Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.

US: Marinol Death Sentence

www.DRCNet.org

The Week Online

Friday 08 Aug 2003

---
Marinol Death Sentence: Oregon Man Denied Liver Transplant
Because of Prescription -- He's Not the Only One
http://www.drcnet.org/wol/299.shtml#notransplant

Oregon resident Dave Myers brought a lot back from his stint in
service in Vietnam. Myers served in the US Navy inspecting boat
traffic off the Vietnamese coast and he brought back memories,
good and bad, of course, and some lasting friendships, but also
Hepatitis C, probably caught inspecting some dark and waterlogged
junk in the South China Sea.

Now suffering from terminal liver failure due to the disease,
Myers sought a transplant from Oregon Health Services University
(OHSU) in Portland, one of 16 major liver transplant centers in
the country. But he was rejected by program head Dr. John Ham
(http://www.ohsu.edu/transplant/bios/ham.html) because he is
taking Marinol, a synthetic cannabis compound and legal
prescription medicine. Worse for Myers, Ham accused Myers of
being a marijuana smoker, something Myers vehemently denies having
done for at least 15 years, when he was first diagnosed.

The removal of Myers from the list of those awaiting liver
transplants is a virtual death sentence. "With liver failure, you
die -- it's as simple as that," said Dr. Jay Cavanaugh, head of
the American Alliance for Medical Cannabis
(http://www.letfreedomgrow.com) and himself a Hepatitis C
sufferer. "And a good number die while they're waiting for the
transplant," he told DRCNet.

Myers is one of about 18,000 people waiting for livers, most of
them Hep C sufferers, according to the Scientific Registry of
Transplant Recipients (http://www.ustransplant.org), which tracks
all organ transplants in the US. According to the registry, some
5,000 liver transplants are done each year, but some 2,000
patients die while on the waiting list.

Because a large proportion of Hep C patients got the disease
through intravenous drug use and because significant numbers of
other liver transplant candidates developed problems due to
alcohol abuse, transplant centers have developed strict protocols
barring transplant eligibility for those people who continue to
abuse drugs. While protocols vary from center to center, the OHSU
protocol specifies "no smoking, no drinking, no illicit drugs."

Marinol, a synthetic cannabinoid, is not an illicit drug. It is a
Schedule II drug available for prescription in the United States.
It is commonly used to increase appetite and as an analgesic, the
use for which it was prescribed to Myers by his attending
physician.

OHSU deflected numerous DRCNet attempts to interview Dr. Ham or
get anyone to talk about the Myers case or OHSU's liver transplant
protocols, but Myers told DRCNet -- and he has the tape recording
to back it up -- that Ham told him that Marinol would suppress the
immune system, thus making post-transplant infections more likely.

"This has me pulling my hair out," said Cavanaugh, himself a
Hepatitis C sufferer. "One thing transplant people worry about is
infection," he explained. "That was the rationale used to deny
Myers, that the use of cannabis would suppress the immune system
and make him prone to infection, but there is no validity to that
whatsoever. Cannabis is not a general immunosuppressant and those
doctors must know that. And it's ludicrous anyway because once
you get a transplant you get whacked with the heaviest anti-
rejection drugs around, and what do they do? They suppress the
immune system."

But according to Myers and the recording of his meeting with Dr.
Ham, the Marinol issue was most likely a smokescreen for Dr. Ham's
real concern: that Myers was smoking marijuana. "I haven't smoked
marijuana for 15 years or so, and I told Dr. Ham that I would
willingly submit to a polygraph and/or a lung biopsy to prove that
I am not smoking marijuana," Myers told DRCNet. "He said that was
unnecessary because he knew I was smoking marijuana. So now I
have a doctor who is also a psychic, I guess."

If Dr. Ham's extrasensory abilities leave room for doubt, so does
OHSU's position on marijuana use as a reason to keep people off
the transplant waiting list. According to Transweb
(http://www.transweb.org), an online resource center for
transplant patients, occasional marijuana use does not
automatically preclude people from obtaining liver transplants.
"It depends," wrote Dr. Jeff Punch, a University of Michigan
transplant surgeon in response to a query. "First it depends on
the policy of the individual transplant center. Second it depends
on the individual patient: what organ they need, why they need it,
and other factors. For example: Most lung transplant centers will
not transplant patients that smoke anything, even occasionally.
Another example is patients who need a liver transplant because of
alcohol abuse. In patients with a history of alcoholism, studies
have shown that one marker that indicates a particular patient is
more likely to return to alcoholism is continued use of any
psychoactive drugs. Most transplant centers will not transplant
patients with active substance abuse of any kind if the reason for
the transplant relates to substance abuse."

"There is no evidence that marijuana has any negative effect on
the liver," Dr. Cavanaugh said. "A 1970 study found that if you
inject a mouse with a massive dose of THC, there is some liver
involvement, but the human equivalent would be mainlining an ounce
of cannabis. More recent studies have found that cannabinoids and
other compounds in marijuana are actually hepato-protective. They
reduce inflammation in the liver associated with cirrhosis. Hell,
cannabis benefits the liver!" Dr. Cavanaugh said.

In Oregon, a state with an active medical marijuana program, OHSU
protocols against illicit drugs don't appear to have kept up with
state law. The result is that Dave Myers is not alone in being
rejected. "I am aware of about a dozen other people removed from
the liver transplant list at OHSU because of medical marijuana
use," said D. Paul Stanford, director of the Cannabis Hemp
Foundation (http://www.thc-foundation.org). "We run a medical
marijuana clinic here in Oregon, and we've got some 200 patients
who have Hep C," he told DRCNet. "Medical marijuana helps those
patients by stimulating their appetites, and it has some
antibacterial properties," he said. "Denying these people
transplants because they use medicinal marijuana is a death
sentence. The Hemp Cannabis Foundation is preparing a lawsuit
against OHSU, including Dave Myers because the facts of his case
are the strongest, but also including registered Oregon medical
marijuana patients who have been bumped."

"Does the transplant team really believe I'm a non-deserving drug
addict for using medical cannabis?" asked Dr. Cavanaugh. "Isn't
it ironic that my Hep C doctors had no problem considering me when
I was being prescribed methadone, Clonopin, Ambien, Flexaril,
Neurontin, and more? Does anyone really believe I was better off
and a better transplant candidate when I was whacked on all those
drugs?" he asked.

"To say that someone who uses physician approved cannabis is at
risk of substance abuse is just ridiculous," Cavanaugh continued.
"The vast majority of patients seeking liver transplants are Hep C
patients, and the majority -- but not all -- are former
intravenous drug users. There is some sense to the notion that if
you are continuing a self-destructive pattern of behavior, such as
shooting speed or smoking crack or drinking booze, you are not a
worthy candidate because you'll just ruin the new liver, but in
the case of Dave Myers, he is conforming to the center's desire
that he not be using drugs that could damage his liver and he is
still being discriminated against because of doctors' prejudice
against medical marijuana, and in this case, Marinol, a federally-
approved Schedule II drug."

As for Myers, he alternates between depression and anger, he told
DRCNet. "I'd like to punch Jack Ham right in the face," said
Myers. "He sat right across from me, my wife, and our daughter,
smirking at us. I told him I wasn't his enemy, that I was willing
to work with him, but it didn't matter. My daughter was crying,
and he just kept going on about no THC," Myers said.

Without a liver transplant, he will be dead within two years, he
said.

"Hep C is seen as the junkies' disease," said Myers. "It has the
same sort of stigma that AIDS had, but it doesn't have those
celebrity spokespeople to raise awareness." Myers should know.
He operates a web site for veterans with Hep C
(http://www.hepvets.org) and writes on the issue for publications
covering the disease. "There is a prejudice like there was in the
1960s. Then, if you had long hair and a beard you must be a
pothead. Now, if you have Hep C, you must be a junkie. I've been
clean and sober for 15 years," said Myers, who recently completed
a stint with Promisekeepers, the conservative Christian men's
fellowship.

Myers must find another transplant center that will take him, if
he is to survive, he said. OHSU is the only one in the state.

Dr. Cavanaugh viewed the whole episode as outrageous. "That
medical professionals would inject prejudice into a life and death
decision is more than unethical. It's cruel, ignorant, and
arrogant."

 

 

 

After you have finished reading this article you can click here to go back.




This page was created by the Cannabis Campaigners' Guide.
Feel free to link to this page!