By Nathan Seppa
In science’s struggle to keep up with life on the streets, smoking cannabis for medical purposes stands as Exhibit A.
Medical  use of cannabis has taken on momentum of its own, surging ahead of  scientists’ ability to measure the drug’s benefits. The pace has been a  little too quick for some, who see medicinal joints as a punch line, a  ruse to free up access to a recreational drug.
But while the  medical marijuana movement has been generating political news, some  researchers have been quietly moving in new directions — testing  cannabis and its derivatives against a host of diseases. The scientific  literature now brims with potential uses for cannabis that extend beyond  its well-known abilities to fend off nausea and block pain in people  with cancer and AIDS. Cannabis derivatives may combat multiple  sclerosis, Crohn’s disease and other inflammatory conditions, the new  research finds. Cannabis may even kill cancerous tumors.
Many in  the scientific community are now keen to see if this potential will be  fulfilled, but they haven’t always been. Pharmacologist Roger Pertwee of  the University of Aberdeen in Scotland recalls attending scientific  conferences 30 years ago, eager to present his latest findings on the  therapeutic effects of cannabis. It was a hard sell.
“Our talks  would be scheduled at the end of the day, and our posters would be stuck  in the corner somewhere,” he says. “That’s all changed.”
Underlying biology
The  long march to credibility for cannabis research has been built on  molecular biology. Smoking or otherwise consuming marijuana — Latin name  Cannabis sativa — has a medical history that dates back  thousands of years. But the euphoria-inducing component of cannabis,  delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, or THC, wasn’t isolated until 1964, by  biochemist Raphael Mechoulam, then of the Weizmann Institute of Science  in Rehovot, Israel, and his colleagues. Within two decades, other  researchers had developed synthetic THC to use in pill form.
The  secrets of how THC worked in the body lay hidden until the late 1980s,  when researchers working with rats found that the compound binds to a  protein that pops up on the surface of nerve cells. Further tests showed  that THC also hooks up with another protein found elsewhere in the  body. These receptor proteins were dubbed CB1 and CB2.
A bigger  revelation came in 1992: Mammals make their own compound that binds to,  and switches on, the CB1 receptor. Scientists named the compound  anandamide. Researchers soon found its counterpart that binds mainly to  the CB2 receptor, calling that one 2AG, for 2-arachidonyl glycerol. The  body routinely makes these compounds, called endocannabinoids, and sends  them into action as needed.
“At that point, this became a very,  very respectable field,” says Mechoulam, now at Hebrew University of  Jerusalem, who along with Pertwee and others reported the anandamide  discovery in Science. “THC just mimics the effects of these  compounds in our bodies,” Mechoulam says. Although the receptors are  abundant, anandamide and 2AG are short-acting compounds, so their  effects are fleeting.
In contrast, when a person consumes  cannabis, a flood of THC molecules bind to thousands of CB1 and  CB2 receptors, with longer-lasting effects. The binding triggers so many  internal changes that, decades after the receptors’ discovery,  scientists are still sorting out the effects. From a biological  standpoint, smoking pot to get high is like starting up a semitruck just  to listen to the radio. There’s a lot more going on.
Though the psychoactive effect of THC has slowed approval for  cannabis-based drugs, the high might also have brought on a  serendipitous discovery, says neurologist Ethan Russo, senior medical  adviser for GW Pharmaceuticals, which is based in Porton Down, England.  “How much longer would it have taken us to figure out the  endocannabinoid system if cannabis didn’t happen to have these unusual  effects on human physiology?”
Beyond the pain
Today  smoked cannabis is a sanctioned self-treatment for verifiable medical  conditions in 14 U.S. states, Canada, the Netherlands and Israel, among  other places. It usually requires a doctor’s recommendation and some  paperwork.
People smoke the drug to alleviate pain, sleep easier  and deal with nausea, lack of appetite and mood disorders such as  anxiety, stress and depression. Patients not wanting to smoke cannabis  can seek out prescriptions for FDA-approved capsules containing cannabis  compounds for treatment of some of these same problems.
Research  now suggests that multiple sclerosis could join the growing list of  cannabis-treated ailments. More than a dozen medical trials in the past  decade have shown that treatments containing THC (and some that combine  THC with another derivative called cannabidiol, or CBD) not only ease  pain in MS patients but also alleviate other problems associated with  the disease. MS results from damage to the fatty sheaths that insulate  nerves in the brain and spinal cord.
“MS patients get burning pain  in the legs and muscle stiffness and spasms that keep them awake at  night,” says John Zajicek, a neurologist at the Peninsula College of  Medicine and Dentistry in Plymouth, England. Patients can take potent  steroids and other anti-inflammatory drugs, but the effects of these  medications can be inconsistent.
Pertwee has analyzed 17 trials in  which MS patients received some form of cannabis or its derivatives.  Reports from the patients themselves, who didn’t know if they were  getting real cannabinoids or a placebo in most of the trials, show  improvements in muscle spasticity, sleep quality, shakiness, sense of  well-being and mobility. Pertwee, who is also a consultant for GW  Pharmaceuticals — which makes a cannabinoid drug that is delivered in  spray form, called Sativex — reviewed the findings in Molecular Neurobiology in 2007.
Sativex  was approved in Canada for MS in 2005 after studies (some included in  Pertwee’s analysis) showed its success in relieving symptoms of the  disease.
GW Pharmaceuticals expects clearance for MS treatment in  the United Kingdom and Spain this year. Later, the company plans to seek  U.S. approval of Sativex for cancer pain.
Zajicek’s team has also  compared MS patients who received a placebo with patients receiving  either a capsule containing THC or one with THC and CBD. Both of the  cannabis-based drugs outperformed a placebo, and the researchers are now  working on a multiyear MS trial.
Calming symptoms such as muscle  spasticity and pain is useful, Zajicek says, but the true value of  cannabinoids may exceed that. “To me, the really exciting stuff is  whether these drugs have a much more fundamental role in changing the  course of MS over the longer term,” he says. “We’ve got nothing that  actually slows progression of the disease.”
Fighting inflammation
CBD,  the same cannabis component that proved beneficial alongside THC for MS,  may also work on other hard-to-treat diseases. Tests on cell cultures  and lab animals have revealed that CBD fights inflammation and mitigates  the psychoactive effects of THC.
Crohn’s disease, which can lead  to chronic pain, diarrhea and ulcerations, could be a fitting target for  CBD. In Crohn’s disease, inflammatory proteins damage the intestinal  lining, causing leaks that allow bacteria in the gut to spread where  they shouldn’t. This spread leads to a vicious cycle that can trigger  more inflammation.
Karen Wright, a pharmacologist at Lancaster  University in England, and her colleagues have found that CBD inhibits  this inflammation and can reverse the microscopic intestinal leakiness  in lab tests of human cells. Adding
THC doesn’t seem to boost the  benefit, Wright reported in December 2009 in London at a meeting of the  British Pharmacological Society. The results bolster earlier findings  by Wright’s team showing that cannabinoids could improve wound healing  in intestinal cells.
CBD’s anti-inflammatory effect may work, at  least in some cases, through its antioxidant properties — the ability to  soak up highly reactive molecules called free radicals, which cause  cell damage.
In the brain and eye, CBD slows the action of  microglia, immune cells that can foster harmful inflammation when  hyperactivated by free radicals. Working with rats whose retinas were  induced to have inflammation, biochemist Gregory Liou of the Medical  College of Georgia in Augusta and his team found that CBD neutralized  free radicals, preventing eye damage. This finding could have  implications for people with diabetes who develop vision loss.
Apart  from being an anti-inflammatory and antioxidant, CBD tones down the  psychoactive effect of THC without eliminating its medical properties.  CBD also mutes the occasional anxiety and even paranoia that THC can  induce. This has been welcome news to scientists, who consider the  “buzz” of cannabis little more than psychoactive baggage.
But CBD  has paid a price for this anti-upper effect. “CBD has essentially been  bred out of North American black market drug strains,” Russo says.  People growing cannabis for its recreational qualities have preferred  plants high in THC, so people lighting up for medical purposes, whether  to boost appetite in AIDS patients or alleviate cancer pain, may be  missing a valuable cannabis component.
Cannabis versus cancer
With  or without CBD, cannabis may someday do more for cancer patients than  relieve pain and nausea. New research suggests THC may be lethal to  tumors themselves.
Biochemists Guillermo Velasco and Manuel Guzmán  of Complutense University in Madrid have spent more than a decade  establishing in lab-dish and animal tests that THC can kill cancer of  the brain, skin and pancreas.
THC ignites programmed suicide in some cancerous cells, the researchers reported in 2009 in the Journal of Clinical Investigation.  The team’s previous work showed that THC sabotages the process by which  a tumor hastily forms a netting of blood vessels to nourish itself, and  also keeps cancer cells from moving around.
THC achieves this  wizardry by binding to protein receptors on a cancerous cell’s surface.  Once attached, the THC induces the cell to make a fatty substance called  ceramide, which prompts the cell to start devouring itself. “We see  programmed cell death,” Velasco says. What’s more, noncancerous cells  don’t make ceramide when they come into contact with THC. The healthy  cells don’t die.
Many compounds kill cancer in a test tube and  even in animals, but most prove useless because they cause side effects  or just don’t work in people. The Madrid team is now seeking funding to  test whether cannabis derivatives can kill tumors in cancer patients. In  an early trial of nine brain cancer patients whose disease had worsened  despite standard therapy, the scientists found that THC injections into  tumors were safe to give.
Early reports from other research  groups suggest that THC also fights breast cancer and leukemia. “I think  the cancer research is extremely promising,” Russo says. “Heretofore,  the model for cancer was to use an agent that’s extremely toxic to kill  the cancer before it kills you. With cannabinoids, we have an  opportunity to use agents that are selectively toxic to cancer cells.”
Looking ahead
Testing  of cannabis and its derivatives has also begun on type 1 diabetes,  rheumatoid arthritis, stroke, Tourette syndrome, epilepsy, depression,  bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. Pertwee is particularly optimistic  that cannabis will help people with post-traumatic stress disorder.  Experiments in rats show that THC “speeds up the rate at which the  animals forget unpleasant experiences,” he says. And a recent study in  people with PTSD showed that THC capsules improved sleep and stopped  nightmares.
Despite these heady beginnings, medical cannabis still  faces an uphill climb. Although some states have sanctioned its use, no  smoked substance has ever been formally approved as a medicine by U.S.  regulatory agencies. Smoking cannabis can lead to chronic coughing and  bronchitis, and smoking renders a drug off-limits for children,  Mechoulam notes.
THC pills don’t have these downsides, but the  drugs have received only lukewarm acceptance. Despite smoking’s  drawbacks, “it is seen as better because you can regulate the amount of  THC you’re getting by not puffing as much,” says pharmacologist Daniele  Piomelli of the University of California, Irvine. Capsules can cause  dizziness and make it hard to focus. “Patients suffering from  neuropathic pain or depression don’t want to be stoned — they want  relief,” he says.
Controlled, randomized trials that seek to  clarify whether smoked cannabis delivers on its medical promise — with  acceptable side effects — have been hard to come by. But scientists in  California have recently concluded several studies in which patients  with severe pain received actual cannabis cigarettes or cannabis  cigarettes with the cannabinoids removed.
In one trial,  researchers randomly assigned 27 HIV patients to get the real thing and  28 to get fake joints. All the patients had neuropathic pain, in which  neurons can overreact to even mild stimuli. About half of the people  getting real cannabis experienced a pain reduction of 30 percent or  greater, a standard benchmark in pain measurement. Only one-quarter of  volunteers getting the placebo reported such a reduction.
“That’s  about as good [a reduction] as other drugs provide,” says Igor Grant, a  neuropsychiatrist at the University of California, San Diego, who is  among the scientists overseeing the trials.
While such studies  provide evidence that smoked marijuana has medical benefits, future  trials are more likely to explore the benefits of cannabis derivatives  that don’t carry the baggage that smoking does.
Ultimately, the  fate of medical cannabis and its derivatives will rest on the same  make-or-break requirements that every  experimental medicine faces —  whether it cures a disease or alleviates its symptoms, and whether it’s  tolerable.
“We have to be careful that marijuana isn’t seen as a  panacea that will help everybody,” Grant says. “It probably has a  niche.… We can’t ignore the fact that cannabis is a substance of abuse  in some people.”
Getting cannabis in
When  most people think of medicinal cannabis, smoking comes to mind. Though  smoking works quickly and allows users to regulate their intake, it’s  hardly a scientific approach: Cannabis quality is often unknown, and  inhaling burned materials is bad for the lungs. These and other  drawbacks have spawned new ways to consume medical marijuana.
Some  people inhale cannabis by using a device that heats the plant without  igniting it. This vaporization unleashes many of the same cannabinoid  compounds as smoking does, without the combustion by-products,  researchers say. Anecdotally, patients report that the effect is prompt,  on a par with smoking.
Because cannabis derivatives can pass  through the lining of the mouth and throat, a company called GW  Pharmaceuticals has devised a spray product called Sativex. This drug  contains roughly equal amounts of two key cannabinoids — THC and CBD —  plus other cannabis components in an alcohol solution. A dose of Sativex  is sprayed under the tongue; no smoking required.
In the face of  these options, the “pot pill” seems almost passé. But capsules of  synthetic THC exist. One called Marinol has been approved in the United  States since 1985, and another called Cesamet was cleared more recently.  Doctors can prescribe the drugs for nausea, vomiting, loss of appetite  and weight loss. Though sales of capsules have increased recently, many  users complain of psychoactive side effects and slow action.
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