Pubdate: Thu, 07 Sep 2000 Source: Bay Area Reporter (CA) Copyright: 2000 The Bay Area Reporter / B.A.R. Contact: Address: 395 9th Street, San Francisco, CA 94103 Website: http://www.ebar.com/ Author: Liz Highleyman UC ESTABLISHES NEW CANNABIS RESEARCH CENTER The University of California last week announced the establishment of a new research center to study the safety and efficacy of medicinal marijuana. The Center for Medical Cannabis Research (CMCR) will be a collaborative project of the University of California at San Francisco and the University of California at San Diego, and will be housed at UCSD. Dr. Igor Grant, a professor of psychiatry at UCSD and director of UCSD's HIV Neurobehavioral Research Center will serve as the CMCR's director. Co-directors include Dr. J. Hampton Atkinson, UCSD professor of psychiatry; Dr. Andrew Mattison, USCD associate professor of psychiatry and family and clinical medicine; and Dr. Donald Abrams, UCSF professor of medicine. Abrams recently presented research at the 13th International Conference on AIDS in Durban, South Africa, that showed that medicinal cannabis can be used without detrimental effects in people taking combination antiretroviral therapy for HIV disease. The CMCR was granted $3 million worth of state funding for its first year of operations, and will coordinate medical cannabis research conducted at universities and centers throughout California. The funding is the outcome of SB847, a state bill sponsored by state Senator John Vasconcellos (D-Santa Clara) and signed into law by Governor Gray Davis last October. The law calls for a three-year program of medical research to "enhance understanding of the efficacy and adverse effects of marijuana as a pharmacological agent." The CMCR will begin soliciting competitive grant applications this fall, which will be reviewed by an independent national scientific review panel. Studies may begin as early as January 2001. Data from CMCR studies will be used to develop guidelines for appropriate medical use of marijuana. A recent report by the National Academy of Science's Institute of Medicine called for further study of the use of medical cannabis for various medical conditions including HIV, cancer, and multiple sclerosis. According to Vasconcellos - perhaps too optimistically in light of last month's Supreme Court ruling against buyer's clubs that distribute medical marijuana - "The politics of medical marijuana are behind us as we begin the important work of researching the safety and efficacy of medical marijuana. Now … the issue of medical marijuana is properly in the hands of physicians and researchers." - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk