Veterans and Lawmakers Lobby in Bipartisan Push for MDMA Therapy

2024-08-08 16:55:12+00:00 - Scroll down for original article

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More than a half century after federal regulators banned most psychedelic compounds, the Food and Drug Administration is nearing a decision on a novel treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder that pairs talk therapy with MDMA, the club drug commonly known as Ecstasy or Molly. The decision, which is expected in the coming days, has generated a groundswell of lobbying by veterans groups, researchers and members of Congress from both parties. Eighty lawmakers signed letters to the Biden administration this week, urging the F.D.A. to approve the application by the drug company Lykos Therapeutics. The campaign was prompted in part by an expert panel’s unanimous rejection in June of Lykos’s application, because of what participants said were flaws in the company’s clinical trials and insufficient data. “We have a mental health crisis and a suicide epidemic, with thousands of military veterans taking their own lives every year,” said Representative Jack Bergman, Republican of Michigan and a former Marine Corps general who helped organize the letter’s 60 backers in the House. “I would just ask the F.D.A. to consider the negative ramifications of them not taking action, which means more veterans will die needlessly.”