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UK: Canada backs GW's cannabis drug

Stephen Foley

The Independent

Wednesday 22 Dec 2004

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GW Pharmaceuticals, which had its cannabis-based medicine turned down by
the UK regulator this month, has moved a step closer to launching the drug
on the Canadian market.

Canada, which allows the medicinal use of smoked cannabis, is less than six
months from becoming the first country in the world to approve cannabis as
a prescription painkiller for multiple sclerosis sufferers.

After seven months of deliberation, GW has been given qualified approval to
launch the spray, called Sativex, and now moves into a final stage of
negotiations with Health Canada, the regulator, covering marketing and
patient information. GW shares rose 8 per cent to 113.5p after the company
said Sativex would be on sale by late spring.

The news partially reversed the disappointment of earlier this month, when
the UK's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency said it was
unconvinced that GW's trial data was enough to prove the medicine should be
approved in this country. An aggrieved GW has agreed to do more work to
show the benefit of Sativex in relieving spasms.

Geoffrey Guy, theexecutive chairman of GW, said: "By May, we had already
benefited from ... detailed negotiations with the UK regulator, so our
dossier was greatly improved by the time it got to the Canadians."

 

 

 

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