Pubdate: Wed, 17 Nov 1999 Source: Toronto Star (CN ON) Copyright: 1999, The Toronto Star Contact: http://www.thestar.com/ Page: A27 Author: Giles Elgood, Reuters News Agency BRITAIN ABUZZ OVER CANNABIS MEDICINE Prescription pot may be available in 3 years, firm says LONDON - A British drug company hopes to have cannabis-based medicine ready to be prescribed by doctors within three to four years. Sufferers from diseases such as multiple sclerosis, which attacks the central nervous system, have been calling for a pain-relieving cannabis medicine for years and many have broken the law by buying the drug from street dealers. GW Pharmaceuticals said yesterday it was making progress in clinical studies with cannabis-based medicines. A small group of volunteers had been taking cannabis under clinical conditions in order to determine the best dose. Some had taken cannabis lozenges that dissolve under the tongue while others used an inhaler. Dr. Geoffrey Guy, chairman of GW Pharmaceuticals, said his company had carried out its first studies in which human subjects were given standardized extracts of cannabis. "I am pleased to report that the progress of our development program from the laboratory to human clinical dosing has proceeded without problems," he added. Guy said there was evidence cannabis could relieve pain in multiple sclerosis, spinal cord injury and neuralgia. His company would be evaluating these uses in some 2,000 patients over the next two to three years. "Subject to the necessary regulatory approvals, we hope to have a cannabis-based medicine available for prescription by doctors within three to four years," Guy said. GW Pharmaceuticals is licensed by the British Home Office to grow and supply cannabis for medical research. If trials are successful, the Home Office will change the law to allow prescription of cannabis-based medicines, the company said. GW has been growing cannabis in secure, computer-controlled greenhouses in the south of England. Although the plants are the same as those grown for illegal recreational use - cannabis sativa - the trials are designed to maximize the drug's analgesic, or pain relieving, effect rather than to make subjects so high that they do not care about the pain. While medical marijuana is still illegal in Canada, federal Health Minister Allan Rock has issued several ministerial permits to grow it and his department is studying its use. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek Rea