Pubdate: Sat, 24 Mar 2001 Source: British Medical Journal (UK) Copyright: 2001 by the British Medical Journal. Contact: http://www.bmj.com/ Author: Annabel Ferriman REGULATORS ACCUSED OF BIAS AGAINST CANNABIS BASED MEDICINES A select committee of Britain's House of Lords this week accused the Medicines Control Agency of not dealing with cannabis based medicines in the same impartial manner as it dealt with other medicines. In its report it said that the agency's insistence that new toxicology data were needed on one of the 60 cannabinoids present in raw cannabis would delay the approval of new cannabis based medicines, which patients with severe conditions, such as multiple sclerosis, needed. The select committee on science and technology also deplored the "postcode prosecuting" of people who used cannabis for their own therapeutic purposes. It called for an end to the prosecution of genuine therapeutic users who possessed or grew cannabis for their own use. It claimed that the medical authorities were making it more difficult than necessary for drug companies to produce cannabis based medicines. So far only two trials into cannabis based products had been approved by the Medical Research Council, one in Derriford Hospital, Plymouth, and one in Hammersmith Hospital, London. Only one of those had started recruiting patients. The committee was particularly critical of the Medicines Control Agency for "not approaching the question of licensing cannabis based medicines in a properly balanced way, especially given the long-established history of cannabis use and the needs of patients for whom there is no medicinal alternative. "To end the delay in the development of an effective cannabis-based medicine, we recommend that the MCA [Medicines Control Agency] should reconsider their position on the licensing of medicines containing cannabidiol [one of the 60 cannabinoids in raw cannabis]." The agency had said that it was satisfied enough with the toxicological profile of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) for it to be used in trials but that it was unhappy with the toxicology data on cannabidiol, in particular the evidence that it inhibited spermatogenesis in animals. The committee pointed out that the studies which the agency took to indicate an inhibition of spermatogenesis involved doses at least 100 times higher than the doses contemplated. "The attitude of the MCA in not allowing patients to make their own decisions could be regarded as over-protective," the report said. It could delay the production of a useful medicine by the pharmaceutical company, GW Pharmaceuticals, by two or three years. The report added, however, that since February, when the committee had taken evidence from the agency, the agency had conducted a review of its decisions on cannabis and was considering modifications to its position. The committee, which is chaired by Lord Winston, said that it stood by its original recommendation that cannabis should be rescheduled from a schedule 1 to a schedule 2 drug under the Misuse of Drugs Regulations Act 1985, in order to facilitate research (BMJ 1998; 317:1337). The select committee's report is available at http://www.parliament.uk . - --- MAP posted-by: Doc-Hawk