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Netherlands to run trials of marijuana in patients with multiple sclerosis

Tony Sheldon

British Medical Journal

Saturday 02 Mar 2002

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BMJ 2002;324:504


The Dutch government has announced a small scale cross over trial into the
effect of three sorts of medical marijuana, plus a placebo, on 16 patients
with multiple sclerosis.

Two foundations in Rotterdam, the Institute for Medical Marijuana and
Maripharm, have been contracted by the government to produce the drug to a
standard quality and provide metal pipes for inhalation.

A Bureau for Medical Cannabis, set up by the ministry and the
Amsterdam's Free University medical centre, will run the year's trial.

The bureau also intends to make medicinal cannabis available through
pharmacists on prescription by spring 2003. The Dutch cabinet recently
agreed to change the law to permit this.

Four trials of cannabis are taking place in the United Kingdom. The
cannabis in multiple sclerosis (CAMS) study, which is sponsored by the
Medical Research Council, started at Derriford Hospital, Plymouth, last
year and aims to take in 660 participants in 40 centres.

Three smaller phase II trials - in Guernsey, Oxford, and Norfolk - have
been under way since autumn 2000, examining a sublingual spray developed
from plants grown by G W Pharmaceuticals in Kent. The researchers expect
to extend these trials to 2000 patients over two years and to enrol not
only people with multiple sclerosis but also patients with various
chronic pain syndromes, such as neuralgia and lower back pain.




 

 

 

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