3:4 methylenedioxypyrovalerone on drug ecstasy but today I want to talk about MDMA not as a recreational drug but as a potential new treatment in medicine and then very important treatment for psychiatry because MDMA could offer us in psychiatry for the first time the opportunity to tackle trauma and psychological trauma particularly that caused by child abuse and maltreatment is at the heart of all or most psychiatric disorders due to anxiety and addictions psychiatry is in need of this innovative approach because current treatments are failing patients hi my name's Ben sesor I'm a child and adolescent psychiatrist now that means I trained as a medical doctor then specialized in mental health and then specialized in child and adolescent mental health but for the last five years I've been working with adults with mental health disorders and addictions due to misuse of drugs and that developmental pathway of my own from working with child abuse into adults with mental disorders and addictions has brought me to the door of MDMA and I'm gonna propose today that MDMA could be important for the future as the Kyah tree as the discovery of antibiotics was for general medicine a hundred years ago so when we think about child abuse we think about physical abuse mental abuse emotional abuse sexual abuse and neglect and we think about noxious environments we think about parents with mental disorder we think about parents who are addicted to drugs and social issues like poverty and poor housing poor education now I'm going to illustrate my talk today with a patient and I'm going to call her Claire now Claire was no single particular patient of mine rather she's an amalgamation of many different people I've met in the last 18 years working as a medical doctor she's certainly not the worst now what was Claire's environment like she was growing up well her mother was depressed now unfortunately the family doctor didn't have time to accurately diagnose and treat depression rather Claire's mother was put onto one antidepressant after another never really got therapy Claire's mother also had a lot of aches and pains typical what we call psychosomatic symptoms in depression and as a result the family doctor put her on to opiate based painkillers which she promptly became addicted to now Claire's father now he was alcoholic and he was often not around in and out of prison which is just as well because when he was there he was physically abusive to Claire and her mother okay so what does this kind of chaotic frightening environment due to the developing child brain I'm going to give you a brief neurophysiology lesson if I may there's a part of the brain called the amygdala now the amygdala is a very ancient part of the mammalian brain and many other animals other than humans have an amygdala the amygdala lights up when stimulated by fear in the environment by a frightening stimulus if lights up and it says fight-or-flight get out now there's another part of the brain much more sophisticated part called the prefrontal cortex and it's right here at the front above the eyes now the prefrontal cortex only humans have and it's in the prefrontal cortex where we use logic and reasoning to rationalize the situation and we can use our prefrontal cortex to overcome that instinctive fear response from the amygdala now when Claire was growing up she never knew from one moment to the next whether the adult coming into the room were they going to give him a kiss or a cuddle or do a jigsaw with her over they're going to punch her or kick her or burn her with their cigarette or were they going to rape her because throughout her childhood Claire was also subjected to sexual abuse now there's a lupa disorders called the anxiety disorders and one of the most important is what we call post-traumatic stress disorder or PTSD now PTSD some of the core features very low mood anxiety high levels of anxiety what we call hyper vigilance this edginess this jumpiness exactly how claire felt throughout her childhood and adolescence never knowing whether they next assailant or assault was around the corner another core feature of PTSD what we call REE experiencing phenomena flashbacks in which the patient has sudden remembrances of these painful traumatic memories they can just pop into the head at any time triggered by some cue in the environment and when they have those experiences those daytime flashbacks they relive the trauma in all the sensory modalities and this results in them freezing or dissociating to try and block out the pain now Claire experienced all of this as she was growing up high levels of self-harm and suicide are associated with PTSD Claire would cut her thighs and her breasts pretty common form of cutting in children who've been sexually abused she was being sexually abused by clients of her mother because her mother had moved on from the addiction to painkillers and was using street heroin when Claire was a teenager and because of the way the war on drugs has set up that reduces access to treatment for people with opiate dependence she had to pay for her heroin using sex work and the clients would sexually abused Claire now it's very hard to treat PTSD and it has a high treatment resistance 50% of people do not respond to the traditional treatments how do we treat it well we can treat it with medications we can treat it with psychotherapies and the medications we use there's a broad range of drugs no single drug and this is very important no single drug cures PTSD rather we treat the disorder symptomatically if the patient's depressed give them an antidepressant if their mood fluctuates give them a mood stabilizer if they can't sleep give them a hypnotic and if that edginess and that fear spills over into paranoia and psychosis give the patient an anti-psychotic drug and they have to take these drugs day in day out for weeks months decades they have to keep taking them because the drugs we use to treat trauma when it's due to this level of severity do not attack the root cause of trauma they paper over the cracks a good analogy would be taking aspirin or ibuprofen when you have a fever now a fever is caused by an infection by an ant by a microorganism sure you can take powerset amal or ibuprofen and this will lower the temperature and make you feel a bit better but it doesn't attack the root cause and that's what we do when we give these patients these daily SSRI drugs we paper over the cracks we maintain the symptoms at a manageable level we also use psycho therapies to treat PTSD unless again a broad range of these DBT CBT EMDR trauma focused psychotherapy cata PT now all of them have a pretty similar approach which actually is an old wives tales which is a problem shared is a problem halved let's talk about your trauma Claire tell me about your rape now that's fine for 50% of patients but for a significant half they just cannot do that as soon as Claire is asked to talk about her rape she freezes she flees she drops out of treatment now by the time she was 15 Claire had been removed from the family home and she was brought up in a succession of foster placements and children's houses and hostels where the abuse continued and she was self-harm cutting and she started drinking and by the time she was 18 she was using heroin as well sometimes working in Skytree can feel pretty desperate can feel pretty hopeless sometimes it feels as if psychiatry is a palliative care profession and this is the truth because the treatments we use do not get to the root cause of the problem the trauma they paper over the cracks and I think the pharma industry know this and they queue up and they provide us with product after product to give to our patients that doesn't quite cure them but it gets them slightly better to function and they have to keep taking them indeed I would say that we are in psychiatry today where we were in general medicine 100 years ago now 100 years ago in general medicine humanity was losing the battle to the infectious diseases oh we were very good at classifying and diagnosing them we knew who got smallpox we knew people died of post-operative surgery we knew there were microorganisms but we didn't have a treatment and then at the beginning of the 20th century we discovered the antibiotics not symptomatic treatment but treatment that goes to the core of the cause and we started getting on top of infectious disease now psychiatry today is in a similar place we're very good at classifying and diagnosing our epidemiology is superb we write these thick diagnostic manuals we know who gets depression we know who gets anxiety we even know the cause trauma child abuse maltreatment poor social conditions but our treatments are lousy and I'm quite shocked away the empathy switch and our understanding of these patients seems to be switched off we have lots of gushing sentimentality for the little five and six year old who's being abused and we throw money at our television sets on these campaigns to improve the lives of these poor little innocent victims well let me tell you what happens to that little five or six year old when they're 11 or 12 on goes the hood start smoking weed by the time they're 16 they're buying and selling amphetamine and by the time they're Claire's age in their mid-20s they're addicted to heroin and alcohol and suddenly we have lost our empathy these people are public enemy number one it's your fault Claire you brought this upon yourself it's your lifestyle choice and I'm quite shocked and having worked in Pediatrics and seen the developmental trajectory that is so inevitable from early trauma into adolescent and then adult mental health and addictions we have to hold on to that sense of compassion and evidence-based understanding about the developmental trajectory there so it does sound desperate but all is not lost MDMA MDMA has some fascinating qualities indeed I would suggest that if you were to invent a hypothetical drug to treat chorma it would be MDMA the way it works in terms of its receptors and it's subjective psychological effects ticks all the right boxes at one level of receptors it causes a increased positive mood lowering of depression lowering of anxiety at another group of receptors it speeds the patient up mild stimulation which motivates them to engage in therapy at another level it would Laxus the patient paradoxically at the same time as the stimulation and this puts the patient into the optimal arousal zone where they can engage in psychotherapy but perhaps the most important thing about MDMA and the most important clinical tool is its ability to provide a sense of empathy and understanding and emotional security it can hold the patient in a place where they can think about and access their trauma like they've never been able to do before one of the ways in which MDMA works is it increases the release of a hormone called oxytocin now oxytocin is released from the brains of breastfeeding mothers it's a hormone that engenders a sense of attachment and bonding and that's what's happening in the patient who takes MDMA and also it acts directly on the amygdala to reduce that fear response whilst at the same time boosting the prefrontal response allowing the patient to see things in a new light a positive light so let's go back to Claire she's 40 now she's been in and out of psychiatric hospitals having tried to take her own life and the inception she's been on all the antipsychotic antidepressant mood stabiliser drugs she's tried all the psychotherapies but she cannot engage because she will not talk about her feelings so she comes into a course of mdma-assisted psychotherapy what does it look like well it's weekly sessions maybe eight ten twelve weeks long the two therapists male-female pair you do not take MDMA everyday you do not take it every every week over that course of 12 sessions you'll take the MDMA three times and the other sessions you talk about the material that's released on the MDMA session so what does Claire actually feel when she takes this MDMA what she feels is a sense of warmth and understanding and a sense of containment within that relationship she's having with the therapist MDMA is like it's like a lifejacket like a bulletproof vest to wear to go into battle with your trauma this is not ecstasy she's not enjoying some ravers euphoric ecstasy delight this is still trauma focused psychotherapy and it is still hard and distressing for her but she can just about do it with MDMA on board so when the therapist says Claire tell me about your rape now in the past just the word rape and she'd be out the door but on MDMA she says yeah I can talk about that I can see him now coming into the room I can smell the whiskey on his breath and I can feel the stubble on his face as he's raping me and she talks about it and she explores it and she reflects upon it and she can begin the process of healing and from here she can start her journey she can attack the root cause of her problems not just maintain the symptoms at a level so does it work well we've known about MDMA for very long time and indeed we've used MDMA in underground therapy for 30 or 40 years and there are thousands of positive anecdotal cases I get five emails a week from all over the world dr. sesor I've had PTSD for years I've tried everything and now I tried MDMA and I'm starting to make a breakthrough now anecdotal reports like that are interesting but they're not science so we've done the science and some important studies in recent years big study in the state showed that a single course of MDMA therapy 16-week quarks patient takes MDMA three times tested against a placebo at the end of that course 85% of the people no longer met the diagnostic criteria for PTSD not just a relief of symptoms they didn't have PTSD now that cohort were then followed up three years later the same no PTSD many of those people had come off their daily medications they were cured we don't use the Cure word in psychiatry we've become learned helplessness position of this is the truth if you're diagnosed with a severe mental disorder like anxiety or depression in your 20s and the developmental route of that disorder is severe child abuse there's a pretty good chance and I'm sorry to say this there's a pretty good chance you will still be going to psychiatric clinics in your 60s and 70s now that is not good enough and we're in this position because we're not tackling trauma so it works but is it safe well we're anything about safety of clinical MDMA what we must not do is look at the risks of recreational ecstasy I don't even know what ecstasy is anymore ecstasy is over here what is ecstasy some dodgy pill bought in some dodgy club or some dodgy geezer that may or may not contain MDMA plus or minus whatever far more toxic substance and indeed when you hear about the very high-profile deaths of people who take ecstasy it invariably is not MDMA so let's not look at ecstasy as a measure of MDMA let's look at clinical MDMA now when will you use clinical MDMA you take it under medical supervision it is pure the MDMA that I'm using in my studies is 99.98% pure very expensive we do it under medical supervision with a doctor and a nurse and a psychologist and under those conditions the risks are reduced to a absolute minimum indeed after 40 years of MDMA research there has not been a single serious adverse drug reaction not one and certainly no deaths so we need to do this research and we need to do this research in an evidence-based compassionate way looking at the data we need to ignore the socio-political agenda that says any drug that's being used recreationally must also be very bad and dangerous that sort of attitude hampers research and we need scientists to drive this it works it's safe and it offers patients like Claire for the first time in their life an opportunity to break through from that trauma and not become a lifelong chronic PTSD sufferer so where were we going with MDMA research well we've had some studies we've got more coming here I'm doing a study in Cardiff with neuroimaging in which we're going to give patients with PTSD MDMA and placebo and we're going to look at that Plus that the relationship between the amygdala and the prefrontal cortex we're also doing a study here in Bristol giving patients with alcohol use disorder MDMA because underlying the root of this addiction is trauma so this is an exciting time now people say this is controversial and indeed that was introduced as a controversial speaker I'm not controversial I'm a very boring conservative doctor I like data I like evidence-based data that helps my patients I'll tell you what's controversial what's controversial is that more people have died returning from Afghanistan and Iraq because they've committed suicide because of their untreated PTSD then ever died in the conflict out there that is controversial and that is unethical so this is a important time for science MDMA could be the antibiotic that psychiatry has been waiting for we owe that population of patients who are being failed we owe them this research we owe this declare thank you