Pubdate: Fri, 26 Sep 2014 Source: Chronicle Herald (CN NS) Copyright: 2014 The Halifax Herald Limited Contact: http://www.herald.ns.ca/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/180 Author: Clare Mellor EXPERIMENTING WITH MEDICAL POT More Data Needed to Determine Effectiveness, Pain-Treatment Specialist Says At least a dozen physicians raised their hands at a pain conference in Halifax on Friday when asked if they have prescribed medical marijuana for their patients. More physicians in Canada are becoming familiar with medical marijuana but more education and research is needed, said Mark Ware, a renowned pain specialist at McGill University in Montreal. "We need more data, yes, but we also need better mechanisms to get that data, that we do have, out to the hands of people that need to know it." Ware, an associate professor in family medicine and anesthesia at McGill, spoke Friday at the Atlantic Pain Conference. In its seventh year, the conference dispenses the latest scientific information on pain management to health-care professionals. Small short-term studies have provided clinical data showing smoked or inhaled cannabis can reduce pain and improve sleep and quality of life in patients with neuropathic pain, said Ware, also director of clinical research at the Alan Edwards Pain Management Unit at McGill University Health Centre. But larger long-term clinical studies are needed to look at efficacy and side-effects, he said. "The issue is who is going to do those trials? Who is going to take herbal cannabis and put it through that kind of process? There aren't the patents that are associated with it. There isn't the investment opportunity that a drug company has with a novel compound." As the medical marijuana industry grows, he hopes those companies producing marijuana will reinvest a portion of earnings into research and education. "Some of that revenue stream should be reinvested into doing the kinds of studies that we know we need to help inform the process," said Ware, a member of the non-profit Canadian Consortium for the Investigation of Cannabinoids. That group is made up of physicians and scientists pushing for research and education in the field. "We (need) to monitor and track the process carefully. If we lose track of it and we are not knowing who is doing what, what are the doses, we won't learn anything. We'll be having the same discussions five years from now." Cannabinoids, chemicals from marijuana, have been officially approved in Canada for treatment of nausea associated with chemotherapy, appetite stimulation for people with HIV/AIDS, neuropathic pain, spasticity associated with multiple sclerosis, and advanced cancer pain, Ware said. "On the herbal cannabis side, there is no approved indication. It is not a drug that has been through the same (testing) process ... There is some data but it's a mass of small studies that we have to filter through to pick out whether we are satisfied that is sufficient to go ahead and use the drug in those conditions." He has been researching and studying cannabis for 15 years. He has about 15 patients using medical marijuana under the new federal program. "I've had patients in various levels using the prescription options and the herbal routes for about 15 years now ... I've seen some remarkable improvements, but I echo my colleagues, and I feel that it is fine to see some benefits in the clinical practice (but) we need to validate that through clinical trials." Karen Smith of Halifax, who has suffered from chronic pain for over 30 years, said she hopes medical marijuana will become more available to patients with chronic pain in the next few years. "I think in the next couple of years, the pharmaceutical companies may be getting a run for their money," she said. "I think it might be the way to go for many." - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom