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Medical Marijuana Boosts Hepatitis C Treatment in New Study

Coastal Post

Tuesday 03 Oct 2006

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Medical Marijuana Boosts Hepatitis C Treatment in New Study

UC San Francisco Researchers Find Marijuana Users Three Times More
Likely to Successfully Eliminate Virus

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA -- A new study from the University of
California, San Francisco, just published in the European Journal of
Gastroenterology and Hepatology, suggests that medical marijuana boosts
the success of treatment for the hepatitis C virus (HCV). Untreated HCV
can lead to liver failure and death, but in the new study, marijuana
users being treated for HCV were three times more likely to have a
"sustained virological response" -- i.e. HCV could not be detected six
months after they completed treatment.
While extensive research has shown that marijuana can provide symptom
relief, this is believed to be the first published study linking
marijuana to improved cure rates for a life-threatening illness. HCV
treatment utilizing the drugs ribavirin and interferon is notorious for
its severe side effects, including nausea, vomiting, weight loss,
sleeplessness, and depression, which cause many patients to discontinue
the long, demanding regimen prematurely. In this study -- which focused
on a difficult patient population: seventy-one recovering drug users
receiving methadone maintenance while simultaneously being treated for
HCV -- those using marijuana were significantly more likely to complete
their treatment regimens. The researchers, with UCSF and OASIS in
Oakland, California, theorized that marijuana relieved the patients'
medication side effects sufficiently to allow them to complete
treatment, and concluded, "our results suggest that moderate cannabis
use during HCV treatment may offer significant benefit to certain patients."

Overall, 54 percent of marijuana users had a sustained virological
response, compared to only 18 percent of non-users. The study was
published alongside a commentary by a separate team of Canadian
researchers describing the evidence that marijuana relieves debilitating
side effects of treatment for HCV, cancer and AIDS, and calling for
patients to be "legally permitted" to use it.

San Francisco patient Brian Klein, 48, (not a participant in the study)
credits medical marijuana for enabling him to be successfully cured of
HCV in his second attempt at treatment, in 2003-4. "One of the main
reasons treatment succeeded was that I was able to stay on my
medications," he said. "The first time I tried treating my HCV, in 2001,
the nausea was so bad I couldn't even keep water down, and I had to stop
after two months. Medical marijuana allowed me to successfully treat my
hepatitis C and clear the virus."

"This is a landmark study, showing that medical marijuana can literally
save lives," said Rob Kampia, executive director of the Marijuana Policy
Project in Washington, D.C. "Every day that our government continues
punishing the sick for using this medicine is literally a crime against
humanity."

With more than 20,000 members and 100,000 e-mail subscribers nationwide,
the Marijuana Policy Project is the largest marijuana policy reform
organization in the United States. MPP believes that the best way to
minimize the harm associated with marijuana is to regulate marijuana in
a manner similar to alcohol. For more information, please visit
http://www.mpp.org.

REFERENCES:
Sylvestre DL, Clements BJ and Malibu Y. Cannabis use improves retention
and virological outcomes in patients treated for hepatitis C. European
Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology 2006, 18:1057-1063. Fischer B
et al. Treatment for hepatitis C virus and cannabis use in illicit drug
user patients: implications and questions. European Journal of
Gastroenterology and Hepatology 2006, 18:1039-1042.
http://www.coastalpost.com/06/10/12a.html

 

 

 

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