Pubdate: Sun, 12 Jul 2015 Source: Pueblo Chieftain (CO) Copyright: 2015 The Pueblo Chieftain Contact: http://www.chieftain.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1613 Author: Libby Stuyt Note: Libby Stuyt, MD, is the medical director for the Circle Program at the Colorado Mental Health Institute in Pueblo, a 90-day inpatient treatment program. Marijuana Research PLACING THE HORSE IN FRONT OF THE CART I would like to respond to Dr. Hasan's allegation ("Hasan decries anti-med premise," Chieftain, June 24) that points I made in my previous opinion piece ("Time to put on the brakes," June 21) were "sheer nonsense." Just because Dr. Hasan "couldn't find" a study doesn't mean it didn't happen. I think I was very clear that it was an "observational study" and, yes, the Veterans Administration is not into prescribing marijuana. But they can observe their patients' behavior. The report by lead author Samuel T. Wilkinson, MD, from Yale School of Medicine, which states "marijuana use is associated with worse outcomes in symptom severity and violent behavior in patients with PTSD" is currently in press in the Journal of Clinical Psychiatry. Observed were a total of 2,276 veterans who were admitted to intensive PTSD treatment programs between 1991 and 2011. The study determined that those who never used marijuana or quit using marijuana in treatment had the best improvement in symptoms of PTSD and a lower risk of violence. Those who started using marijuana after treatment demonstrated significantly less improvement in PTSD symptoms and risk of violence. They also found that this group was more likely to turn to other drugs to cope with their residual PTSD symptoms. This supports the idea that cannabis use can be a "gateway" to other illicit drug use. I totally agree that alcohol and tobacco can also be gateways to illicit drug use as they all cause "cross sensitization" in the brain. In fact the majority of patients who I have treated over the years started using tobacco, alcohol and/or marijuana during their teen years, but I saw them in treatment for problems with more powerful drugs as adults. While there very well may be people who start using cannabis as adults and never have a problem, the association with cannabis use in adolescents and increased risk of illicit drug use is undeniable. Once someone is addicted to an addictive substance, the best hope for full recovery is avoidance of all drugs of abuse. I have spent my entire career trying to convince people that ongoing tobacco use can increase the risk for relapse to their drug of choice and have published several studies supporting this. Now, sadly, I will have to start including cannabis use in this venture, especially since the governor of Colorado recently signed a bill allowing people on parole or probation to use medical marijuana and 75 percent of the people I treat are on probation. Luckily, the majority of them have the insight that using marijuana will be a "gateway" back to their drug of choice. Additionally, it is not just patients who have the diagnosis of schizophrenia or adolescents who are at risk for psychosis with cannabis use. Numerous people are at risk for psychosis, worsened with increased doses of THC. A recent study in London demonstrated that the use of high potency "skunk" cannabis (THC concentrations of 15 percent) resulted in three times the risk of psychosis - five times if used daily. The cannabis available in the 1970s was 1-2 percent THC. Colorado now has the reputation of having the most potent cannabis in the world (25 percent THC and up). This quest for growers and dispensaries to increase the concentration of THC has nothing to do with any known medical benefit, it is simply to provide a better "high." There are no recommendations given for the dose, duration and what the recipient should do with their other medications they are already taking for the medical problem for which they are seeking marijuana. I believe there is a possibility that cannabinoids may be helpful medically, but we want good medicine that has been through the proper drug approval process. As eloquently put by a recent editorial in JAMA (Journal of the American Medical Association), "perhaps it is time to place the horse back in front of the cart." These views are solely mine and do not represent the views of the Colorado Mental Health Institute at Pueblo or the Colorado Office of Behavioral Health. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom