Cannabis Campaigners' Guide News Database result:


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

Marijuana Use Does Not Accelerate HIV Infection

Reuters Health

Monday 18 Aug 2003

---

NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - Short-term cannabis use does not seem to
adversely affect CD4+ cell counts or viral loads in HIV-infected patients,
according to a report published in the August 19th issue of the Annals of
Internal Medicine.

In HIV-infected patients, marijuana has been used as an appetite stimulant
and as a treatment for the nausea associated with some antiretroviral
agents. However, concern has been raised that such therapy could have a
harmful effect on disease status, because in theory, cannabinoid use could
increase HIV levels by impairing the immune response or by interfering with
the activity of protease inhibitors.

Previously it was shown that short-term marijuana use did not influence
nelfinavir metabolism. Although marijuana use did produce a drop in
indinavir levels, this fall was small and unlikely to be clinically
meaningful (see Reuters Health story March 20, 2002). However, it still
remained unclear whether cannabinoid use had an effect on viral load or CD+
cell counts.

To investigate, Dr. Donald I. Abrams, from the University of California at
San Francisco, and colleagues assessed the outcomes of 67 HIV-infected
patients who were randomly assigned to use marijuana cigarettes,
cannabinoid capsules, or sugar pills (placebo) three times daily for 21
days. All of the patients had been receiving the same antiretroviral
regimen, which included indinavir or nelfinavir, for at least 8 weeks
before the study began.

More than half of the subjects in each group had undetectable viral loads
throughout the study, the researchers note. Although not statistically
significant, marijuana and cannabinoid use were actually associated with a
slight drop in viral load compared with placebo use.

Marijuana and cannabinoid use did not produce a drop in CD4+ or CD8+ cell
counts. In fact, compared with placebo use, treatment with these agents was
actually associated with a slight increase in cell counts.

The results suggest that short-term cannabinoid use is not unsafe for
patients with HIV infection, the authors note. "Further studies
investigating the therapeutic potential of marijuana and other cannabinoids
in patients with HIV infection and other populations are ongoing and should
provide additional safety information over longer exposure periods," they
write.

SOURCE: Annals of Internal Medicine, August 9, 2003.

 

 

 

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!