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This is a feasibility study to examine the use of use of Psilocybin (magic mushrooms) to alleviate pain in chronic neuropathic pain.
While theoretical mechanisms demonstrate promise, there is no clinical evidence. This vacuum of clinical evidence has been occupied by a "psychedelic hype bubble" with media communications touting psychedelics as a 'miracle cures'. The mismatch between evidence and perception creates an urgent need for RCT to fill this significant gap. This trial aims to address this gap by conducting a pilot trial assessing the feasibility, tolerability, and preliminary efficacy of psilocybin for chronic neuropathic pain to inform a future larger, multi-centre study.
The purpose is to conduct a randomized control double-blinded trial of psilocybin and active placebo (dextromethorphan).
At this time, the aim of the trial is to recruit 30 participants from St. Michael's Hospital, to learn whether it will be feasible to plan a larger study in the future.
Full description
Brief title PEACE-PAIN Trial Indication Adult patients suffering from chronic neuropathic pain Condition(s) of focus of study Moderate-to-severe chronic neuropathic pain Number of participants 30 Primary outcome Feasibility (recruitment success, consent rate, adherence, patient withdrawal, missing data, adverse outcomes) Secondary outcome Change in pain intensity and pain interference Study design Study type: An intervention trial Allocation: Randomized Intervention model: 2-Arm Parallel Group Primary purpose: Feasibility Phase: Phase II Masking Participants, all study team including outcome assessors
Test Products, Dose, and Mode of Administration Treatment arm: Psilocybin 25mg + placebo PO single dose plus psychological support Placebo arm: Dextromethorphan 400mg PO single dose plus psychological support
Follow-Up Days: 1, 7, 14, 30, and 90
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30 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group
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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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