Source: British Medical Journal (UK) Contact: 1 Aug 1998 Issue: BMJ 1998;317:302 (1 Aug 1998) POSSIBLE CANNABIS RESEARCH IN BRITAIN News extra: Some encouragement given for research into cannabis (John Warden, parliamentary correspondent, BMJ) The Home Office indicated last week that it is willing to set up "workshop talks" to discuss licensing procedures for research into the medical use of cannabis, and the Medical Research Council said that it would consider special treatment for clinical trials. The offers were made when both bodies gave evidence to the House of Lords subcommittee that is inquiring into possible changes in the law relating to cannabis and its derivatives for medical and recreational purposes. Home Office officials said that they are making arrangements with the Department of Health and the Medicines Control Agency (MCA) for a conference to discuss aspects of research licensing with representatives of the research community. The aim would be to highlight some of the complex issues involved such as the supply of standardised cannabis and the adoption of sound methodologies. If and when the benefits of a cannabis based medicine had been scientifically proved and a marketing authorisation issued by the MCA, the Home Office said that it would be willing to come forward with a change in the law to allow the prescribing of such a medicine. Professor George Radda, the chief executive of the MRC, told the committee that the council did not get many valid applications for research into the therapeutic use of cannabis, although it would be prepared to give them special consideration. It was looking into the possibility of carrying out some preliminary trials at Exeter university. In addition, the committee set up by the Royal Pharmaceutical Society under Sir William Asscher (2 May, p 1335) had agreed to focus on the reduction of pain and spasticity as the end point of possible clinical trials and committee members were debating which products to investigate. They were in process of discussing good protocols. In a written submission, the MRC said that in the absence of data, the scientific evidence in favour of permitting the medical use of cannabis or cannabinoids must be considered slight at the moment. Lord Walton of Detchant observed that the subcommittee had not had any convincing evidence that cannabis had any effect on the course of a disease. BMJ 1998 316: 1333. [Full text]: Research into the clinical use of cannabinoids is to be put on to a new basis in Britain with the formation of a committee of experts who will draw up guidelines for good practice. The working party on the therapeutic uses of cannabinoids is being set up by the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain and will be headed by Sir William Asscher, a former chairman of the government Committee on Safety of Medicines. The aim is that the guidelines will encourage the Home Office to approve research licences which are currently being delayed. The development was reported by BMA witnesses to a House of Lords subcommittee inquiring into the use of cannabis and its derivatives for medical and recreational purposes and into whether any relaxation of the law is appropriate. Last year the BMA report Therapeutic Uses of Cannabis concluded that cannabis is unsuitable for medicinal use but that cannabinoid derivatives should be considered. Dr Vivienne Nathanson, head of the BMA's professional resources and research group, and Professor Heather Ashton, consultant writer for the BMA report, gave evidence to the Lords subcommittee last week. They reported a meeting last month with the chief medical officer at the Department of Health to discuss further action in moving forward clinical trials of cannabinoids. It was agreed that a new independent body to conduct such trials was required. Dr Nathanson welcomed the Royal Pharmaceutical Society's working party as a means of producing better research and development of cannabinoids so that the least possible delay occurs before clinical trials are started. Concern had been expressed, she said, over Home Office delays in issuing research licences, with about 14 applications pending. The new research protocols might help the Home Office to compare licence applications with a set of guidelines and decide which should be licensed. In a written submission, the BMA said that individual cannabinoids have a therapeutic potential in several medical conditions in which present drugs are not fully adequate. The long term effects have not been studied, but present evidence indicates that cannabinoids are remarkably safe. The accumulation of scientific evidence has been hampered by regulations restricting the use of cannabinoids to one clinical indication--as antiemetics in chemotherapy for cancer. The BMA wants a high priority given to carefully controlled trials of cannabinoids in patients with chronic spastic disorders that have not responded to other drugs. In the meantime there was a case for the extension of the indications for nabilone and [delta]-9-tetrahydrocannabinol for use in chronic spastic disorders unresponsive to standard drugs. - --- Checked-by: Mike Gogulski