysmorphic disorder'

Editorial

βBlossom's Take

This review is useful because it gathers a very sparse literature into one place and shows that the interest in eating disorders and body dysmorphic disorder is still mostly exploratory. The evidence base is thin, but the paper is a sensible marker of where mechanistic plausibility, case reports and early prospective work begin to converge.

Introduction

Body dysmorphic disorder (BDD) and eating disorders (EDs), particularly anorexia nervosa (AN), are psychiatric conditions marked by excessive preoccupation with appearance and disturbed eating behaviours, and they carry high morbidity, mortality and functional impairment. Ledwos and colleagues note overlap between BDD and EDs in phenomenology, sociodemographic features, and neurobiological findings such as altered visuospatial processing and serotonergic signalling; conventional treatments (psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy) produce limited and often unsustained responses, prompting calls for novel interventions. In response to this treatment gap, the study aimed to systematically review published evidence to the end of February 2022 on the therapeutic potential of classic serotonergic psychedelics (for example psilocybin, LSD, ayahuasca, DMT, mescaline) for patients with diagnosed EDs and/or BDD. The authors restricted the search to agents acting largely via 5-HT2A receptor agonism and excluded MDMA due to its differing pharmacology; the review set out to collect and critically evaluate all study designs reporting symptom change in these populations.

Methods

Ledwos and colleagues performed a systematic review following PRISMA guidelines. Searches were run across multiple databases (PsycInfo, PubMed, Embase, Web of Science, Google Scholar, Cochrane Library, CINAHL) and gray literature sources (WorldCat, Google Scholar) through the end of February 2022. Search terms combined a wide set of psychedelic-related terms (e.g. "psilocybin", "LSD", "ayahuasca", "DMT") with diagnostic and symptom terms for body image disorders and eating disorders (e.g. "Anorexia Nervosa", "Bulimia Nervosa", "Body Dysmorphic Disorder"). Registered clinical trial registries were also searched. All study designs were eligible if they involved patients with ED and/or BDD diagnoses (per ICD-10 or DSM) and reported descriptive or validated measures of symptom change following use of serotonergic psychedelics. MDMA studies were excluded. The review was limited to English-language publications. Screening and full-text review were conducted in Covidence: two independent reviewers screened titles/abstracts and full texts (NL and JR), with conflicts resolved by a third reviewer (DC). Due to the small number of eligible articles, one reviewer (NL) performed data extraction with team review. Extracted variables included study objectives, design, sample characteristics, diagnosis, psychedelic assessed, assessment measures and results.

Results

The search identified 372 records; after automatic duplicate removal 92 duplicates were removed and 26 articles underwent full-text review. Twenty-one full texts were excluded for reasons such as wrong publication type, unsuitable outcomes or populations, leaving five articles that met the inclusion criteria. These comprised two retrospective exploratory qualitative studies (both from the same research group) involving participants who had taken ayahuasca, two case reports (one reporting a person with BDD who used psilocybin, and an English translation of a 1959 French clinical note describing psilocybin use), and one prospective survey study. Across the five included reports, four described reductions in ED or BDD symptoms following ingestion of ayahuasca or psilocybin. The two qualitative ayahuasca studies—retrospective interviews of predominantly female samples with AN or bulimia nervosa—identified themes in which participants reported being better able to identify root causes of their ED, experiencing shifts in self-perception towards greater self-love and self-forgiveness, and reporting improved insight and changes in body image. The BDD case report described three acute psilocybin experiences in which the patient perceived his mirror image as no longer deformed and subsequently engaged with pharmacotherapy (fluoxetine); the translated 1959 case reported short-term euphoria and weight gain after psilocybin injections but limited documentation and loss of effect at one-year follow-up. One included prospective study did not directly measure post-ingestion ED symptoms but documented improvements in well-being and reductions in depressive symptoms.

Discussion

Ledwos and colleagues interpret the collected literature as sparse but tentatively promising, emphasising that current evidence is preliminary and largely descriptive. The authors describe two broad classes of plausible mechanisms by which classic psychedelics might benefit BDD and EDs. First, neurobiological mechanisms: serotonergic psychedelics agonise 5-HT2A receptors and may ameliorate dysfunctional serotonergic signalling and cognitive inflexibility—features implicated in AN, BN and OCD—potentially enhancing cognitive and neural flexibility. Changes in network dynamics are also discussed; psychedelics may downregulate the default mode network (DMN), increasing global integration and thereby enabling the disruption of rigid self-referential patterns. Agonism at 5-HT receptors in visual cortex could transiently alter visual perception, which might explain acute perceptual changes reported in a BDD case, and a predictive coding model is proposed whereby psychedelics reduce over-weighting of rigid top-down beliefs about the body, allowing bottom-up sensory inputs to recalibrate body-image representations. Second, psychological mechanisms are emphasised: acute psychedelic experiences may promote emotional processing, insight, and changes in body perception and self-identity. The qualitative ayahuasca reports describe confronting difficult emotions, enhanced emotion regulation and shifts toward greater self-acceptance—processes that could plausibly reduce disordered eating behaviours. The authors also consider related findings in other disorders (treatment-resistant depression, OCD, smoking cessation) to suggest shared therapeutic targets. Safety, ethics and implementation are discussed at length. Contemporary clinical trials report mostly transient and tolerable adverse events (for example increases in blood pressure, nausea, headaches, and vomiting with ayahuasca), but archival case material from the 1960s and early work documented longer-lasting harms such as flashbacks and hallucinogen-persisting perception disorder; the authors note such historical data are biased because they derive from harm-compensation records. Ledwos and colleagues stress the importance of rigorous, transparent protocols (including careful selection, preparation and aftercare), attention to set and setting, and involvement of people with lived experience when designing trials. The authors also present preliminary, indirect evidence for related serotonergic interventions: an exploratory analysis from an MDMA-assisted therapy trial for PTSD showed a statistically significant reduction in Eating Attitudes Test-26 scores (F(2,79) = 4.68, p = 0.0335; Hedge's g = 0.33) but Reliable Change Index values did not indicate reliable or clinically meaningful change, underscoring the need for disorder-specific trials. Finally, the authors acknowledge major limitations of the evidence base: the five included studies were small, largely uncontrolled and methodologically heterogeneous; the search was limited to English and no randomized controlled trials were identified. They note five registered clinical trials across North America and Europe, predominantly investigating psilocybin for AN and one for BDD, and call for larger, rigorous trials to determine safety and efficacy.

Conclusion

This systematic review identified only five eligible publications up to February 2022 examining classic psychedelics in patients with BDD or EDs. All included studies reported positive effects on core symptoms or related well-being measures, but evidence is preliminary and largely descriptive. Ledwos and colleagues conclude that existing basic-science and clinical findings from related disorders provide a rationale for further investigation, and they highlight ongoing registered trials of psilocybin in EDs and one in BDD as likely to generate more definitive safety and efficacy data in the near future.

Study Details

References (35)

Papers cited by this study that are also in Blossom

348 cited
MDMA-assisted therapy significantly reduces eating disorder symptoms in a randomized placebo-controlled trial of adults with severe PTSD

Brewerton, T. D., Wang, J. B., Lafrance, A. et al. · Journal of Psychiatric Research (2022)

80 cited
Trial of Psilocybin versus Escitalopram for Depression

Carhart-Harris, R. L., Giribaldi, B., Watts, R. et al. · New England Journal of Medicine (2021)

1334 cited
Neural correlates of the psychedelic state as determined by fMRI studies with psilocybin

Carhart-Harris, R. L., Erritzoe, D., Williams, T. et al. · PNAS (2012)

1178 cited
Increased global integration in the brain after psilocybin therapy for depression

Daws, R. E., Timmermann, C., Giribaldi, B. et al. · Nature Medicine (2022)

425 cited
Psilocybin therapy increases cognitive and neural flexibility in patients with major depressive disorder

Doss, M. K., Považan, M., Rosenberg, M. D. et al. · Translational Psychiatry (2021)

335 cited
143 cited
Pilot study of psilocybin treatment for anxiety in patients with advanced-stage cancer

Grob, C. S., Danforth, A. L., Chopra, G. S. et al. · JAMA Psychiatry (2011)

1209 cited
Perspectives on psychedelic treatment and research in eating disorders: a web-based questionnaire study of people with eating disorders

Harding, F., Seynaeve, M., Keeler, J. et al. · Journal of Integrative Neuroscience (2021)

18 cited
Neuropharmacological modulation of the aberrant bodily self through psychedelics

Ho, J. T., Preller, K. H., Lenggenhager, B. · Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews (2020)

59 cited
Show all 35 references
Psychedelics not linked to mental health problems or suicidal behavior: A population study.

Johansen, P. Ø., Krebs, T. S. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2015)

299 cited
Human hallucinogen research: guidelines for safety

Johnson, M. W., Richards, W. A., Griffiths, R. R. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2008)

1173 cited
Psychedelics and mental health: a population study

Krebs, T. S., Johansen, P. ˚. Ø. · PLOS ONE (2013)

335 cited
Nourishing the spirit: exploratory research on ayahuasca experiences along the continuum of recovery from eating disorders

Lafrance, A., Loizaga-Velder, A., Fletcher, J. et al. · Journal of Psychoactive Drugs (2017)

123 cited
29 cited
Long-term Amelioration of OCD Symptoms in a Patient with Chronic Consumption of Psilocybin-containing Mushrooms

Lugo-Radillo, A., Cortes-Lopez, J. L. · Journal of Psychoactive Drugs (2020)

33 cited
Safety, Tolerability, and Efficacy of Psilocybin in 9 Patients With Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

Moreno, F. A., Wiegand, C. B., Taitano, E. K. et al. · Journal of Clinical Psychiatry (2006)

778 cited
64 cited
The History of Psychedelics in Psychiatry

Nichols, D. E., Walter, H. · Pharmacopsychiatry (2020)

128 cited
Psychedelic therapy for smoking cessation: Qualitative analysis of participant accounts

Noorani, T., Garcia-Romeu, A., Swift, T. C. et al. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2018)

283 cited
Psychedelic Psychiatry’s Brave New World

Nutt, D. J., Erritzoe, D., Carhart-Harris, R. L. · Cell (2020)

322 cited
The psychedelic state induced by ayahuasca modulates the activity and connectivity of the default mode network

Palhano-Fontes, F., Andrade, K. C., Tófoli, L.F. et al. · PLOS ONE (2015)

458 cited
Psychedelics and Psychedelic-Assisted Psychotherapy

Reiff, C. M., Richman, E. E., Nemeroff, C. B. et al. · American Journal of Psychiatry (2020)

618 cited
An exploratory study of experiences with conventional eating disorder treatment and ceremonial ayahuasca for the healing of eating disorders

Renelli, M., Fletcher, J., Tupper, K. W. et al. · Eating and Weight Disorders - Studies on Anorexia Bulimia and Obesity (2018)

73 cited
Emotional breakthrough and psychedelics: validation of the emotional breakthrough inventory

Roseman, L., Haijen, E. C. H. M., Idialu-Ikato, K. et al. · Journal of Psychopharmacology (2019)

403 cited
Positive effects of psychedelics on depression and wellbeing scores in individuals reporting an eating disorder

Spriggs, M. J., Kettner, •. H., Carhart-Harris, •. R. L. · Eating and Weight Disorders - Studies on Anorexia Bulimia and Obesity (2020)

106 cited
Harm potential of magic mushroom use: A review

Van Amsterdam, J., Opperhuizen, A., Van Den Brink, W. · Regulatory Toxicology and Pharmacology (2011)

205 cited
Psilocybin in the treatment of anorexia nervosa: The English transition of a French 1959 case study

Verroust, V., Zafar, R., Spriggs, M. J. · Annales Médico-Psychologiques (2021)

16 cited
Psychedelic drugs: neurobiology and potential for treatment of psychiatric disorders

Vollenweider, F. X., Preller, K. H. · Nature Reviews Neuroscience (2020)

546 cited
Patients’ accounts of increased “Connectedness” and “Acceptance” after psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression

Watts, R., Day, C. M., Krzanowski, J. et al. · Journal of Humanistic Psychology (2017)

568 cited
Psilocybin and obsessive compulsive disorder

Wilcox, C. E. · Journal of Psychoactive Drugs (2014)

54 cited
102 cited

Cited By (5)

Papers in Blossom that reference this study

Therapeutic emergence of dissociated traumatic memories during psilocybin treatment for anorexia nervosa

Peck, S. K., Knatz Peck, S., Brewerton, T. D. et al. · Journal of Eating Disorders (2025)

13 cited
Psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy improves psychiatric symptoms across multiple dimensions in patients with cancer

Petridis, P. D., Grinband, J., Agin-Liebes, G. et al. · Nature Mental Health (2024)

9 cited
The ego in psychedelic drug action - ego defenses, ego boundaries, and the therapeutic role of regression

Buchborn, T., Kettner, H., Kartner, L. et al. · Frontiers in Neuroscience (2023)

19 cited
Pilot study of single-dose psilocybin for serotonin reuptake inhibitor-resistant body dysmorphic disorder

Feusner, J. D., Wheaton, M. G., Gomez, G. J. et al. · Journal of Psychiatric Research (2023)

73 cited