Common antibiotic Linked to Lower Schizophrenia Risk in New Study
November 5, 2025 – 9:00 A.M. – A widely-usedโ antibiotic, doxycycline, might potentially be associated with a reduced risk of developing schizophrenia in young people, according to research publishedโ today in the American Journal of Psychiatry. The observational study suggests adolescents treated with doxycycline experienced a 30 to 35 percent lower likelihood ofโข being diagnosed with schizophrenia in adulthood comparedโ to those receiving other antibiotics.
The โstudy, conducted by researchers in Finland, analyzed data from over 56,000 adolescents, with more than 16,000 receiving doxycycline, commonly โprescribed for infections and acne. While the research โขdoesn’t prove aโ causal link – it wasโ not a randomized controlled โtrial – the findings are prompting calls for further investigation.
Researchers hypothesize the โฃantibiotic’s potential benefit may stem from its ability to reduce inflammation in the brain and โฃinfluence synaptic pruning,โ the process where the โbrain eliminates unnecessary neuron connections. Disruptions โin this pruning process have been implicated inโ the development of schizophrenia, a debilitating mental illness affecting approximatelyโข 23 โขmillion people worldwide.
“The results are preliminary but exciting,” the research team noted.
Lead author Ian Kelleher, professor of child and adolescent psychiatry at the University of Edinburgh, emphasized the importance of the โfindings. “This is an โฃimportant signal to further investigate the possible protective effect of doxycycline and other anti-inflammatory treatments in adolescents in psychiatry,” he said, adding that this approach “could potentially reduce โthe risk of developing a serious โmental illness in adulthood.”
However, experts caution against drawing definitiveโ conclusions. Dominic oliver, a psychiatry researcher at the University of Oxford,โค warned, “Many other treatments initially seemed promising but proved ineffective in large studies.”
Dr.Katharina Schmack from the Francis Crick Instituteโข in the United Kingdom, while acknowledging the statistically notable results, pointed out the modest absolute riskโ reduction. “Rather of โฃabout fiveโ out ofโค 100 people, roughly two to three out of 100 people would now develop schizophrenia” fifteen years after doxycycline treatment, she explained.
Schmack further stated, “Uncovering clinical connections in studies โฃlike โคthis is critically โฃimportant as it can trigger further biological investigations.” Both Oliver and Schmack were not โฃinvolved in the study.
The research highlights the need for continued exploration into โคthe complex interplay of brain development,inflammation,andโ the risk factors associated with schizophrenia,a condition that typically emerges inโ early adulthood and currently has no cure,though symptoms can be managed with medication.