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UK: Medical cannabis on the NHS moves a step closer

Lorna Duckworth

The Independent

Tuesday 21 May 2002

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The use of cannabis-based drugs to treat multiple sclerosis and terminal
cancer moved a step closer yesterday when ministers asked for an
investigation by the panel which vets medicines for the NHS.

Cannabis derivatives are undergoing clinical trials to see if they relieve
the symptoms of MS and alleviate the pain endured by cancer patients as
well as those with spinal-cord damage.

The trials will run for at least another year and if they prove successful
the earliest envisaged date by which a manufacturer could obtain a licence
to market the drugs would be 2004.

But yesterday the Department of Health included cannabinoids in the latest
batch of drugs to be referred for assessment by the National Institute for
Clinical Excellence. The move was seen as a tacit acceptance that the
medicines will prove to be of value in relieving symptoms such as spasms,
bladder dysfunction and pain in patients with severe nerve damage.

It comes ahead of plans by David Blunkett, the Home Secretary, to make
possession of cannabis a non-arrestable offence. This more relaxed approach
to cannabis, will be endorsed by a report from the Commons Home Affairs
Select Committee today.

If approved for medicinal use, drugs derived from the cannabis plant would
probably be formulated so the patient did not experience any narcotic effect.

 

 

 

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