David Gratzer

8.3K posts

David Gratzer

David Gratzer

@DavidGratzer

Physician & Psychiatrist, Author, International Man of Mystery

Katılım Ağustos 2013
1.7K Takip Edilen2.7K Takipçiler
John Torous, MD MBI
John Torous, MD MBI@JohnTorousMD·
Listen to the free author interview podcast! Link inside the @JAMAPsych paper below
Balázs Szigeti@psybalazs

🚨MAJOR NEW PAPER 🚨 just out in @JAMAPsych : Psychedelic Therapy vs Antidepressants for the Treatment of Depression Under Equal Unblinding Conditions (tinyurl.com/yu2rbtaf). I am very proud of this one, was a lot of work for me - both co-first and last author! Eternal gratitude to co-first @QuantPsychiatry and twitterless Hannah Barnett! The premise is that it is biased to compare open-label trials (=where patients know what treatment they are getting) to blind trials (=where patients do NOT know what they are getting). Open-label trials would gain an unfair advantage by higher placebo response. Even formally blinded psychedelic trials are practically open-label as its obvious to distinguish placebo from 25mg of #psilocybin. In contrast, traditional antidepressants (SSRIs/SNRIs) trials are are close to be truly blind (Lin 2022). Given the bias of open-label vs. blinded comparison, we compared the efficacy of psychedelic-therapy (which is practically always open-label) vs. open-label antidepressants for the treatment of major depression. We tested 3 prior hypothesis: - There will be a significant difference between psychedelic-therapy vs. open-label antidepressants, favoring psychedelic-therapy. - There will be a significant difference between blinded and open-label antidepressants trials, favoring open-label. - There will NOT be a significant difference between blinded and open-label psychedelic-therapy, as practically they are always open-label. In contrast with our prior hypothesis, we did not find psychedelic-therapy to be more effective than open-label antidepressants (H1). Not only was the difference not clinically meaningful, but practically there was no difference at all. This finding means that antidepressants administered knowingly to patients, which is the case in real-life medical practice, is as effective as psychedelic-therapy. This result was robust across variations in study selection, including when we removed psychedelic-therapy trials on treatment-resistant depression. We also assessed the impact of blinding in both psychedelic-therapy and antidepressants trials. We found that for antidepressants (H2), but not for psychedelic-therapy (H3), open label is associated with better outcomes than blinded treatment. However, even in the case of antidepressants, the difference was practically small (~1.3 HAMD units). How come hypothesis 1 failed, i.e. that psychedelic-therapy is no ore effective than open-label antidepressants, given that antidepressants trials are famous for small drug-placebo difference (~2.4 HAMD units), while psychedelic-therapy trials reported large effects (~7.3)? The key factor is that in psychedelic trials the placebo response is about 50% relative to antidepressants, ~ 4 vs 8 HAMD units (Hsu 2024, Hieronymus 2025). This suppressed placebo response leads to an inflated between-arm difference, as the treatment arm is measured against a lower floor. The suppressed placebo response in psychedelic-therapy trials is likely attributable to the ‘know-cebo’ effect, i.e. the disappointment when patients realize they are in the control group. In psychedelic-therapy trials, this placebo suppression accounts for 4.0 / 7.3 ~ 55% of the specific treatment effect. In other words, ~55% of psychedelic-therapy’s effect is not explained by patient improvement after the treatment, but rather by the lack of improvement in the placebo group. In summary, we found that for the treatment of depression, psychedelic-therapy is no more effective than open-label SSRIs/SNRIs. Our results for psychedelics are twofold: psychedelic-therapy demonstrated a robust and large therapeutic effects (~12 HAMD units), which justifies optimism. On the other hand, psychedelic-therapy’s lack of superiority compared to open-label SSRIs/SNRIs highlights the influence of blinding integrity and argues against overly optimistic narrative's about psychedelic-therapy's potential.

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Toronto Star
Toronto Star@TorontoStar·
Young Canadians are increasingly turning to self-harm — but the trend is steepest among girls, study finds trib.al/BcDK8y5
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Massimo
Massimo@Rainmaker1973·
The Day Penicillin First Saved a Life: March 14, 1942 Eighty-four years ago today, on March 14, 1942, penicillin achieved its first documented success in saving a human life—a milestone that forever changed medicine. In the early 1940s, a serious bacterial infection was frequently a death sentence. Conditions such as pneumonia, septicemia (blood poisoning), and infected wounds claimed countless lives because physicians had no effective means to halt the spread of bacteria once it took hold in the body. Antibiotics as we know them simply did not exist. Alexander Fleming had discovered penicillin’s remarkable antibacterial properties in 1928, when he observed that a mold—Penicillium notatum—produced a substance capable of killing nearby bacteria on a petri dish. Although the finding was groundbreaking, transforming the mold’s secretion into a safe, stable, and scalable medicine proved extraordinarily challenging. The compound was unstable, difficult to purify, and could only be produced in tiny quantities. By the early 1940s, however, scientific teams had made enough progress to begin cautious human trials. On that historic day in 1942, at Yale-New Haven Hospital, doctors Orvan Hess and John Bumstead administered the first carefully prepared doses of penicillin to Anne Miller, a 33-year-old woman dying from a life-threatening streptococcal infection following a miscarriage. Her condition had deteriorated rapidly despite every available treatment. The experimental drug worked. Within hours, signs of improvement appeared; the raging infection began to subside, and Anne Miller recovered fully. This case became one of the earliest and clearest demonstrations that penicillin could defeat bacterial infections inside the human body, just as it had in the laboratory. The breakthrough came at a critical moment. World War II was raging, and battlefield wounds were killing soldiers at alarming rates due to infection. Spurred by military urgency, large-scale production methods were rapidly developed—most notably by teams in the United States and the United Kingdom—leading to mass manufacturing by 1943–1944. Penicillin soon reached the front lines, dramatically reducing mortality from infected wounds and saving tens of thousands of lives. Before penicillin, even minor cuts or routine surgeries carried the constant threat of fatal infection. After it, medicine entered a new era—one in which bacterial diseases that once seemed unstoppable could be reliably treated. The events of March 14, 1942, marked the beginning of that transformation.
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Psychiatric News
Psychiatric News@PsychiatricNews·
AI scribes are changing psychiatry fast: more eye contact with patients, less time typing notes, and thousands of hours saved system-wide. But risks remain: errors in notes, missed symptoms, even lower rates of depression diagnosis and referrals in some studies. Is this a major win for clinicians and patients or a step with hidden downsides?
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Toronto Star
Toronto Star@TorontoStar·
Ryan is 18 and homeless in Toronto. As with 1 in 10 homeless people in the city, he went through the child welfare system first trib.al/53ciGq7
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Crémieux
Crémieux@cremieuxrecueil·
Drug overdose deaths are still falling as of February 1st.
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David Gratzer
David Gratzer@DavidGratzer·
Adolescent Mental Health A look at 3 papers. Can AI find the needle in the haystack with the MYRIAD data helping us understand who benefits from mindfulness (@JAMAPsych)? Also, firearms & youth suicide (@JAACAP) and GenAI & teens (@TheBJPsych). davidgratzer.com
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Jessie M. Dalman
Jessie M. Dalman@jessiemdalman·
my last day working as a medical student 🥲 the biggest privilege & best job in the world. i have learned so much. i am so lucky. thank you x1000000 @UMichMedSchool 💙
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David Gratzer
David Gratzer@DavidGratzer·
Congratulations to @jossreimer on her appointment as the chief public health officer of Canada. She has done remarkable things in life, including serving as president of the @CMA_Docs. She's also spoken about her experiences with depression, as a doctor & a patient. theglobeandmail.com/canada/article…
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