Pubdate: Wed, 17 Mar 1999 Source: United Press International Copyright: 1999 United Press International Feedback: http://www.sciencenews.org/sn_forms/sn_ctact.htm Author: ELLEN BECK UPI Science News WASHINGTON, March 17 (UPI) -- A government-funded report says smoked marijuana is potentially effective for a short list of symptoms, recommends rigorous clinical trials and development of a delivery system so patients do not have to inhale. The 18-month, $1 million Institute of Medicine report released today in Washington makes six recommendations, including clinical trials allowing patients with chronic conditions or end-stage diseases, who have no other alternative, to use smoked marijuana on an experimental basis for six months. The IOM report, "Marijuana and Medicine: Assessing the Science Base, " was ordered by drug czar Barry McCaffrey in 1997 after California and Arizona passed state laws making medical marijuana legal as long as it is prescribed by a physician. Voters in Alaska, Washington State and Oregon in 1998 passed similar laws and other states are readying ballot measures. In 1982, the IOM made its first report on medical marijuana, in which it said cannabis and its derivatives had "shown promise" in treating a variety of disorders, including glaucoma, asthma and nausea from chemotherapy treatment. The IOM's latest report says smoked marijuana, as compared to the synthetic pill Marinol, which is legal, is potentially effective in treating chronic pain, nausea from cancer chemotherapy, lack of appetite and wasting in AIDS patients. The report follows several public hearings and months of examining the existing scientific database. "Marijuana's medical effects are generally modest and for most symptoms there are more effective medications already available on the market," co-author John Benson Jr. said in a statement. The report rebukes long-held beliefs by many physicians that smoked marijuana is effective for treating glaucoma, adding relief of pressure on the eye is only temporary, and it does not endorse using the drug to treat Parkinson's or Huntington's diseases, seizures, migraines and a host of other ailments doctors believe are helped by it. "Although marijuana smoke delivers THC (its active agent) and other cannabinoids to the body, it also delivers harmful substances, including most of those found in tobacco smoke," the report says. Beyond the smoking issue, however, the IOM said the range of problems associated with medical marijuana is within the acceptable range of problems associated with the use of other drugs. In calling for development of a new delivery system so patients do not have to smoke marijuana cigarettes, the IOM says research also should continue into the effects, both positive and negative, of synthetic and plant-derived cannabinoids. It warns the marijuana plant contains a "variable mixture" of biological compounds that "cannot be expected to provide a precisely defined drug effect" so the future of medical marijuana is not in smoked delivery but in the development of "chemically defined drugs" that are predictable and safe. The report notes that while cannabinoids have a natural role in pain control, the brain can develop tolerances to the drug, and it's impact on the immune system is unclear. And while there is evidence smoking marijuana often precedes use of harder drugs, the report says there is no conclusive evidence that it acts as a "gateway" that actually causes people to take that next step. Sandra Bennett, director of the Northwest Center for Health & Safety and president of Drug Watch International, says scientific studies have failed to show marijuana is safe or effective for medical use. "But there are studies that show it is harmful," Bennett says. "On top of that is the fact that it is harmful as a psychoactive and addictive substance that should not be mainstreamed." The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, or NORML, calls the report a political document, not a scientific one. It says the IOM ignored testimony from hundreds of patients who have found relief smoking marijuana that other medications did not provide and is holding marijuana to a higher standard than other drugs. "The Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act does not require a drug to demonstrate superiority over all existing medicines before receiving federal approval and no such hurdle exists for any other drug," says Allen St. Pierre, NORML Foundation executive director. The IOM is a private, non-profit organization that operates under a congressional charter grant to the National Academy of Sciences. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck