Hughes Marcus E, Garcia-Romeu Albert
Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, USA.
Interventional Psychiatry Service, Yale Psychiatric Hospital, New Haven, CT, USA.
EClinicalMedicine. 2024 Jul 3;74:102711. doi: 10.1016/j.eclinm.2024.102711. eCollection 2024 Aug.
Prior data indicate limited ethnoracial diversity in studies testing psychedelic-assisted treatments. Regulatory approval for psychedelic treatments may be imminent given growing evidence for safety and efficacy in a variety of psychiatric conditions. Data on racial and ethnic inclusion rates in clinical psychedelic studies since 2018 have not been systematically reported to date. With the publication of multiple new studies in the field, an update to existing ethnoracial inclusion data is needed to inform the state of the science and future directions for research.
Systematic review of Pubmed/MEDLINE, EMBASE, and Web of Science for studies of any design testing a psychedelic treatment for a psychiatric or substance use disorder published between January 1, 1994 and May 24, 2024. Search terms related to serotonergic psychedelics and MDMA, psychedelic therapies, psychiatric disorders, and substance use disorders were used. References of reviewed studies were screened for inclusion. Studies were rated for quality on a five-point scale ranging from 1 (most rigorous, i.e., properly powered randomized clinical trial) to 5 (least rigorous, e.g., case reports). Separate analyses were performed for two groups of studies, one involving all included studies meeting search criteria, and the other involving only studies from the USA. Rates of inclusion of different ethnoracial groups were calculated between studies published before and after December 31, 2017. Additionally, the proportion of White vs. non-White participants was compared between studies published before and after December 31, 2017. Finally, a nonparametric Mann-Whitney U test was used to compare the relative quality ratings of studies published before and after December 31, 2017.
787 studies were screened, and 39 studies were included. This included 16 studies (n = 282) from a prior review published in 2018 with an additional 23 studies (n = 1111) that were published after 2017, consisting of 14 randomized controlled studies, 8 open-label studies, and 1 placebo-controlled, within-subject, fixed-order study. In all included studies published after 2017, 85.6% of participants identified as non-Hispanic White, 3.1% as Black, 6.8% as Latinx/Hispanic, 3.6% as Asian, 1.2% as Indigenous, 3.5% as mixed race, 1.4% as other, Pooled data from all included studies (n = 1393) found 85.0% of participants identified as non-Hispanic White, 2.9% as Black, 5.9% as Latinx/Hispanic, 3.2% as Asian, 1.9% as Indigenous, 3.7% as mixed race, 1.4% as other. In studies conducted in the USA (n = 1074), 908 (84.5%) of participants identified as White, 36 (3.4%) as Black, 80 (7.4%) as Latinx/Hispanic, 43 (4.0%) as Asian, 15 (1.4%) as Indigenous, 40 (3.7%) as Mixed, and 9 (0.8%) as Other. Differences in inclusion rates were found when comparing studies published before and after December 31, 2017 for all included studies and all studies conducted in the USA. The proportion of White to non-White participants was found to have decreased in studies conducted in the USA over the same period, but not for all included studies.
Underrepresentation of ethnoracial minoritized populations persists in studies examining psychedelic therapies, despite growing calls for diversity. Non-Hispanic White participants remain an over-represented majority by a large margin, though, there were greater proportions of ethnic minoritized populations included in studies since 2018, particularly in studies conducted in the USA. This indicates progress towards equity in psychedelic research, though much work is needed to inform the safety and efficacy of psychedelic treatments in the general population.
There was no funding source for this study.
先前的数据表明,在测试迷幻辅助治疗的研究中,种族和民族多样性有限。鉴于越来越多的证据表明迷幻治疗在多种精神疾病中的安全性和有效性,其监管批准可能即将到来。自2018年以来,临床迷幻研究中的种族和民族纳入率数据迄今尚未得到系统报告。随着该领域多项新研究的发表,需要更新现有的种族和民族纳入数据,以为科学现状和未来研究方向提供信息。
对PubMed/MEDLINE、EMBASE和科学网进行系统综述,以查找1994年1月1日至2024年5月24日期间发表的任何设计的研究,这些研究测试了用于精神疾病或物质使用障碍的迷幻治疗。使用了与血清素能迷幻剂和摇头丸、迷幻疗法、精神疾病和物质使用障碍相关的搜索词。对综述研究的参考文献进行筛选以纳入。研究质量按从1(最严格,即样本量充足的随机临床试验)到5(最不严格,如病例报告)的五分制进行评分。对两组研究进行了单独分析,一组涉及所有符合搜索标准的纳入研究,另一组仅涉及来自美国的研究。计算了2017年12月31日之前和之后发表的研究中不同种族和民族群体的纳入率。此外,比较了2017年12月31日之前和之后发表的研究中白人参与者与非白人参与者的比例。最后,使用非参数曼-惠特尼U检验比较2017年12月31日之前和之后发表的研究的相对质量评分。
筛选了787项研究,纳入了39项研究。这包括2018年发表的先前综述中的16项研究(n = 282)以及2017年之后发表的另外23项研究(n = 1111),包括14项随机对照研究、8项开放标签研究和1项安慰剂对照、受试者内、固定顺序研究。在2017年之后发表的所有纳入研究中,85.6%的参与者被认定为非西班牙裔白人,3.1%为黑人,6.8%为拉丁裔/西班牙裔,3.6%为亚洲人,1.2%为原住民,3.5%为混血,1.4%为其他。所有纳入研究(n = 1393)的汇总数据显示,85.0%的参与者被认定为非西班牙裔白人,2.9%为黑人,5.9%为拉丁裔/西班牙裔,3.2%为亚洲人,1.9%为原住民,3.7%为混血,1.4%为其他。在美国进行的研究(n = 1074)中,908名(84.5%)参与者被认定为白人,36名(3.4%)为黑人,80名(7.4%)为拉丁裔/西班牙裔,43名(4.0%)为亚洲人,1S名(1.4%)为原住民,40名(3.7%)为混血,9名(0.8%)为其他。在比较2017年12月31日之前和之后发表的所有纳入研究以及在美国进行的所有研究时,发现纳入率存在差异。同期在美国进行的研究中,白人参与者与非白人参与者的比例有所下降,但并非所有纳入研究都是如此。
尽管对多样性的呼声越来越高,但在研究迷幻疗法的研究中,种族和民族少数群体的代表性仍然不足。非西班牙裔白人参与者仍然是占比过高的多数群体,不过,自2018年以来,研究中纳入的少数族裔人口比例有所增加,尤其是在美国进行的研究中。这表明在迷幻研究的公平性方面取得了进展,不过仍需要做大量工作来了解迷幻治疗在普通人群中的安全性和有效性。
本研究没有资金来源。