Pubdate: Mon, 07 Oct 2002
Source: Independent  (UK)
Copyright: 2002 Independent Newspapers (UK) Ltd.
Contact:  http://www.independent.co.uk/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/209
Author: Jeremy Laurance, Health Editor

MEDICINAL CANNABIS MAY BE AVAILABLE WITHIN TWO YEARS

Pharmaceutical Companies Invest Millions To Develop New Painkillers As 
Medical Research Council Tests Enter Their Final Phase

By Jeremy Laurance, Health Editor

The world's oldest euphoric drug is poised to make a return to the medicine 
cabinet. Cannabis, reputedly taken by Queen Victoria to quell her period 
pains but banished from Britain's schedule of medicinal drugs in 1971, is 
on the point of winning scientific backing for its role in easing the 
symptoms of chronic disease.

This week the Medical Research Council is due to announce that it has 
recruited the last of 660 patients to a UKP1.2m trial of cannabis-based 
medicines in the treatment of multiple sclerosis, the largest in the world. 
Most of the patients recruited over the past two years have already 
completed the 15-week trial, in 30 centres round the UK.

Although final results will not be available until next summer, researchers 
are optimistic. Dr John Zajicek, consultant neurologist at Derriford 
Hospital, Plymouth, who is leading the research, said: "I'm fairly 
confident we are going to find an effect in reducing spasticity, or muscle 
spasms, and it is also going to have an effect on bladder control.

"Anecdotally some patients have had tremendous benefit from it. One or two 
who couldn't walk or go to the loo found they were able to when they were 
on the drug. There have been some whose lives have changed dramatically."

Next month, a venture capital firm, GW Pharmaceuticals, is due to report 
preliminary results from its own Phase III trials of cannabis-based 
medicines in patients with multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury and other 
conditions. Phase III trials are the largest and most rigorous, and must 
show positive results before a drug can be licensed.

Last week the company published results from an earlier, smaller Phase II 
trial which showed that 28 out of 34 patients suffering severe pain 
benefited from the medicines and had elected to continue on the trial. 
Geoffrey Guy, GW's executive chairman, said: "One can be confident the 
Phase III trials are going to yield results reflective of Phase II."

If such hopes are fulfilled, cannabis-based medicines could be on the 
market in two to three years. The National Institute for Clinical 
Excellence, the government watchdog on new medicines, has been alerted by 
its horizon scanning unit in Birmingham, whose job is to spot drugs in 
development before they hit the NHS.

The medicinal benefits of cannabis have been known for at least 2,000 
years. Its analgesic properties were described by the British herbalist 
Nicholas Culpepper in 1653. Two drugs based on the active constituent 
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) have been used in the UK for over 30 years to 
treat nausea in cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy, although their use 
has declined as better anti-emetics have been developed.

Medicines derived from the cannabis plant are being tested by drug 
companies around the world as treatments for pain, stiffness, tremor, weak 
bladder, loss of appetite and high blood pressure. It is being tested in 
people with behavioural disturbance caused by Alzheimer's and in sufferers 
from Parkinson's disease.

Research is also going on into its role in stimulating appetite in cancer 
and Aids patients ? cannabis has long been known to give users the "munchies".

But one hurdle remains to be overcome. Scientists have not so far succeeded 
in isolating cannabis's medicinal properties from its euphoria-inducing 
ones. Although patients in both trials have not got high, that is believed 
to be because they were taking low doses.

"Most of the active ingredients of cannabis can give a high. What the 
Government wants is a drug that can be used without being abused," Dr 
Zajicek said.

In the 1970s, researchers discovered morphine-like opioid receptors in the 
spinal cord that led to the development of epidural painkillers, which did 
not have the psychoactive effects of morphine. They are now widely used in 
childbirth, after surgery, and increasingly for intractable pain such as 
that caused by cancer.

Similar receptors for cannabinoids have been identified in the spinal cord, 
and the hope is that cannabis-based drugs can be developed to target them 
which would have a painkilling effect without a psychoactive one.

With scientists confident that they can harness some of the 60 active 
constituents of cannabis to alleviate a range of symptoms, millions of 
pounds are being invested by drug companies in developing unique 
combinations of the constituents or finding a unique means of delivering 
them to the body, which would be patentable. As cannabis is a natural 
plant, neither it nor the oil produced from it can be patented.

In the MRC trial, patients were given either THC - cannabis oil derived 
from the whole plant - or a placebo in a capsule to be swallowed. The THC 
was manufactured in California and the cannabis oil was derived from plants 
grown in Switzerland and processed in Germany.

One drawback of using an oral drug is that there is great variation between 
patients in the dose needed to produce an effect. Patients in the MRC trial 
were started on a target dose based on their weight, which was adjusted 
over the first five weeks, depending on side effects.

GW Pharmaceuticals have developed an under-the-tongue spray which they 
claim is absorbed more quickly, making dose adjustment simpler. Their 
patients received THC or cannabidiol, either alone or in combination, 
manufactured from cannabis plants grown in a secret location under tight 
security in southern England.

The Multiple Sclerosis Society has taken a close interest in the research, 
but has declined to fund patients who wished to continue on the drug after 
the end of the MRC trial ? to the anger of some of its members.

A spokesman said: "There is a tremendous amount of anecdotal evidence that 
cannabis in various forms can be helpful in alleviating some of the most 
unpleasant symptoms of MS.

"But we also know that there have been people with MS who have had very bad 
experiences. So the main concern is whether the substance is safe in the 
long term, because people with MS have a condition that is going to last 
the rest of their life."

'It Was Brilliant Just To Be Able To Stand'

The pills Hazel Walker swallowed as part of the Medical Research Council's 
(MRC) cannabis trial helped her get out of her wheelchair and walk. She 
took them for 15 weeks last year and the effect was dramatic.

"I could walk a couple of lengths of the hallway and do simple things that 
other people take for granted. It was brilliant, really brilliant," she said.

She still doesn't know what was in the pills because the trial was "double 
blind" to prevent both the patients and their doctors knowing who was 
taking the active ingredient and who was taking the placebo.

But the improvement in her condition was so striking that after a 
fortnight's break at the end of the trial she elected to go back on the 
pills for another year and continued to reap the benefits.

"The first week after I came off the pills I really went downhill. I tried 
to do things I had got used to and I found I couldn't. When I went back on 
them I noticed a change again - more mobility and fewer spasms. It is very 
hard to stand at the sink and wash the dishes if you have got spasms in 
your legs."

Her love life improved, too. "It was brilliant to be able to stand up. It 
is difficult to get passionate stuck in a wheelchair."

Aged 47, she has had multiple sclerosis for seven years. She is confined to 
a wheelchair and when her husband, a fisherman, is away, she needs two 
carers to get her up and dressed in the morning and put her to bed at night 
at their home in Plymouth.

The only drugs that have helped during those seven years have been 
steroids, but they have damaging effects if taken long-term. Medicines 
based on cannabis are her only hope but now they, too, have been taken away.

Funding was only available to provide one year's supply of pills. For 
Hazel, they ran out this summer. The MRC's researchers applied to the 
Multiple Sclerosis Society for financial help to continue supplying the 
drugs, but the society declined.

Hazel said: "I was left in limbo. I was annoyed, to be honest. The MS 
Society says it won't fund the drug, yet it gives benefits to people with 
MS. It's frustrating."

She experimented with herbal cannabis for a while: "I tried it for a 
fortnight. I sat watching telly and started laughing. I don't know whether 
it helped because I was giggling all the time."

"I didn't fancy going out if I was going to be in the street giggling. 
People already think if you are in a wheelchair you are practically 
braindead and if they saw me giggling they would probably think I had lost 
it altogether. You need your wits about you. My hope now is that the trial 
is successful, the drug is licensed and I can start taking it again."
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MAP posted-by: Beth