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UK: High hopes for cannabis medicine

Ben Hirschler

Reuters

Friday 04 Oct 2002

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LONDON (Reuters) - Somewhere in the south of England, cannabis plants worth
a small fortune on the street are ripening in high-tech glasshouses.

But this crop, cultivated at a secret location behind a tight security
cordon, will never be rolled up and smoked.

Instead, it will be processed into a pharmaceutical-grade extract as part
of an initiative that could see cannabis return to medical respectability.

Two research groups are conducting the world's biggest clinical trials to
determine whether the Indian hemp plant really does confer the medical
benefits many users claim. They will know the answer in a few months.

Dr John Zajicek of Derrifield Hospital in Plymouth is leading a
government-backed study which has just recruited the last of more than 660
multiple sclerosis (MS) patients, and believes cannabis will pass
scientific scrutiny.

"I'm fairly confident we are going to find an effect in reducing
spasticity, or muscle spasms, and it is also going to have an effect on
bladder control," he told Reuters.

Results of the 30-centre, placebo-controlled study on the effectiveness of
cannabis capsules will be released next May or June.

Meanwhile, GW Pharmaceuticals, a small biotech company holding the sole
British licence to develop cannabis-based medicines, will publish its first
authoritative clinical trial results for an under-the-tongue spray next month.

GW has already reported good results in treating pain in intermediate, or
Phase II, studies and is optimistic this will be replicated in the pivotal
Phase III tests.

"One can be confident that the Phase III trials are going to yield results
reflective of the Phase IIs," said Geoffrey Guy, GW's executive chairman.
The group is growing 40,000 cannabis plants a year hidden in the English
countryside.

2004 LAUNCH TARGET

If Zajicek and Guy are right, cannabis may be about to return to medicine
cabinet after a century in the wilderness.

The government has already indicated it is ready to alter the medical
schedule of drugs that doctors are allowed to prescribe if the trials are
successful and Guy expects to have cannabis medicines legally on sale by
early 2004.

While shunned by modern doctors, cannabis has a history of medicinal use,
dating back to ancient Chinese times.

The British herbalist Nicholas Culpeper described its analgesic effects in
1653 and Queen Victoria, whose physician described it as "one of the most
valuable medicines we possess", is said to have taken cannabis tincture for
her menstrual pains.

It fell out of favour in modern medicine because of a lack of any
standardised preparations and the development of more potent synthetic
compounds.

Nonetheless, many MS sufferers are convinced that cannabis helps their
condition and an estimated 10 percent of British patients are estimated to
use it illegally.

Those expecting a marijuana high, however, are likely to be disappointed.
The new medicinal cannabis products are designed to minimise psychoactive
effects.

The Multiple Sclerosis Society has welcomed the research but is cautious
until its sees more data.

"There is a tremendous amount of anecdotal evidence that cannabis in
various forms can be helpful in alleviating some of the most unpleasant
symptoms of MS," said spokesman David Harrison.

"But we also know that there have been people with MS who have had very bad
experiences. So the main concern is whether the substance is safe in the
long term, because people with MS have a condition that is going to last
the rest of their life."

APPETITE CONTROL

Other applications for cannabis derivatives also beckon beyond pain relief
and controlling symptoms of MS.

One of the more intriguing prospects is using cannabis to control appetite.

It has long been known that when people smoke marijuana they get the
"munchies", or a strong urge to eat. Researchers are now looking to harness
this effect to stimulate appetite in AIDS and cancer patients.

The French drug maker Sanofi-Synthelabo, meanwhile, has taken the opposite
approach by developing a drug that turns off the biological "switch" in the
brain which triggers this hunger.

The result is an experimental drug called Rimonabant that appears to help
people quit smoking without gaining weight. It is also being developed for
obesity.

Scientists are still trying to establish how cannabis works by latching on
to special receptors, or biochemical "docking sites", in the body. Their
answers could help in the search for novel therapies for a range of ailments.

"Our brains and nervous system are stuffed full of cannabis receptors and
we are only now starting to work out what roles they play," said Zajicek.

 

 

 

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