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Psychedelic drug makers rally as Trump orders FDA to expedite reviews

Psychedelic drug makers rally as Trump orders FDA to expedite reviews

Reuters Mon, April 20, 2026 at 11:33 AM UTC

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April 20 (Reuters) - Shares of psychedelic drug developers rose in premarket trading on Monday after U.S. President Donald Trump signed an executive ‌order directing health regulators to speed up reviews of psychedelic ‌drugs and boosted federal research funding.

Shares of Atai Life Sciences jumped 21% before the bell, while ​Definium Therapeutics (DFTX) rose 15% and Compass Pathways (CMPS) climbed 26%. GH Research gained 19%, Enveric BioSciences (ENVB) added 7%, and U.S.‑listed shares of Cybin (HELP) were up about 15%.

The executive order, issued on Saturday, tells the U.S. Food and Drug Administration to ‌fast-track reviews of treatments ⁠such as ibogaine, a psychedelic compound being studied for mental health conditions including post‑traumatic stress disorder, depression and addiction.

The order ⁠directs the agency to give Commissioner’s National Priority Vouchers to psychedelic drugs that have the "breakthrough therapy" tag, potentially cutting the review time to 1 to 2 ​months from ​the usual 6 to 10 months.

FDA ​Commissioner Marty Makary on Saturday ‌said decisions on the drugs could come as soon as this summer.

Jefferies analyst Andrew Tsai said the order is an "official stamp of validation to the class," showing that government support is real.

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Trump also said the government would allocate $50 million for federal research into ibogaine.

Ibogaine is derived from a shrub native to ‌Africa and is classified as a Schedule ​I substance in the U.S., meaning it ​is considered to have no ​accepted medical use.

RBC analyst Brian Abrahams said the signing of ‌the executive order "is a substantial step ​towards diminishing regulatory ​risk" for psychedelic drugs.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. has championed the idea of using ibogaine as an alternative treatment for mental health ​conditions such as depression.

Lawmakers ‌from both Republican and Democratic parties have also said they would ​pursue legislation to expand access to psychedelic therapies.

(Reporting by Kamal Choudhury ​in Bengaluru; Editing by Sahal Muhammed)

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Source: “AOL Money”

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