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Mystical Experience Induced by Esketamine Treatment: A Real-World Observational Study

Mallevays, M.; Fuet, L.; Danon, M.; Di Lodovico, L.; Jaffre, C.; Bouzeghoub, L.; Mrad, S.; Rousselet, A.-V.; Allary, L.; Muh, C.; Vissel, B.; De Maricourt, P.; Vinckier, F.; Gaillard, R.; Mekaoui, L.; Gorwood, P.; Petit, A.-C.; Berkovitch, L.

2026-04-01 psychiatry and clinical psychology
10.64898/2026.03.31.26349757 medRxiv
Show abstract

Esketamine is a fast-acting antidepressant drug which induces acute psychoactive effects. The most frequent is a dissociative state which seems unrelated to therapeutic efficacy. Other esketamine-induced effects, including psychedelic-like mystical experiences, have been poorly studied in terms of phenomenology and frequency, and may carry specific therapeutic relevance. In this study, we characterised esketamine-induced mystical experiences in relation with clinical outcomes. We conducted a longitudinal observational study and systematically measured acute subjective effects in patients receiving esketamine for treatment-resistant depression after each administration across the induction phase. A total of 45 patients were included, from two independent centres, totalling 352 esketamine administrations. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) supported the validity of the Mystical Experience Questionnaire (MEQ-30) for assessing esketamine-induced subjective effects, with components recovering dimensions previously validated with classic psychedelics. Mystical experiences (MEQ-30 score above 60) occurred in 58% of patients, with high inter- and intra-individual variability in frequency, intensity, and phenomenology across sessions. Higher mean and peak MEQ scores were associated with greater improvement in Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale scores from pre- to post-treatment, whereas the intensity of dissociative or other non-mystical effects was not. Positive mood and mystical MEQ dimensions in particular predicted therapeutic outcomes. Baseline spirituality also significantly predicted treatment outcomes and peak MEQ scores in the first week of treatment. These findings add to the growing body of evidence suggesting that psychedelic-like mystical experiences may be associated to therapeutic efficacy, not only in classic psychedelic-assisted therapy, but also in esketamine treatment.

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