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UK: Cannabis Medicine 'On Sale This Year'

Alan Travis, home affairs editor

The Guardian

Saturday 22 Mar 2003

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The first cannabis-based prescription medicines for more than 30 years
will be available in high street chemists this year, the drugs minister,
Bob Ainsworth, revealed yesterday.

GW Pharmaceuticals, which was licensed by the Home Office to carry out
clinical research trials on cannabis, has submitted "an extremely
positive" report to the medicines control agency before final approval.

"We could be in a situation where we are able to make cannabis-derived
medicines available before the end of the year," Mr Ainsworth told MPs.

The drug company has been testing an under-the-tongue spray in trials
involving about 350 patients. The spray has been useful in treating
multiple sclerosis and helps reduce nerve damage pain and sleep
disturbance.

Additional trials looking at its effectiveness in treating pain in
cancer and spinal cord injury are under way. GW says it is discussing
the marketing of its new product with several drugs companies.

The main ingredient in the cannabis-derived medicines does not contain
the active substance found in recreational cannabis and so patients
taking the new drugs will not become intoxicated. Their prescriptions
will not be subject to the international treaties banning the production
and sale of cannabis.

Cannabis-based medicines were outlawed in 1968 after legislation banned
doctors from prescribing tincture of cannabis which contained a high
concentration of the active THC psychotropic ingredient which was
popular among some recreational cannabis users. While Mr Ainsworth was
able to report "really good progress" to MPs on medicinal cannabis, he
was less forthcoming when challenged over new research reported earlier
this week in the Guardian, which showed that as much as half the
cannabis smoked in Britain may be homegrown.

Mr Ainsworth told the Commons home affairs select committee that the
government would not adopt a lenient approach to those who cultivated
cannabis for personal use.

"We feel that the courts should deal with that. It is down to the courts
to apply their discretion. We have no intention of being more lenient on
what is the production of an illegal substance," he told Chris Mullin,
chairman of the committee which questioned him on the issue.

"I don't think the courts deal with a serious international drug
trafficker in the same way as the people you are talking about," Mr
Ainsworth said.

The minister also indicated that plans to prescribe heroin to drug
addicts who do not respond to methadone treatment had run into a new
problem.

He said that some supermarkets had made it clear that they would be
unwilling to allow medicinal heroin to be prescribed in their new
pharmacy departments.

Mr Ainsworth said he would raise the matter with the Department of Trade
and Industry, which is to rule on an office of fair trading inquiry into
the supermarkets' expansion into the pharmacy trade.

New Home Office guidance to doctors on prescribing heroin is to be
issued next month. One aim is to boost the number of doctors willing to
treat class-A drug addicts.


 

 

 

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