This living systematic review and meta-analysis examined MDMA-assisted therapy for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) across 6 randomized controlled trials involving 286 participants. The intervention was compared against control conditions, primarily placebo. The analysis focused on standardized mean differences for PTSD symptom reduction, along with response and remission rates.
MDMA-assisted therapy showed a greater reduction in PTSD symptoms compared to control conditions, with an effect size of Hedges g = -0.71. Response rates were higher with MDMA (risk ratio = 1.35), and remission rates were substantially higher (risk ratio = 2.25). Absolute numbers for these outcomes were not reported in the meta-analysis.
Safety and tolerability data, including adverse events, serious adverse events, and discontinuation rates, were not reported in this analysis. The authors noted that while most studies had low risk of bias according to Cochrane guidelines, these assessments fail to capture pertinent challenges such as expectancy effects, functional unblinding, potential issues with study conduct, and safety considerations.
The evidence received an overall low certainty rating using the GRADE approach. Practice relevance was not specifically addressed, but the authors emphasized that findings represent short-term decreases in PTSD symptoms and that more trials are needed. Clinicians should interpret these results cautiously given the methodological limitations and low certainty evidence.
View Original Abstract ↓
3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) has emerged as a potential treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), generating considerable enthusiasm in the field. However, rapidly changing evidence in a fast-moving field can be challenging to integrate. Here, we present a living systematic review and open-data meta-analytic resource on MDMA treatment for PTSD. In this initial release, six randomized controlled trials comprising 286 participants are included in the database. Our primary model uses inverse-variance random-effects meta-analysis of standardized mean differences on primary outcomes of PTSD. Compared to control conditions, MDMA showed a greater reduction in PTSD symptoms (Hedges g = -0.71). Meta-regression on both the number of dosing sessions and cumulative dose showed that a higher number of dosing sessions and a higher cumulative dose was related to larger effects of MDMA. Treatment with MDMA as compared to placebo also resulted in higher response (risk ratio (RR) = 1.35) and remission (RR = 2.25) rates. Most studies included in the database had a low risk of bias according to Cochrane guidelines, though these fail to capture pertinent challenges in the field such as expectancy, functional unblinding, potential issues with study conduct, and safety. The current findings were assigned an overall low certainty rating using the GRADE approach. Together, this systematic review and meta-analysis suggests that MDMA-assisted therapy results in short-term decreases in PTSD symptoms across studies to date, though more trials are needed. This living systematic review, meta-analysis, database, and online dashboard (sypres.io) will continue to be updated as evidence emerges, providing a valuable, open, and transparent resource for researchers in a rapidly evolving field.