By Alle McMahon
MDMA — more commonly known as ecstasy — is one step closer to becoming a legal form of treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in the United States.
Researchers have for years been looking at how the drug could be used in conjunction with therapy to help sufferers confront their trauma.
Now the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has approved it for use in a phase-three clinical trial — the final stage of research required before it can be considered for approval as a prescription drug.
So, what exactly is MDMA, what will the clinical trial involve and what implications might it have for sufferers in Australia?
What is MDMA?
MDMA — or 3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine — is a psychoactive drug that reduces inhibitions and causes users to become more alert, affectionate and energetic.
It is the presumed main ingredient in the illicit party drug ecstasy.
Why do researchers believe it can help PTSD?
People with PTSD tend to avoid recollections of the experience that prompted their PTSD or situations that remind them of the trauma.
Exposure therapy is used to treat the disorder because it encourages sufferers to confront their trauma, either by remembering it or re-experiencing the event.
According to the president of Psychedelic Research in Science and Medicine (PRISM), Dr Martin Williams, MDMA can help facilitate that because it is an “empathogen”.
“It promotes a closeness between people, so it makes people feel a lot more open to others, enables them to communicate more effectively and more directly and it also reduces fear and anxiety,” he said.