Trump fast-tracks psychedelics for depression and PTSD

Signed on April 18, 2026, the Executive Order “Accelerating Medical Treatments for Serious Mental Illness” introduces National Priority Vouchers for late-stage psychedelic candidates, allocates at least $50 million through HHS to co-fund state-level research, and expands access via the Right to Try pathway. The measure creates a significant opportunity for the pharmaceutical industry to accelerate the development and approval of innovative therapies for TRD and PTSD, with potential post-approval rescheduling.

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On April 18, 2026, President Donald J. Trump signed the Executive Order Accelerating Medical Treatments for Serious Mental Illness, a measure set to reshape the regulatory landscape for the development of innovative therapies targeting severe mental disorders.

The order directs the Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), and Department of Justice (DOJ) to remove bureaucratic barriers, accelerate review processes, and expand access to psychedelic compounds for patients with treatment-resistant depression (TRD), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), substance use disorders, and other conditions refractory to conventional therapies.

The context is critical

More than 14 million American adults are affected by serious mental illness; among veterans, the suicide rate is more than double that of the general population, with over 6,000 cases annually for the past two decades. Despite significant federal investment, standard therapies continue to show clear limitations in terms of sustained response. The Executive Order explicitly acknowledges that animal models do not always predict human efficacy and shifts focus toward innovative approaches supported by early clinical evidence.

Operational measures of the Executive Order

The key provisions are concrete and immediately actionable:

  • Priority Review and National Priority Vouchers: the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) will assign priority vouchers to psychedelic drugs with Breakthrough Therapy designation that meet program criteria, reducing review timelines.
  • Expansion of Right to Try: the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) are tasked with creating a pathway for compassionate access to investigational compounds, including ibogaine, while ensuring baseline safety requirements and authorizing physicians and researchers to handle Schedule I substances.
  • Federal funding: the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), through Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H), will allocate at least $50 million to co-fund state-level programs supporting clinical trials, technical assistance, and data sharing.
  • Interagency collaboration and VA involvement: HHS, the FDA, and the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) will establish memoranda of understanding to enable the exchange of clinical data, real-world evidence, and participation in trials, with priority given to Breakthrough-designated therapies.
  • Post-approval rescheduling: the Department of Justice (DOJ), through the Attorney General and based on HHS recommendations, will complete rescheduling reviews for products that successfully pass Phase 3 trials and obtain FDA approval.

These measures do not bypass FDA requirements for safety and efficacy; rather, they streamline processes and remove longstanding logistical barriers.

The current clinical landscape

On the psilocybin front, Compass Pathways announced in February 2026 positive Phase 3 results for COMP360 (its proprietary synthetic formulation) in treatment-resistant depression (TRD), showing a statistically significant and clinically meaningful reduction in depressive symptoms within one day, sustained for at least six months after one or two administrations. The company is already in discussions with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) regarding a rolling submission for a New Drug Application (NDA).

For ibogaine, observational studies and small randomized controlled trials (RCTs) indicate marked symptom reductions; however, cardiotoxicity remains a known safety signal, requiring rigorous screening and controlled clinical settings.

Other compounds, including MDMA and related analogues, are in advanced pipelines, but the Executive Order prioritizes products already in late-stage development and those with Breakthrough Therapy designation.

Implications for the pharmaceutical industry

For biotech companies and large pharmaceutical players active in neuropsychiatry, the Executive Order acts as a regulatory catalyst. Priority vouchers and collaboration with the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) reduce development timelines and costs; federal–state matching mechanisms unlock additional resources; and the Right to Try pathway enables the generation of early real-world data. Potential post-approval rescheduling would further facilitate manufacturing, distribution, and reimbursement.

Commercial opportunities are significant: the treatment-resistant depression (TRD) market is estimated to involve millions of patients in the U.S., while PTSD affects approximately 13 million individuals. An approved product could benefit from premium pricing typical of innovative therapies addressing high unmet need, particularly if integrated into assisted therapy protocols.

Challenges remain. Ibogaine requires rigorous cardiac screening and controlled, hospital-based settings; clinical trials must demonstrate superiority or non-inferiority on durable endpoints in complex patient populations. The “assisted therapy” model raises issues of scalability, workforce training, and integration into reimbursement systems. In addition, GMP manufacturing of Schedule I active substances remains complex.

Industry response and bipartisan support

Companies have broadly welcomed the initiative. Kabir Nath, CEO of Compass Pathways, stated that the announcement aligns regulatory urgency with patient need and that Phase 3 data support a transformative profile for COMP360. Tom Feegel, CEO of Beond, praised the leadership of Donald J. Trump and Robert F. Kennedy Jr. in recognizing psychedelics as a strategic component of the national mental health agenda.

Bipartisan figures—including Senators Lindsey Graham and Rand Paul, and Representatives Lou Correa, Dan Crenshaw, and Marcus Luttrell—along with veterans’ organizations such as American Legion, VETS, and Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW), have expressed support, provided that treatments are grounded in robust evidence and medical oversight.

Future outlook

The Executive Order does not guarantee immediate approvals, but it establishes a framework that could compress timelines from discovery to market by 12–24 months for the most advanced candidates. For the industry, this translates into greater regulatory certainty, increased capital attraction, and new opportunities for public–private partnerships. Companies with mature pipelines—synthetic psilocybin, pharmaceutical-grade ibogaine, and related analogues—are best positioned to capitalize on this shift.

In essence, the measure marks the transition of psychedelics from a marginal field to a national public health priority, while keeping FDA scientific rigor at its core. For pharmaceutical industry players, this is the moment to reassess development accelerators, evidence-generation strategies, and commercial readiness. The potential to save lives—particularly among veterans—is tangible, but will depend on the sector’s ability to deliver robust data and scalable solutions.