Abstract
There is growing interest in incorporating MDMA (3,4-Methylenedioxymethamphetamine) into structured, evidence-based cognitive-behavioral treatment protocols for post-traumatic stress disorder. Yet this risks overlooking the distinctive qualities of MDMA-assisted therapy, which has already demonstrated strong clinical effects, high response rates, and low dropout using a principle-guided, patient-directed therapeutic model. This model integrates MDMA administration into a broader therapeutic process, including nondrug preparatory and integrative sessions, designed to support the unique, nonlinear experience often elicited by MDMA. This perspective paper outlines the theoretical and clinical rationale for preserving and refining the patient-directed model, arguing that it represents a distinct innovation in trauma treatment that is not well suited to existing protocols. Attempting to embed MDMA within highly structured, manualized treatment protocols may misapprehend the synergistic nature of the therapy, blunt its most transformative effects, and even potentially cause harm. Rather than immediately turn to existing models, the field should prioritize research investigating real-world evidence, treatment optimization, and mechanisms of action of this new model.
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