Could 'microdosing' help people with anxiety? This study aims to find out Clinical trial now underway in Kingston, Ont.
Researchers in Kingston, Ont., have embarked upon a clinical trial that will look at whether "microdosing" psilocybin — the hallucinogenic compound in magic mushrooms — can offer relief to people suffering from generalized anxiety disorder.
Led by a team from the Kingston Health Sciences Centre Research Institute, the study is being touted as the first Phase 2 clinical trial approved by Health Canada to probe the effects of small, daily doses of psilocybin.
The hope is to find out if microdosing can alleviate anxiety symptoms without bringing on mind-altering side effects, said Dr. Claudio Soares, a psychiatry professor at Queen's University and the lead researcher.
But much of that work, Soares said, has involved high doses or "macrodoses" that — because of their hallucinatory effects — require study participants to be monitored in medical settings, sometimes for up to half a day.
"They have that mystical experience and changes in their perception of their environment — what we call a trip," said Soares, who's also the director of the Centre for Psychedelics Health and Research at Kingston's Providence Care Hospital.
"That is not for everybody. Some people cannot tolerate that effect of psychedelics."
How this study works
The Kingston trial will ultimately involve up to 60 adults with "debilitating" anxiety, Soares said, but no other medical conditions.
They'll take small doses of psilocybin — around two to three milligrams a day — at home for four weeks. After that, they'll be randomly assigned either more psilocybin microdoses or a placebo for another four weeks.
The goal is to see if participants do well during the study's first half, Soares said, and then watch for signs of their anxiety returning or any withdrawal symptoms in the second half.
The data would potentially inform larger Phase 3 trials, typically the final phase before any drug goes to market.
It's not that uncommon to come across someone that says, 'Oh, I've been microdosing with psilocybin and I'm feeling much better.- Dr. Claudio Soares, lead researcher
The study comes as rates of generalized anxiety disorder have been on the rise, more than doubling among people age 15 and older — from 2.6 per cent to 5.5 per cent — from 2012 to 2022, according to Statistics Canada.
Typical treatments involve antidepressants and psychotherapy, but there's a significant subset of sufferers who simply "don't get better" through those approaches, said Dr. Tyler Kaster, a psychiatrist and medical head of the Temerty Centre for Therapeutic Brain Intervention at Toronto's Centre for Addictions and Mental Health (CAMH).
De-stigmatizing hallucinogens
While clinical studies into microdosing psilocybin and anxiety are rare, Soares noted there have been anecdotal reports of people taking small doses to treat their mental health conditions.
"It's not that uncommon to come across someone that says, 'Oh, I've been microdosing with psilocybin and I'm feeling much better," Soares said.
"[But there are] very few studies looking at microdosing in medical conditions, in a controlled setting, [where] we know exactly what people are taking, for how long [and] what doses."
Both the current study and the centre's overall work have a wider goal in mind, Soares said: the de-stigmatization of psilocybin and other psychedelics as a legitimate medical treatment.