Source: New Scientist (UK) Contact: http://www.newscientist.com/ Pubdate: July 25, 1998 Author: Nell Boyce BAD DOPE MARIJUANA damages DNA as much as tobacco, creating potentially fertile ground for cancers, according to a study of mothers and their newborn infants. Marijuana smoke contains many of the same carcinogenic chemicals found in cigarette smoke, and people tend to hold marijuana smoke longer in their lungs. Epidemiologists have not yet linked marijuana to cancer, but this may be because cancers take decades to develop and widespread marijuana use is a recent phenomenon. Marinel Ammenheuser and her colleagues at the University of Texas Medical Branch in Galveston set out to discover whether marijuana smoke directly damages DNA. Using blood and urine tests, the researchers identified 17 pregnant women who smoked marijuana but did not use tobacco, cocaine or heroin. The study also enrolled an equal number of women who used none of the drugs. The researchers collected blood from each woman and from 10 umbilical cords. They found that the frequency of mutations in the DNA was nearly three times as high in the marijuana smokers and their infants as in nonsmokers (Mutation Research, vol 403, p 55). Ammenheuser says that the increased mutation rate in marijuana users resembles that found in tobacco smokers. "It's only a hint that there may be trouble there, but it's scientifically plausible." "There's more and more evidence from our lab showing increased levels of mutations in lungs," says Michael Roth of the University of California's Los Angeles Medical Center. His group will publish a study next month in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute showing that marijuana is associated with mutations known to be linked to lung cancer. He also has preliminary evidence suggesting that THC, the mood-altering ingredient in marijuana, may promote the carcinogenic effect. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski