Pubdate: Sun, 23 Jan 2000 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: Guardian Media Group plc. 2000 Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/ Author: Anthony Browne, Health Editor TOBACCO IS 'LESS RISKY THAN DOPE' US Research Says Cancer More Than Twice As Likely For Cannabis Smokers For decades, it has been been the retort of cannabis smokers: dope is not as bad for you as cigarettes or alcohol. But after years of ambiguous research, US scientists claim it is worse. Regular smokers of cannabis can be more than 30 times as likely to get cancer of the neck, throat, mouth and larynx as those who have never inhaled. Nor does giving up the weed cut the risk. According to the research, quitting does not reduce the damage. Previous research has shown dope and cigarette smokers can develop pre-cancerous changes in throat-lining cells. But this study, carried out in New York, is the first definitely to link the smoking of joints to full cancers of the head and neck. It suggests that the drug's popularity in recent decades could lead to swaths of the population with cancer. Teenagers in the Sixties - first to enjoy regular use of cannabis - are now reaching the age when such types of cancer are likely to occur. Marijuana smoke is higher in tar and carcinogens than tobacco smoke. Researchers at New York's Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Centre decided to investigate the health risks of marijuana because people who use the drug tend to inhale deeply and keep smoke in their lungs as long as they can, depositing four times more matter in mouth, throat and windpipe than cigarettes. They enrolled 173 patients with head or neck cancer, and a group of 176 cancer-free blood donors of similar age. Participants were quizzed about past use of marijuana, tobacco and alcohol, plus workplace and environmental exposure to possible carcinogens. Frequency of marijuana use was categorised as never, less than or equal to once a day, and more than once a day. Duration of use was categorised as never, one to five years and more than five years. Among those who had used marijuana, the risk of head and neck cancer was 2.6 times greater than among those who never used it, even after adjusting for other risk factors such as alcohol and tobacco smoking. Researchers found that the more dope smoked, the more likely cancer would develop. Among people who reported smoking marijuana once a day, the risk of head and neck cancer was 2.1 times that of those who never used it. Among those who smoked it more than once a day, the risk was 4.9 times greater. But risk of head and neck cancer was far higher if people also smoked cigarettes, incidating that the two work together to promote cancer development. Users of both substances had 36 times the risk of head and neck cancer found in people who used neither. The study did not look at dope-smoking and lung cancer, but the effects are thought to be similar. Researchers in the field welcomed the study, saying it proved what they long suspected. 'It appears marijuana smoke is a stronger carcinogen than cigarette smoke. It's what I expected to see,' said Li Mao, professor of medicine at M.D. Anderson Cancer Centre in Houston, Texas. The report has far-reaching implications for the British Government, which last month announced the first official research into medical use of cannabis, and its effects of relieving pain in a wide range of conditions, including multiple sclerosis. Scientists will have to learn to deliver any cannabis benefits without high cancer risk. There is some comfort for dope smokers who presumed it relatively harmless. One joint is more dangerous than one cigarette, but the effect of cigarettes on health is probably greater, said Eugenia Calle of the American Cancer Society, 'because people just smoke so many more cigarettes'. Even heavy dope smoker would be unlikely to get through 20 joints a day every day for 50 years. - --- MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart