TY - JOUR
T1 - An international Delphi consensus for reporting of setting in psychedelic clinical trials
AU - Pronovost-Morgan, Chloé
AU - Greenway, Kyle T.
AU - Roseman, Leor
AU - Williams, Keith
AU - Wells, Hattie
AU - Tzarfaty, Keren
AU - Timmermann, Christopher
AU - Lévesque, Julien Thibault
AU - Tadwalkar, Sayali
AU - Szigeti, Balázs
AU - Shutte, Thomas
AU - Schneider, Leonie
AU - Sanders, James W.
AU - Ruffell, Simon
AU - Rucker, James
AU - Roullier, Ian
AU - Rochester, Jessica
AU - Risby, Sally
AU - Richards, William
AU - Richards, Brian
AU - Repantis, Dimitris
AU - Reed, Sara
AU - Ramaekers, Johannes G.
AU - Preller, Katrin H.
AU - Perkins, Daniel
AU - Peekeekoot, Gail
AU - Patchett-Marble, Ryan
AU - Palhano-Fontes, Fernanda
AU - Ona, Genís
AU - Oehen, Peter
AU - Noorani, Tehseen
AU - Neitzke-Spruill, Logan
AU - Moreno, Francisco
AU - McAlpine, Rosalind
AU - Mazarrasa, Jerónimo
AU - Marcus, Olivia
AU - Mallon, Orla
AU - MacLean, Katherine
AU - Lucas, Philippe
AU - Lifshitz, Michael
AU - Lehmann, Alexandre
AU - Langlitz, Nicolas
AU - Knowles, Adam
AU - Kettner, Hannes
AU - Holze, Friederike
AU - Hartogsohn, Ido
AU - Hapke, Emma
AU - Guss, Jeffrey
AU - Gukasyan, Natalie
AU - Greer, George
N1 - Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025/6/3
Y1 - 2025/6/3
N2 - Psychedelic substances exhibit complex interactions with the ‘set and setting’ of use, that is, the mental state of the user and the environment in which a psychedelic experience takes place. Despite these contextual variables’ known importance, psychedelic research has lacked methodological rigor in reporting extra-pharmacological factors. This study aimed to generate consensus-based guidelines for reporting settings in psychedelic clinical research, according to an international group of psychedelic researchers, clinicians and past trial participants. We conducted a Delphi consensus study composed of four iterative rounds of quasi-anonymous online surveys. A total of 89 experts from 17 countries independently listed potentially important psychedelic setting variables. There were 770 responses, synthesized into 49 distinct items that were subsequently rated, debated and refined. The process yielded 30 extra-pharmacological variables reaching predefined consensus ratings:i.e., ‘important’ or ‘very important’ for ≥70% of experts. These items compose the Reporting of Setting in Psychedelic Clinical Trials (ReSPCT) guidelines, categorized into physical environment, dosing session procedure, therapeutic framework and protocol, and subjective experiences. Emergent findings reveal significant ambiguities in current conceptualizations of set and setting. The ReSPCT guidelines and accompanying explanatory document provide a new standard for the design and documentation of extra-pharmacological variables in psychedelic clinical research.
AB - Psychedelic substances exhibit complex interactions with the ‘set and setting’ of use, that is, the mental state of the user and the environment in which a psychedelic experience takes place. Despite these contextual variables’ known importance, psychedelic research has lacked methodological rigor in reporting extra-pharmacological factors. This study aimed to generate consensus-based guidelines for reporting settings in psychedelic clinical research, according to an international group of psychedelic researchers, clinicians and past trial participants. We conducted a Delphi consensus study composed of four iterative rounds of quasi-anonymous online surveys. A total of 89 experts from 17 countries independently listed potentially important psychedelic setting variables. There were 770 responses, synthesized into 49 distinct items that were subsequently rated, debated and refined. The process yielded 30 extra-pharmacological variables reaching predefined consensus ratings:i.e., ‘important’ or ‘very important’ for ≥70% of experts. These items compose the Reporting of Setting in Psychedelic Clinical Trials (ReSPCT) guidelines, categorized into physical environment, dosing session procedure, therapeutic framework and protocol, and subjective experiences. Emergent findings reveal significant ambiguities in current conceptualizations of set and setting. The ReSPCT guidelines and accompanying explanatory document provide a new standard for the design and documentation of extra-pharmacological variables in psychedelic clinical research.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105007652102&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41591-025-03685-9
DO - 10.1038/s41591-025-03685-9
M3 - مقالة
C2 - 40461819
SN - 1078-8956
JO - Nature Medicine
JF - Nature Medicine
M1 - 1200393
ER -