FDA moves to fast-track psychedelic drugs after Trump order

President Donald Trump signs an executive order encouraging more research into ibogaine, next to U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Joe Rogan, and Americans for Ibogaine CEO W. Bryan Hubbard, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., Saturday.

President Donald Trump signs an executive order encouraging more research into ibogaine, next to U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., Joe Rogan, and Americans for Ibogaine CEO W. Bryan Hubbard, in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, D.C., Saturday. (Nathan Howard, Reuters)


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KEY TAKEAWAYS
  • FDA fast-tracks psychedelic drugs after Trump's April 18 executive order.
  • Compass Pathways receives voucher for psilocybin treatment-resistant depression candidate COMP360.
  • Psilocybin's advanced clinical profile favored over ibogaine for priority vouchers.

BENGALURU, India — The U.S. health regulator on Friday moved to speed up the development of new treatments for serious mental illness ​by awarding the national priority vouchers to three companies, days after President Donald Trump signed an executive order.

The executive order, signed on April 18, directed the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to give the vouchers to psychedelic ‌drugs that have the "breakthrough therapy" tag, potentially cutting the review time to one to two months from the usual six to 10 months.

Compass Pathways has confirmed that ⁠it received a voucher for its candidate COMP360, a synthetic ​form of psilocybin for treatment-resistant depression.

Of the remaining two companies, ⁠one is studying psilocybin for major depressive disorder and another is studying methylone for post-traumatic stress disorder, the FDA said.,

Usona Institute ‌and Transcend Therapeutics are developing such ‌treatments, respectively, but neither responded to requests to confirm whether they were recipients. The Department of Health ⁠and Human Services also did not respond to a request to identify the ⁠companies involved.

Earlier this week, Compass CEO Kabir Nath told Reuters that the company aims to be "launch-ready by the end of this year." On the executive order, Nath said it is "not going to be a huge acceleration for Compass, but it does offer some more momentum toward a potential approval."

Compass shares were up about 2% in midday trading.

Mental illness remains widespread, affecting 23.4% of U.S. adults in 2024 and 17.6% of veterans in 2023, according to the National Alliance on ‌Mental Illness.

Psychedelic treatments work primarily by activating proteins on the surface of nerve cells ​that regulate the brain's ability to reorganize, form new connections and repair damaged circuits. Risks of psychedelic-assisted therapy include acute anxiety, panic and confusion during administration of the medicine.

Despite Trump's vocal support for ibogaine, a psychoactive derived from a shrub native to Africa, the FDA did not include it in the list of drugs receiving priority vouchers. The agency, however, is allowing an early-stage clinical study of a derivative of ibogaine, developed by DemeRx NB, as a potential treatment for alcohol-use disorder.

Experts said the focus on psilocybin reflects its more advanced clinical profile. "Maybe ibogaine is just a year away from ​a similar position," said Michael Thase, a professor of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvania.

Others viewed the development in a more positive light.

"This is exceptionally ‌fast action," said ‌Bryan Hubbard, CEO of ⁠Americans for Ibogaine, who attended Trump's signing of the executive order. "Commissioner Markary and his team have walked their talk on accelerating the approval process. This is a good start."

Both psilocybin and ibogaine are listed as Schedule I drugs, meaning they currently have no accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse, according to the Drug Enforcement Administration.

But psilocybin has been studied more extensively than other ‌psychedelic drugs, with research over the ​past decade, including at Johns Hopkins University and Imperial College London, showing ‌it can significantly reduce symptoms of ⁠depression.

Ibogaine has been studied far ​less and carries a more troubled safety record.

Contributing: Chris Prentice, Reuters

The Key Takeaways for this article were generated with the assistance of large language models and reviewed by our editorial team. The article, itself, is solely human-written.

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