Pubdate: Fri, 28 Feb 2014 Source: News Leader, The (VA) Copyright: 2014 News Leader Contact: http://www.newsleader.com/customerservice/contact.html Website: http://www.newsleader.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1985 NIH DIRECTOR COLLINS ON LEGALIZING POT: NOT SO FAST WASHINGTON - One of the nation's top scientists raised concerns about the nationwide move to legalize marijuana, saying regular use of the drug by adolescents had been tied to a drop in IQ and that a possible link to lung cancer hasn't been seriously studied. "I'm afraid I'm sounding like this is an evil drug that's going to ruin our civilization and I don't really think that," Francis Collins, director of the National Institutes of Health, said Thursday. "But there are aspects of this that probably should be looked at more closely than some of the legalization experts are willing to admit." Collins, 63, is a geneticist who led the project to map the human genome. Since 2009, he has headed the NIH, the nation's leading agency for biomedical research. He's originally from Staunton, and still has family here. He said the National Institute on Drug Abuse, which he oversees, was interested in pursuing such studies now that legalization has made them more feasible to do. But the process will take time, he cautioned. "We don't know a lot about the things we wish we did," he said at a small dinner with journalists hosted by USA TODAY and National Geographic. "I've been asked repeatedly, does regular marijuana smoking, because you inhale deeply, increase your risk of lung cancer? We don't know. Nobody's done that study." Last year, Colorado and Washington state legalized marijuana, and a majority of states across the country are considering legalizing the drug or decriminalizing it for medical or recreational use. In the past, research was complicated because marijuana was outlawed. "There's a lot we don't know because it's been an illegal drug, so how do you run a research project asking people to sign up who by their signing up are admitting they are breaking a law and might get into trouble?" he said. "I think one of the things we'll need to do is take advantage of legalization now to try to mount studies that were impossible before, if people are willing to participate." That said, he said it already had been documented that regular marijuana use by adolescents, particularly early adolescents, had a significant and lifelong impact on the brain, leading to an average loss of about 10 IQ points. "Perhaps it would be better if, before we plunged into this, there was a little bit more recognition of that particular consequence," he said. USA Today - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom