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'Ecstasy' Use Studied to Ease Fear in Terminally Ill
By Rick Weiss |
For some, the diagnosis comes out of the blue. For
others, it arrives after a long battle. Either way,
the news that death is just a few months away poses a
daunting challenge for both doctor and patient.
Drugs can ease pain and reduce anxiety, but what about
the more profound issues that come with impending
death? The wish to resolve lingering conflicts with
family members. The longing to know, before it's too
late, what it means to love, or what it meant to live.
There is no medicine to address such dis-ease.
Or is there?
This month, in a little-noted administrative decision,
the Food and Drug Administration gave the green light
to a Harvard proposal to test the benefits of the
illegal street drug known as "ecstasy" in patients
diagnosed with severe anxiety related to advanced
cancer.
The drug, also known as
3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine, or MDMA, has been
referred to by psychiatrists as an "empathogen," a
drug especially good at putting people in touch with
their emotions. Some believe it could help patients
come to terms with the biggest emotional challenge of
all: the end of life.
The FDA's approval puts the study on track to become
the first test of a psychedelic substance since 1963
at Harvard, where drug guru Timothy Leary lost his
teaching privileges after using students in
experiments with LSD and other hallucinogens.
It also marks a milestone for a small but increasingly
effective movement favoring a more open-minded
attitude toward the therapeutic potential of
psychedelic drugs, virtually all of which have been
criminalized and disparaged for decades as medically
useless.
Already, MDMA is being tested for its ability to
reduce symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder. And
two U.S. studies are looking at the usefulness of
psilocybin -- the active ingredient in "magic
mushrooms" -- in terminally ill cancer patients and in
people with obsessive-compulsive disorder.
In the coming year, advocates also hope to submit to
the FDA an application to test psilocybin and LSD as
treatments for a debilitating syndrome known as
cluster headaches.
That would be a fitting birthday present for Albert
Hofmann, the chemist who discovered both compounds
while working for the Swiss drug company Sandoz and
who turns 99 in January, said Rick Doblin, president
of the Multidisciplinary Association for Psychedelic
Studies. The Sarasota-based nonprofit has organized
and funded much of the new research.
Hofmann, who has expressed support for clinical
studies such as the one being planned at Harvard, has
referred to LSD as his "problem child" -- a reference
to his belief that despite its widespread abuse, the
mind-altering drug has the potential to help some
people.
Although they vary in their chemical structures and
specific effects, many psychedelic drugs work on the
parts of the brain that regulate serotonin -- the same
brain chemical that is the target of many FDA-approved
antidepressants. That does not indicate that the drugs
are necessarily safe; indeed, they all carry some
medical and psychiatric risk.
Yet even scientists who have been vocal about those
risks have expressed at least guarded support for the
idea that, in the company of a therapist and with
proper medical monitoring, moderate doses might
benefit some people.
"When taken under adverse circumstances by
ill-prepared individuals, there are substantial
psychological risks," said Charles Grob, a
psychiatrist at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center in Los
Angeles. "But when taken in the context of carefully
structured and approved research protocols and
facilitated by individuals with expertise, adverse
effects can be contained to a minimum."
Grob is leading an FDA-approved study in which
terminally ill cancer patients are being given
psilocybin to see whether it can help them sort
through emotional and spiritual issues. He said the
patients take a "modest" dose of synthetic psilocybin,
equivalent to two or three illicit mushrooms. They
spend the next six hours or so in a comfortable
setting with a psychiatrist -- talking, thinking and
sometimes listening to music with headphones.
"So far they have had very impressive results in terms
of amelioration of anxiety, improvement of mood,
improved rapport with close family and friends and,
interestingly, significant and lasting reductions in
pain," Grob said of the first few patients to enroll.
"These are extraordinary compounds that seem to have
an uncanny ability to reliably induce spiritual or
religious experiences when taken in the right
conditions."
Promising results have also been reported at the
University of Arizona from a 10-person study of
psilocybin for obsessive-compulsive disorder, which
locks people into repetitive thoughts and actions. And
Charleston, S.C., psychiatrist Michael Mithoefer has
seen no complications in any of the five patients who
have enrolled in his 20-person study of MDMA for
victims of violence struggling with post-traumatic
stress disorder.
With the FDA's Dec. 17 approval of the Harvard MDMA
protocol -- and permission in hand from ethics review
boards at Harvard and the nearby Lahey Clinic, where
patients will be recruited -- the only remaining
hurdle is getting a special license from the Drug
Enforcement Administration. A dozen subjects with less
than 12 months to live will get either low or moderate
doses of MDMA during two sessions a few weeks apart,
along with counseling and a variety of psychological
tests before and after treatment.
The approach has its doubters.
"Even in antiquity, some groups thought it was
especially important to take whatever their local
psychedelic was -- including alcohol -- when
confronting mortality, whether it's to see into the
hereafter, improve spiritual growth or just numb
yourself to the reality," said Joanne Lynn, president
of the Washington-based Americans for Better Care of
the Dying and director of RAND Health, a science and
policy research center. But drugs can be disorienting,
she said.
"It's sometimes poetic, sometimes majestic, but often
mundane work to wrap up one's life," Lynn said. "I
think it's unlikely there's a pill that will make that
go away."
John Halpern, associate director of substance abuse
research in the biological psychiatry lab at Harvard's
McLean Hospital, who will lead the MDMA study there,
agreed that it is not for everyone. But creating a
sense of connection with something greater than
oneself "may be helpful" for many facing death, he
said.
Halpern emphasized the differences between his study
and the freewheeling experiments conducted by Leary in
the 1960s.
"This is not about hippy dippy Halpern trying to turn
on the world. I'm not looking at this as a magic
bullet," he said. "But for a lot of people, the
anxiety about death is so tremendous that there is no
way to get their arms around the problems that were
ongoing in their family. This could be a substantial
contribution to the range of palliative care
strategies we're trying to develop for people facing
their death."
Laura Huxley, widow of the author and metaphysical
pioneer Aldous Huxley, said her husband asked for --
and she provided -- a dose of LSD as he lay dying in
1963. "He wanted to be aware," the 93-year-old
supporter of the new research said last week. "It's a
very important moment."
Leary took a wide array of psychedelics in the weeks
leading up to his death from cancer in 1996. Some
suspect the drugs clouded rather than sharpened his
perceptions, but he died with a positive attitude.
"It's kind of interesting really," he said of dying,
talking to a friend in his final days. "You should try
it sometime."
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