| Literature DB >> 32296353 |
Kristin Heuschkel1, Kim P C Kuypers1.
Abstract
Depression is a major public health problem that affects approximately 4.4% of the global population. Since conventional pharmacotherapies and psychotherapies are only partially effective, as demonstrated by the number of patients failing to achieve remission, alternative treatments are needed. Mindfulness meditation (MM) and psilocybin represent two promising novel treatments that might even have complementary therapeutic effects when combined. Since the current literature is limited to theoretical and empirical underpinnings of either treatment alone, the present review aimed to identify possible complementary effects that may be relevant to the treatment of depression. To that end, the individual effects of MM and psilocybin, and their underlying working mechanisms, were compared on a non-exhaustive selection of six prominent psychological and biological processes that are well known to show impairments in patients suffering from major depression disorder, that is mood, executive functioning, social skills, neuroplasticity, core neural networks, and neuroendocrine and neuroimmunological levels. Based on predefined search strings used in two online databases (PubMed and Google Scholar) 1129 articles were identified. After screening title and abstract for relevance related to the question, 82 articles were retained and 11 were added after reference list search, resulting in 93 articles included in the review. Findings show that MM and psilocybin exert similar effects on mood, social skills, and neuroplasticity; different effects were found on executive functioning, neural core networks, and neuroendocrine and neuroimmune system markers. Potential mechanisms of MM's effects are enhanced affective self-regulation through mental strategies, optimization of stress reactivity, and structural and functional adjustments of prefrontal and limbic areas; psilocybin's effects might be established via attenuation of cognitive associations through deep personal insights, cognitive disinhibition, and global neural network disintegration. It is suggested that, when used in combination, MM and psilocybin could exert complementary effects by potentiating or prolonging mutual positive effects, for example, MM potentially facilitating psilocybin-induced peak experiences. Future placebo-controlled double-blind randomized trials focusing on psilocybin-assisted mindfulness-based therapy will provide knowledge about whether the proposed combination of therapies maximizes their efficacy in the treatment of depression or depressive symptomatology.Entities:
Keywords: depression; mindfulness meditation; psilocybin; psychedelics; review
Year: 2020 PMID: 32296353 PMCID: PMC7136554 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2020.00224
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Figure 1A model of psychological and biological deficiencies associated with major depressive disorder; rounded square-shaped box, deficient factor(s); oval-shaped box, mediating factor(s); white box, psychological factor; gray box, biological factor; arrow, unidirectional influence; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor.
Figure 2A model of possible complementary effects of mindfulness meditation (MM) and psilocybin on psychological and biological deficiencies associated with major depressive disorder; rounded square-shaped box, deficient factor(s) in depression; arrow-shaped box, unidirectional effect; white box, psychological factor/effect; gray box, biological factor/effect; black arrow, interdependence; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor.
Overview of experimental studies and other types of studies (e.g., no intervention or pooled data analysis) included in the review; only constructs and findings (increase ↑/reduction ↓) related to the model are presented; the most used abbreviations are BS, Between Subject; WS, Within Subject; MM, Mindfulness Meditation (or related); P, Psychedelic; Psi, Psilocybin; p.o., per oral; IV, intravenously; the other abbreviations are explained in the footnote of this table.
| Study | Sample (size) | Design/Intervention | Construct (measure) | Findings | MM/P |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Astin ( | Healthy participants (N=28) | BS, 2 groups: 8-weekBSR programme or non-intervention control condition | Psychological symptomology (SCL-90; perceived control; spiritual experience) | MBSR group > control group: ↓ overall psychological symptomatology, ↑ overall domain-specific sense of control, ↑ scores on a measure of spiritual experiences | MM |
| Alonso et al. ( | Healthy male volunteers with prior experience with psychedelics | WS, 2 sessions: placebo and freeze-dried ayahuasca (0.75 mg DMT/kg equivalent dose, p.o.) | Directed functional connectivity (transfer entropy) | Ayahuasca: ↓ top-down control (anterior regions), ↑ bottom-up (posterior regions) information transfer in the human brain | P |
| Barnes et al. ( | Study 1: dating undergraduate students (N=89); | Study 1 (WS): short-term longitudinal measurement over 10 weeks; | Both studies: Mindfulness (MAAS); Relationship satisfaction (DAS; IMS); Self-control (SCS); | Mindfulness: ↑ relationship satisfaction, ↑ capacities to respond constructively to relationship stress, | MM |
| Barrett et al. ( | Healthy hallucinogen users (N=20) | Double-blind, WS, 5 sessions: Psi (10, 20, and 30 mg/70 kg, p.o.), DXM (400 mg/70 kg, p.o.) and placebo | Psychomotor performance (motor praxis task); Memory (word-encoding, recall, and recognition task; letter N-back task); Visual perception (PLOT) | Psi: ↓ psychomotor performance, WM, episodic memory, associative learning, visual perception; dose-dependent effects | P |
| Broderick ( | Healthy undergraduate students | BS; negative mood induction + rumination (group 1), distraction (group 2), or MM (group 3) | Affect (PANAS); Thought-listing | Negative affect: group 3 < group 1 and 2 | MM |
| Brown et al. ( | Healthy undergraduate students (N=44) | BS; Trier Social Stress Test or control task | Cortisol; Mindfulness (MAAS); Perceived stress (PSS), Anxiety (POMS); Negative affectivity (PANAS); Fear of negative evaluation (FNE) | Mindfulness: ↓ cortisol response to social stress, anxiety, negative affect | MM |
| Cahn et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=38) | WS; 3-month yoga and meditation retreat | Psychometric measures (BSI, FMI, Tellegen Absorption Scale), serum BDNF levels; circadian salivary cortisol levels; pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines | ↓ Anxiety, depression, pro-inflammatory cytokine IL-12; | MM |
| Barrett et al. ( | Healthy participants, not drug naive (N=20) | Double-blind, WS, 5 sessions: Psi (10, 20, 30 mg/70 kg, p.o.), DXM (400 mg/70 kg, p.o.), and placebo | Subjective drug effects (Subjective Effects Questionnaire, Drug effect intensity rating, SOCQ, 5D-ASC, Mysticism Scale, Psychological Insight Questionnaire, Challenging Experience Questionnaire) | Psi (30 mg/kg) and DXM (400 mg/70 kg): similar profiles of subjective experiences ↓ psychomotor performance, balance; Psi > DXM: visual, mystical-type, insightful, and musical experiences; Psi < DXM: disembodiment, nausea/emesis, light-headedness | P |
| Carhart-Harris et al. ( | Healthy participants with previous experience with a hallucinogenic drug (N=30) | WS, 2 sessions: Psi (2 mg in 10-mL saline) and placebo | CBF (fMRI); changes in venous oxygenation; intensity of subjective effects | Psi: ↓ CBF, which was maximal in hub regions (e.g. thalamus, ACC, PCC),↓ positive coupling between mPFC and PCC., ↓ ACC activity predicted the intensity of the subjective effects | P |
| Carhart-Harris et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=15) | WS, 2 session: Psi (2 mg, IV + 10 mL saline) and placebo (10 mL saline) | Functional connectivity (fMRI) | Psi: ↑ functional connectivity between DMN and CEN, preserved thalamocortical connectivity | P |
| Carhart-Harris et al. ( | Unipolar, treatment-resistant major depression patients (moderate-to-severe) (N=12) | Open-label, two doses of Psi (10 mg and 25 mg, p.o.) 7 days apart, supportive setting | Depressive symptoms (QIDS, BDI, HAM-D, MADRS, GAF), Anxiety (STAI), Anhedonia (SHAPS) | ↓ Depressive symptoms, anxiety, anhedonia 1 week and 3 months after (25 mg) treatment compared to baseline | P |
| Carhart-Harris et al. ( | Patients with moderate-to-severe, unipolar, treatment-resistant major depression (N=20) | Open-label, uncontrolled administration of Psi (10 mg and 25 mg, p.o. 7 days apart), supportive setting | Depressive symptoms (QIDS), BDI, HAM-D, MADRS, GAF), state-trait anxiety (STAI), anhedonia (SHAPS) | ↓ Depressive symptoms until 6-month follow-up; response (n=9) was predicted by acute psychedelic experience quality; remitters (n=4) | P |
| Carlson et al. ( | Early stage breast and prostate cancer patients | 8-week MBSR programme | QOL (EORTC QLQ-C30); Mood (POMS), stress symptoms (SOSI); Salivary cortisol; Plasma DHEAS; Salivary melatonin | ↑ QOL, associated with ↓ afternoon cortisol levels; ↑ sleep quality; | MM |
| Carlson et al. ( | Cancer outpatients | 7-week MM programme | Mood (POMS); Stress symptoms (SOSI) | ↓ Mood disturbance and stress until 6-month follow-up | MM |
| Carter et al. ( | Healthy participants | Double-blind, WS, 4 sessions: placebo, ketanserin (50 mg, p.o.), Psi (215 mg/kg, p.o.), and Psi + ketanserin | Attentional tracking ability (multiple-object tracking task); Spatial WM (spatial WM task) | Psi: ↓ attentional tracking ability (not attenuated by pre-treatment with ketanserin) | P |
| Carter et al. ( | Healthy participants | Double-blind, WS, 4 sessions: pre-treatment with ketanserin (50 mg, p.o.) or placebo, followed by administration of Psi (215 µg/kg, p.o.) or placebo | Subjective drug effects (AMRS, 5D-ASC), Binocular rivalry (binocular rivalry switch rate) | Psi: ↓ rate of binocular rivalry switching (not blocked by ketanserin); ↑ proportion of transitional/mixed percept experience; ketanserin: ↓ P’s hallucinogenic symptoms | P |
| Coffey and Hartman ( | 2 independent, healthy undergraduate student samples (sample 1: n = 204; sample 2: n = 258) | Observational study; Structural equation modeling to test the mediation role of emotion regulation, nonattachment, and reduced rumination in in the relationship between mindfulness and a psychological distress factor | Mindfulness (MAAS); Emotion regulation (TMMS-Repair subscale); Nonattachment (Linking Inventory); Rumination (RRQ); Psychological distress (BSI) | Inverse relationship between mindfulness and psychological distress and emotion regulation, nonattachment, and rumination significantly mediated this relationship. | MM |
| Domínguez-Clavé et al. ( | Volunteers (N= 45; of which 12 with borderline personality disorder (BPD) traits) | Naturalistic ayahuasca study; tests were administered prior to and 24 h after the ayahuasca session | Emotion regulation (DERS); mindfulness (FFMQ), Decentering (EQ); Borderline Personality Disorder (MSI-BPD) | Participants ↑ in mindfulness capacities and emotion regulation. The BPD-like subgroup ↑in emotion regulation; no changes in mindfulness capacities | P |
| Frecska et al. ( | Participants of ayahuasca rituals (N= 40) | Naturalistic study; Assessments before and two days after the end of a two-week long ceremony | Visual creativity (Torrance Tests of Creative Thinking) | Highly original solutions and phosphenic responses ↑ number | P |
| Gex-Fabry et al. ( | Patients remitted from recurrent depression | BS: 8-week MBCT + TAU or TAU alone | Cortisol (CAR, average day exposure, diurnal slope); depression (MADRS, BDI); relapse (SCID) | Unchanged cortisol secretion patterns following participation in MBCT or TAU | MM |
| Gotink et al. ( | Adult participants (previously completed MBSR or MBCT course) (N=29) | WS+BS: Mindful walking in nature for 1, 3, 6, or 10 days with a control period of a similar number a of days 1 week before the mindful walking period | Affect and state mindfulness (ESM); Depression, anxiety and stress (DASS-21); Mindfulness skills (Toronto Mindfulness Scale) | Mindful walking: ↑ mindfulness (predicted ↓ negative affect), positive affect, state mindfulness; positive affect and mindfulness prospectively enhanced each other in an upward spiral | MM |
| Greenberg et al. ( | Study 1 (N=35): experienced mindfulness meditators (n=14) and non-meditators registered for their first meditation retreat (n=21); Study 2 (N=76): non-meditators | Study 1: BS; Study 2: BS, 8-meeting mindfulness programme or waiting list | Cognitive rigidity (Einstellung water jar task (Study 1 and 2)), Alphabet-Maze task (Study 2) | Rigidity scores experienced mindfulness meditators < non-meditators; rigidity scores non-meditators with mindfulness programme < waiting list group | MM |
| Greenberg et al. ( | Non-meditators (N=76) | BS; 8-session mindfulness training programme or waiting list | Task set inhibition (BI, CRS) | Mindfulness programme: ↑ BI, but not CRS, compared to a waiting list group | MM |
| Griffiths et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=18) | Double-blind, WS, 5 sessions: Psi (5, 10, 20, 30 mg/70 kg, p.o.) and placebo | acute subjective drug effects (HRS, APZ, 5D-ASC, Mysticism Scale, SOCQ, ARCI); retrospective persisting effects (PEQ); attitudes/dispositions/behavior (Mysticism Scale, Death Transcendence Scale, Community Observer Ratings) | Psi (20 and 30 mg/70 kg): mystical-type experiences that have persisting (1 and 14 months) positive effects (↑) on attitudes, mood, and behavior | P |
| Griffiths et al. ( | Cancer patients with life-threatening diagnoses and symptoms of depression and/or anxiety (N=51) | Randomized, double-blind, WS: Psi (1 or 3 mg/70 kg, p.o.) and Psi (22 or 30 mg/70 kg, p.o.) | Depression (HAM-D, BDI, HADS); Anxiety (HAM-A, HADS, STAI, LAP); Mood (POMS); Self-rated psychiatric symptoms (BSI); Wellbeing (QOL); Optimism (LOT-R); Life meaningfulness (PILT); Understanding of self/others/life (LAP); Other-ratings of participant’s mood/attitude/behavior | Psi (22 or 30 mg/70 kg): ↓ depressed mood, anxiety, ↑ QOL, life meaning, optimism, up until 6-months; participants attributed ↑ in attitudes to Psi (20 or 30 mg/70 kg) experience, consistent with other-ratings; mystical-type Psi experience on session day mediated the effect of Psi dose on therapeutic outcomes. | P |
| Griffiths et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=75; 25 per condition) | BS; 6-8-month programme of meditation/spiritual practices + double-blind administration of one of three doses of Psi p.o.: (1) 1 mg/70 kg + moderate-level support; (2) 20 and 30 mg/70 kg + moderate-level support; (3) 20 and 30 mg/70kg + high support | Persisting effects attitudes (Brief RCOPE, Gratitude Questionnaire, LAP, Trait Forgiveness Scale, Inclusion of Others in the Self scale, ASPIRES, Dispositional Positive Emotions Scale, LOT-R, SWLS, PILT, Other-ratings of participant’s mood/attitude/behavior | Psi: ↑ interpersonal closeness, gratitude, life meaning/purpose, forgiveness, death transcendence, daily spiritual experiences, religious faith and coping, community observer ratings at 6 months; Psi (20 and 30 mg/kg) > Psi 1 mg/kg; enduring effects depended on Psi-occasioned mystical-type experience and rates of meditation/spiritual practices | MM+P |
| Griffiths et al. ( | Healthy adults who regularly participate in religious/spiritual activities (N=36), hallucinogenic-naïve | WS, 2-3 sessions: Psi (30 mg/70 kg, p.o.) and methylphenidate (40 mg/70 kg, p.o.) | Affect (PANAS); Well-being (QOL); personality (NEO-PI); spirituality (Spiritual Transcendence Scale; Faith Maturity Scale; FACIT) | Psi: ↑ positive attitudes, mood, social effects and behavior at 2- and 14-month follow-up; Psi occasioned experiences similar to spontaneously occurring mystical experiences | P |
| Griffiths et al. ( | Hallucinogen-naïve healthy adults who regularly participate in religious/spiritual activities (N= 36) | WS, 2-3 sessions: Psi (30 mg/70 kg, p.o.) and methylphenidate (40 mg/70 kg, p.o.) | Affect (PANAS); Spirituality (Mysticism scale); Other-ratings of participant’s mood/attitude/behavior | Psi: 2 months self- and other-rated sustained positive changes in attitudes and behavior | P |
| Grob et al. ( | Adults with advanced-stage cancer, and anxiety (N=12) | Double-blind, WS, placebo-controlled, Psi (0.2 mg/kg, p.o.) | Depression (BDI); Mood (POMS); Anxiety (STAI); Psychiatric symptoms (BPRS) | Psi: ↓ anxiety, depressive symptoms at 1 and 3 months | P |
| Håkansson et al. ( | Healthy older participants (N=19) | WS, 3 sessions: 35 min of physical exercise (condition 1), cognitive training (condition 2) or mindfulness practice (condition 3) | Neuroplasticity (serum BDNF levels) | Condition 1 > condition 2-3: ↑ serum BDNF levels | MM |
| Hargus et al. ( | Depressed patients who had experienced suicidal crises (N=27) | BS; MBCT + TAU or TAU alone | Depression (SCID, BDI); meta-awareness (MACAM); specificity of memory (ReSSI) | MBCT > TAU: ↑ meta-awareness, specificity of memory | MM |
| Harman et al. ( | Professionally employed males (N=27) | WS: mescaline (200 mg, p.o.) | Creativity (Purdue Creativity Test, Miller Object Visualization Test, Witkin Embedded Figures Test); Subjective ratings | ↑ creative problem-solving for at least some weeks subsequent to the psychedelic session | P |
| Hasler et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=8) | Double-blind, WS, 5 sessions: placebo, Psi (45, 115, 215 and 315 μg/kg, p.o.) | Attention (FAIR); Mood (AMRS), blood chemistry (plasma concentrations of thyroid-stimulating hormone, prolactin, cortisol, adrenocorticotropic hormone) | Psi: ↑ physiological parameters in a dose-dependent manner; Psi (215 & 315 μg/kg): ↓ attentional capacity | P |
| Hölzel et al. ( | Healthy participants | WS; 8-week MBSR programme | Perceived stress (PSS); amygdala grey matter density (MRI) | ↓ stress, correlated with ↓ right basolateral amygdala grey matter density | MM |
| House et al. ( | Mouse cells | In vitro treatment with LSD (100 µm) | Inflammatory markers | ↓ proliferation of B-lymphocytes, production of the cytokines IL-2/IL-4/IL-6, induction of cytotoxic T-lymphocytes, NK response, ↑ basal and IL-2-augmented NK cell function | P |
| Huffziger and Kuehner ( | Depressed patients 3.5 years after discharge from inpatient treatment (N=76) | BS; Negative mood induction + rumination (group 1), distraction (group 2), or mindful self-focus (group 3) | Depression (SCID-I); Coping styles (RSQ); Mindfulness (FMI); Mood (PANAS) | Negative mood group 2-3 < group 1; High mindfulness facilitates negative mood reduction in group 3 | MM |
| Jha et al. ( | Experimental mindfulness-naive participants (group 1; n=17), experienced meditators (group 2 n=17) and a mindfulness-naive control group (group 3; n=17) | BS; group 1 participated in an 8-week MBSR course, while group 2 participated in a 1-month intensive mindfulness retreat | Alerting/orienting/conflict monitoring (ANT) | Pretraining: group 2 > 1 conflict monitoring; post-training: group 1 ↑ endogenous orienting; group 2 ↑ exogenous alerting | MM |
| Jimenez et al. ( | College students (N = 514) | Observational, cross-sectional study; Structural equation modeling to test the relationship between self-rated dispositional mindfulness and depressive symptoms through emotion regulation, mood regulation and self-regulation | Positive emotions (mDES), Perceived mood repair ability (NMR-15); Self-acceptance (PWBS); Mindfulness (FMI); Depressive symptoms (CES-D) | Relationship between mindfulness and depressive symptoms was mediated by emotion regulation, mood regulation and self-regulation. Higher levels of dispositional mindfulness were associated with higher levels of positive emotions, mood regulation expectancies, and self-acceptance; all were inversely related to depressive symptoms. Self-acceptance was the strongest mediator of mindfulness and depressive symptoms. | MM |
| Kometer et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=17) | Randomized, double-blind, 4 sessions: Psi (215 g/kg), ketanserin (50 mg), Psi + ketanserin, placebo | Affect (PANAS), Anxiety (STAI-State), Emotion recognition (FERT); Emotional Go/NoGo Task, EEG | Psi: ↑ positive mood, goal-directed behavior (++ > – cues), positive emotion; ↓ recognition of negative facial expression (blocked by ketanserin), negative sequential emotion, P300 component (valence-dependent) | P |
| Kraehenmann et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=25) | Double-blind, WS, 2 sessions: Psi (0.16 mg/kg, p.o.) and placebo | Affect (PANAS) Anxiety (STAI); Amygdala reactivity (amygdala reactivity task; BOLD fMRI) | Amygdala reactivity to negative and neutral stimuli Psi < placebo; this response (after Psi) was related to the Psi-induced ↑ positive affect | P |
| Kubera et al. ( | Human blood samples from healthy volunteers (N=19) and major depressed patients with treatment resistant depression (n= 7; N=26) | Treatment with 5-HT (150, 1.5 and 15 μg/mL), PCPA (5 μM), flesinoxan (15 and 1.5 μg/mL), mCPP (27 and 2.7 μg/mL), and ritanserin (50 and 5.0 μg/mL) | Cytokine secretion (LPS, PHA); pro- versus anti-inflammatory capacity of cultured whole blood (IFNγ/IL-10 production ratio) | 5-HT: ↓ IFNγ/IL-10 ratio; PCPA: ↓ production of IFNγ and IL-10; mCPP and ritanserin: ↓ IFNγ/IL-10 ratio | P |
| Kuypers et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=26) | Naturalistic ayahuasca study; Assessment took place at baseline and 2 h after drinking ayahuasca | Divergent thinking ((PLMT), Convergent thinking (PCT) | Convergent thinking ↓, divergent thinking ↑ | P |
| Lazar et al. ( | Healthy participants with extensive Insight meditation experience (N= 20) and control participants with no meditation or yoga experience (N= 15) | BS Structural MRI; scanning | Cortical thickness (MRI) | Brain regions associated with attention, interoception and sensory processing were thicker in meditation participants than controls, including the PFC and right anterior insula. | MM |
| Lee et al. ( | Male Chinese expert meditators N(FAM)= 11; N(LKM)= 11; male Chinese novice meditators N(FAM)= 11; N(LKM)=11 | Cognitive tasks during fMRI scanning | Cognitive processing (CPT); Affective processing (EPT); brain activity (BOLD fMRI); affect (CAS) | FAM was associated with expertise-related behavioral improvements and neural activation differences in attention task performance, in contrast to LKM meditation. Both FAM and LKM practice affected the neural responses to affective pictures: For viewing sad faces, the regions activated for FAM experts were consistent with attention-related processing, whereas responses of LKM experts to sad pictures were more in line with differentiating emotional contagion from compassion/emotional regulation processes. | MM |
| Lengacher et al. ( | Advanced-stage cancer patients (n=26) and caregivers (n=26; N=52) | BS+WS; modified 6-week, self-study MBSR-C | Perceived stress (PSS); Depression (CES-D); Anxiety (STAI); Psychological and physical symptoms (MSAS); QOL (MOS); Stress markers (salivary cortisol and IL-6) | Patients and caregivers: ↓ cortisol at weeks 1 and 3, ↓ IL-6 levels at week 6; patients: ↓ stress, anxiety; caregivers: ↓ psychological symptoms, ↑ QOL (not significant); | MM |
| Lewis et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=58) | Double-blind, BS (Psi dose)+WS, 2 sessions: group 1: 0.160 mg/kg Psi p.o.; group 2: 0.215 mg/kg Psi p.o., and placebo | perfusion changes (fMRI); subjective drug effects (5D-ASC) | Group 1 < 2 ↑ subjective drug effects; Psi: ↑ relative perfusion in right hemispheric frontal and temporal regions and bilaterally in the anterior insula, ↓ relative perfusion in left hemispheric parietal and temporal cortices subcortical regions, widespread ↓ in absolute perfusion | P |
| Lutz et al. ( | Healthy participants (experimental: n=24; control: n=22) | BS: short mindfulness intervention, followed by emotional expectation paradigm during fMRI scanning | Psychometric measures (SDS; STAI; Eysenck Personality Inventory; EPI; FMI; MAAS) | Mindfulness intervention: ↑ activations in prefrontal regions during expectation of (potentially) negative stimuli, ↓ activation in amygdala and parahippocampal gyrus during perception of negative stimuli; prefrontal and right insular activations when expecting negative pictures correlated negatively with trait mindfulness | MM |
| Ly et al. ( | In vitro: cultured cortical rat neurons; | In vitro studies: treatment of cultured cortical rat cells with different psychedelic class compounds (amphetamines, ergolines, tryptamines, iboga); | Structural change (fluorescence microscopy); Functional change (electrophysiology); Neuroplasticity (BDNF levels) | Serotonergic psychedelics: ↑ neuritogenesis, spinogenesis, synapse number and function; induced structural changes appear to result from stimulation of the TrkB, mTOR, and 5-HT2A signaling pathways. | P |
| MacLean et al. ( | Healthy, hallucinogen-naïve participants (N= 52) | Pooled data analysis; Combination of Psi data from Griffiths et al. ( | Personality (NEO-PI) | Psi: ↑ Openness; In participants who had mystical experiences during their psilocybin session, Openness remained significantly higher than baseline more than 1 year after the session. | P |
| Malarkey et al. ( | University faculty and staff (n=186) with elevated CRP level (> 3.0 mg/ml) who had, or were at risk for cardiovascular disease | BS; 2-month MBI-ld (group 1) or lifestyle education programme (group 2) | CRP; IL-6; cortisol; Perceived stress (PSS); Depression (CES-D); Sleep quality (PSQI) | Group 1 > 2: ↑ mindfulness at 2-months and up to a year | MM |
| Mason et al. ( | Healthy participants (before ingesting P N=55; the morning after P: N=50); 7 days after P: N=22) | WS; ingestion of truffles (1.9 mg, p.o.) containing Psi in a retreat setting | Creative thinking (PCT), empathy (MET), Satisfaction with life (SWLS) | Psi ↑ divergent thinking & emotional empathy the morning after use; 7 days after Psi: ↑ convergent thinking, valence-specific emotional empathy, and well-being; changes in empathy correlated with changes in wellbeing | P |
| Matousek et al. ( | Women with breast cancer and depressive symptoms (N=33) | WS; MBSR programme | Stress (CAR; PSS); Depression (CES-D); medical symptoms (MSCL) | Prolonged ↑ CAR, ↓ self-reported stress levels, depressive symptomatology, medical symptoms | MM |
| Moore and Malinowksi, ( | Experienced Buddhist meditators (N= 25) and a meditation-naïve control group (N= 25) | Observational study | Mindfulness (KIMS); degree of automatization/deautomatization (Stroop task); Attentional performance and flexibility (d2-concentration and endurance test) | Attentional performance and cognitive flexibility were positively related to meditation practice and levels of mindfulness | MM |
| Mrazek et al. ( | Healthy undergraduate students (N=48) | WS; 2-week mindfulness-training course | WM capacity (OSPAN); Mind wandering (Thought sampling); Reading comprehension (GRE) | Mindfulness training: ↑ reading comprehension; WM capacity, ↓ mind wandering; improvements in performance were mediated by reduced mind wandering among participants prone to distraction at pretesting | MM |
| Nau et al. ( | Young adult male mice | BS; sterile saline or (R)-DOI, followed by TNF-α; pretreatment with a 5-HT2A receptor antagonist. in some mice | Gene expression; protein expression; cytokines | (R)-DOI: ↓ inflammation by blocking the systemic effects of TNF-α (blocked by pre-treatment with a 5-HT2A receptors antagonist) | P |
| Oken et al. ( | Community-dwelling caregivers of close relatives with dementia (N=28) | BS, 7 weeks: MBCT-based programme (group 1), education class based on Powerful Tools for Caregivers (group 2) or respite | Stress (RMBPC); mood (CES-D); fatigue (SF-36); self-efficacy (General Perceived Self-Efficacy Scale); mindfulness (MAAS, FFNJ); cortisol; cytokines; cognitive function (10-word list learning task, Stroop task, ANT); expectancy of improvement; credibility of the interventions | Group 1 and 2: ↓ stress, ↑ self-efficacy, cognitive function; significant correlations between mindfulness and self-rated mood and stress scores | MM |
| Pokorny et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=32; N(MET)=32; N(MDT)= 24) | Double-blind, WS, 2 sessions: Psi (0.215 mg/kg, p.o), placebo | Empathy (MET, IRI); Moral decision-making (MDT); Affect (PANAS) | Psi > placebo: ↑ emotional empathy | P |
| Preller et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=21) | Double-blind, WS, 2 sessions: Psi (0.215 mg/kg, p.o.) and placebo, followed by exposure to social ostracism | Neural activity (fMRI); Empathy (MET) | Psi: ↓ ACC response to social ostracism, ↑ emotional empathy compared to placebo | P |
| Quednow et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=16) | Double-blind, randomized, BS: placebo, ketanserin (40 mg, p.o.), Psi (260 mg/kg, p.o.), or Psi + ketanserin | Sensorimotor gating (prepulse inhibition of the acoustic startle response); psychopathological core dimensions (5D-ASC); behavioral inhibition (Stroop task) | Psi: ↓ sensorimotor gating, behavioral inhibition, ↑ all 5D-ASC scores (blocked by ketanserin) | P |
| Raes et al. ( | Healthy participants | Study 1: Cross-sectional design to examine the relationship between trait mindfulness and CR; study 2: 8-week MBCT programme or waiting list; BS | Mindfulness (KIMS), CR (LEIDS-R, BDI, MDQ) | Trait mindfulness is negatively correlated with CR; MBCT: ↓ CR (mediated by a positive change in mindfulness skills) | MM |
| Roseman et al. ( | Treatment-resistant depression patients (moderate to severe) (N=20) | Open-label, WS, 2 sessions: Psi (10 mg/kg p.o.) and (25 mg/kg p.o.) | Depression (HAM-D, BDI); Amygdala activity to emotional faces (fMRI); Treatment response (in-scanner rating of depressed mood; QIDS) | Psi: ↓ depressive symptoms, ↑ responses to fearful and happy faces in the right amygdala; amygdala(r) increases to fearful versus neutral faces were predictive of clinical improvements at one week | P |
| Roseman et al. ( | Healthy participants (N= 40; N(Psi)= 15; N(MDMA)=15) | Pooled data analysis; data from 2 previously published BOLD-weighted fMRI data sets after placebo-controlled administration of Psi (N = 15) and MDMA (N = 25) | Resting-state functional connectivity (RSFC); Subjective effects | Psi> MDMA: changes in consciousness. Psi ↑ between-network RSFC and ↓ RSFC between visual and sensorimotor resting state networks. MDMA had a notably less marked effect on between-network RSFC | P |
| Ross et al. ( | Patients with cancer-related anxiety and depression (N=29) | Double-blind, WS, 2 sessions: Psi (0.3 mg/kg, p.o.) and niacin (p.o.), both + psychotherapy | Anxiety and depression (HADS, STAI, BDI) | Psi: anxiolytic and anti-depressant effects which sustained for 6.5 months; effects were mediated by P-induced mystical experience | P |
| Sampedro et al. ( | Healthy participants with prior experience with ayahuasca | Open-label, uncontrolled, 1 session: ayahuasca (148 mL; 0.3 mg/ml DMT) | Neurometabolic and connectivity modifications (magnetic resonance spectroscopy); mindfulness (FFMQ, EQ, Self-Compassion questionnaire); acute subjective drug effects (HRS) | ↓ Neurometabolism in PCC; ↑ PCC-ACC connectivity; ↑ ACC-right MTL connectivity, correlating with ↑ self-compassion; ↓ glutamate + glutamine, correlating with ↑ nonjudging | P |
| Smigielski et al. ( | Healthy, experienced meditator subjects (N=38; 23 males) | Five-day mindfulness retreat; Single dose of PSI (0.315 mg/kg, p.o.) | Pre- and post PSI brain dynamics during resting state and two meditation forms | Decoupling of mPFC and posterior cingulate cortices: associated with PSI-induced subjective ego dissolution | P and MM |
| Stroud et al. ( | Patients with treatment-resistant depression (n=17) and controls (n=16; N=23) | BS (patient/control)+WS, 2 sessions: Psi 10 mg/kg, p.o. and 25 mg/kg, p.o. | Depression (QIDS); emotional processing (Dynamic Emotional Expression Recognition Task); anhedonia (SHAPS) | Baseline: patients < controls emotion recognition speed; Psi: ↑ emotion recognition speed compared with baseline in patient (correlated with ↓ anhedonia), but not controls | P |
| Studerus et al. ( | Healthy participants (N= 110) | Pooled data analysis; Eight double-blind placebo-controlled experimental studies conducted between 1999-2008; 1–4 administrations of Psi (45–315 mg/kg p.o.) | Psychedelic experience (5D-ASC); Mood (AMRS), long-term drug effects (investigator-constructed follow-up questionnaire) | Psi dose-dependently induced changes in mood, perception, thought and self-experience; most participants described the experience as pleasurable, enriching and non-threatening. | P |
| Surawy et al. ( | Chronic fatigue syndrome patients waiting to receive cognitive behavior therapy (N=9) | WS; 8-week MM programme | Fatigue (Chalder fatigue scale); Physical functioning (SF-36); Anxiety/Depression (HADS); Effect of fatigue on QOL (FIS) | ↓ fatigue, anxiety, depression; ↑ QOL, physical functioning; effects were sustained for 3 months | MM |
| Soler et al. ( | Healthy participants with no prior meditation experience (N=20; n(ayahuasca)=10; n(MBSR)=10) | WS+BS(ayahuasca/MBSR); 4 closely spaced consecutive ayahuasca sessions or 8-week MBSR programme | Mindfulness (FFMW, EQ) | MBSR > ayahuasca: ↑ mindfulness; MBSR = ayahuasca: ↑ acceptance | P and MM |
| Szabo et al. ( | Human primary moDCs and autologous naïve T cells | In vitro pre-treatment with DMT and a sigmar-1 agonist, followed by inflammatory response induction with LPS (500 ng/mL), polyI:C (20 µg/mL) or pathogen-derived stimuli versus resting state | Cytokines; gene expression; protein expression | DMT: ↓ inflammatory responses, ↑ anti-inflammatory responses in LPS or polyI:C-stimulated moDCs through the sigma-1 receptor | P |
| Turton et al. ( | Healthy psychedelic-experienced volunteers (N= 15) | Qualitative study; Psi (2 mg, IV) | Psychedelic experience (Semi-structured interview) | Reports of perceptual changes (visual, auditory and somatosensory distortions), cognitive changes, mood changes, spiritual or mystical type experiences | P |
| Vollenweider et al. ( | Healthy participants (N=10) | WS, 3 sessions: Psi (15, 20 mg) and placebo | CMRglu (PET, FDG); ego pathology (EPI); psychopathology (AMDP); subjective drug effects (APZ) | Psi: global ↑ CMRglu, especially in PFC, ACC, and temporomedial cortex and putamen (correlated positively with hallucinatory ego disintegration) | P |
| Wachs and Cordova ( | 33 married couples (N= 66) | No intervention | Mindfulness (MAAS); Emotional skills and traits (TAS-20, IRI, SECS, ECQ); Marital quality (DAS, Marital Satisfaction Inventory—Revised) | Mindfulness was associated with marital quality and partners’ emotion skills. The association between mindfulness and marital quality was mediated by emotion repertoire skill. | MM |
| Winnebeck et al. ( | Depressed patients with a chronic/recurrent lifetime history (N=74) | BS; brief MBI or control condition | Depression (SCID, BDI); ruminative tendencies (RSQ); mindfulness (FFMQ); Cognitive reactivity to sad mood (LEIDS-R) | MBI: ↑ mindfulness, ↓ ruminative tendencies, cognitive reactivity; MBI > control ↓ depressive symptoms | MM |
| Zeidan et al. ( | Healthy participants, no prior meditation experience (N=63) | BS, 4 sessions: MM training (group 1) or listening to a recorded book (groups 2) | Mood (POMS); Mindfulness (FMI); Depression (CES-D); anxiety (STAI); Verbal fluency (Controlled Oral Word Association Test); Visual coding (DSST); WM (DSST, N-back task); Immediate memory span (forward/backward digit span); Information processing speed and attention (N-back task) | Group 1 and 2: ↑ mood; | MM |
| Zeidan et al. ( | Healthy undergraduate students with no prior meditation experience | BS, 3 sessions: MM training (group 1), sham MM training (group 2), or control condition (group 3) | Mood (POMS); Anxiety (STAI); Heart rate | Group 1 > group 2-3: ↓ negative mood, depression, fatigue, confusion, heart rate | MM |
Footnote to clarify the used abbreviations: (R)-DOI, 2,5-Dimethoxy-4-iodamphetamin; 5D-ASC, 5-Dimensional Altered State of Consciousness Rating Scale; 5-HT, Serotonin; ACC, Anterior cingulate cortex; AMDP, Inventory of the Association for Methodology and Documentation in Psychiatry; AMRS, Adjective Mood Rating Scale; ANT, Attention Network Test; APZ, Altered States of Consciousness; ARCI, Addiction Research Center Inventory; ASPIRES, Assessment of Spirituality and Religious Sentiments; BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; BI, Backward inhibition; BPRS, Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale; BSI, Brief Symptoms Inventory; CAR, Cortisol awakening response; CAS, Chinese Affect Scale; CBF, Cerebral blood flow; CEN, Central executive network; CES-D, Center of Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale; CMRglu, Cerebral metabolic rate of glucose; CR, Cognitive reactivity; CPT, continuous performance test; CRP, C-reactive protein; CRS, Competitor Rule Suppression; DAS, Dyadic Adjustment Scale; DASS-21, Depression Anxiety Stress Scale; DERS, Difficulties in Emotion Regulation Scale; DHEAS, Dehydroepiandrosterone-sulfate; DMN, Default-mode network; DMT, N,N-Dimethyltryptamin; DSST, Digit symbol substitution task; DXM, Dextromethorphan; ECQ, Emotional Control Questionnaire; EEG, Electroencephalogram; EORTC QLQ-C30, European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire; EPI, Ego Pathology Inventory; EPT, emotion-processing task; EQ, Experience Questionnaire; ESM, Experience Sampling Method; FACIT, Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy; FAM, Focused Attention Meditation; FAIR, Frankfurt Attention Inventory; FDG, [F-18]-fluorodeoxyglucose; FERT, Facial Emotional Recognition Task; FFMQ, Five Facet Mindfulness Questionnaire; FFNJ, Measure of being nonjudgmental adapted from factor five; FIS, Fatigue Impact Scale; FMI, Freiburg Mindfulness Inventory; fMRI, Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging; FNE, Fear of Negative Evaluation Scale, GAF, Global Assessment of Functioning; GRE, Graduate Record Examination; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; HAM-A, Hamilton Anxiety Scale; HAM-D, Hamilton Depression Scale; HRS, Hallucinogen Rating Scale; IFNγ, Interferon gamma; IL, Interleukin; IMS, Investment Model Scale; IRI, Interpersonal Reactivity Index; KIMS, Kentucky Inventory of Mindfulness Skills; LAP, Life Attitude Profile; LEIDS-R, Leiden Index of Depression Sensitivity; LKM, Loving-kindness meditation; LOT-R, Life-, Orientation Test—Revised; LPS, Lipopolysaccharides; LSD, Lysergic acid diethylamide; MAAS, Mindful Attention Awareness Scale; MACAM, Measure of Awareness and Coping in Autobiographical Memory; MADRS, Montgomery–Åsberg Depression Rating Scale; MBI, Mindfulness-Based Intervention; MBI-ld, low-dose MBI; MBSR-C, MBSR programme for cancer; mCPP, m-chlorophenylpiperazine; mDES, Modified Differential Emotions Scale; MDT, Moral Dilemma Task; MET, Multifaceted Empathy Test; moDCs, Monocyte-derived dendritic cells; MOS, Medical Outcomes Studies Short-Form General Health Survey; mPFC, Medial prefrontal cortex; MSAS, Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale; MSCL, Medical Symptom Checklist; MSI-BPD, McLean Screening Instrument for BPD; MTL, Medial temporal lobe; NEO-PI, Big Five Personality Inventory; NK, Natural killer; NMR-15, Negative Mood Regulation Expectancies scale; OSPAN, Operation Span Task; PANAS, Positive and Negative Affect Schedule; PCC, Posterior cingulate cortex; PCPA, P-chlorophenylalanine; PCT, Picture Concept Test; PEQ, Persisting effects questionnaire; PFC, Prefrontal cortex; PHA, Polyhydroxyalkanoate; PILT, Purpose in Life Test; PLMT, pattern/line meanings test; PLOT, Penn Line Orientation Test; POMS, Profile of Mood States; PSQI, Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index; PSS, Perceived Stress Scale; PWBS, Psychological Well-Being Scale; QIDS, Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptoms; QOL, Quality of Life; RCOPE, Religious Coping Activity Scales; ReSSI, Relapse Signature of Suicidality Interview; RMBPC, Revised Memory and Behavior Problems Checklist; RRQ, Rumination–Reflection Questionnaire; RSQ, Response Styles Questionnaire; SCID, Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-5; SCL-90, Symptom Check List-90; SCS, Self-Control Scale; SDS, Self-Rating Depression Scale; SECS, Self‐Expression and Control Scale; SF-36, Short Form 36; SHAPS, Snaith-Hamilton Pleasure Scale; SOCQ, Selection-Optimization-Compensation Questionnaire; SOSI, Symptoms of Stress Inventory; STAI, State-Trait Anxiety Inventory; SWLS, Satisfaction with Life Scale; TAU, Treatment as usual; TAS-20, Toronto Alexithymia Scale; TMMS, Trait Meta-Mood Scale; TNF-α, Tumour necrosis factor alpha; WM, Working memory.