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About
The purpose of this study is to understand whether psilocybin therapy is safe and well tolerated in improving chronic pain and increasing motivation to quit smoking for people who have chronic pain and smoke cigarettes. Psilocybin is a psychedelic drug and the active ingredient in "magic mushrooms." Psilocybin is currently being studied in clinical trials but has no current medical use in the United States. Some studies have shown that a dose of psilocybin can help people quit smoking. Other studies have shown that a dose of psilocybin may improve certain chronic pain conditions, such as migraine headaches. We believe that it may also be helpful for people who smoke and have chronic pain, but this has not been tested yet.
Full description
This will be an open-label pilot study examining the feasibility and potential efficacy of psilocybin in individuals who smoke and have chronic pain. Following the screening visit, the potential participants will have 1) an adaptation/preparation session, 2) a treatment session, and 3) two post-treatment follow-up sessions: 1 and 4 weeks after the treatment session. During study participation, participants will also complete surveys 4 times per day on a mobile device for 5 weeks (1 week before the treatment session and 4 weeks post-treatment session).
General Procedures: Potential participants will undergo extensive medical and psychiatric screening to minimize the risk of study participation. Psilocybin will be administered as a 25 mg oral dose under close medical and psychiatric monitoring.
For the 24 hours before the treatment session, subjects will be asked to abstain from consuming alcoholic beverages and any illicit drugs, verified by urine drug screening and breathalyzer. Non-compliant subjects will be rescheduled or discharged from the study if they are repeatedly non-compliant. Subjects will be instructed to drink their typical number of caffeinated beverages and smoke cigarettes as usual to minimize caffeine and tobacco withdrawal, which could confound the study measures. Subjects will be instructed not to eat for 4 hours before the treatment sessions because a light snack will be provided before the beginning of the session, and lunch will be provided at the end.
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Interventional model
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10 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
Mehmet Sofuoglu, M.D., Ph.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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