Pubdate: Thu, 8 April 1999 Source: Calgary Herald (Canada) Contact: http://www.calgaryherald.com/ Author: Susan Okie - The Washington Post Note: The full IOM report is on-line on many sites, including: http://www.drugsense.org/iom_report/ MEDICAL STUDY THROWS WATER ON MARIJUANA SMOKE But Cannabinoids May Still Be Helpful Marijuana is too dangerous to the lungs to make smoking 'grass' a safe long-term treatment for illness - but some of the active ingredients in the weed could sprout into a whole new family of medicines. Those are among the conclusions of a landmark report issued late last month by an expert panel on the medical uses of marijuana, a topic that has pitted patients and pro-legalization activists against the federal government. Marijuana's active ingredients belong to a chemical family called the cannabinoids. In recent years, scientists have found that these chemicals - as well as receptors on cell surfaces that respond to them - are found naturally in memory, control of movement and pain perception. Scientific knowledge of cannabinoids has exploded, far outstripping the few well-conducted medical studies of marijuana's therapeutic effects in patients, according to the pair of scientists who headed the panel. Together, the new laboratory findings and clinical results suggest that some cannabinoids could be developed into promising drugs for pain control, the relief of nausea and vomiting and stimulation of appetite in people who have lost weight because of AIDS or other diseases. Just last month, the Canadian government announced it has plans to conduct human clinical tests to determine if smoking marijuana can reduce pain in terminally ill patients. And the movement to legalize marijuana for this use is gaining more and more publicity. Calgarian Grant Krieger, who has multiple sclerosis and uses marijuana to alleviate his symptoms, is organizing a Compassion Club in the city to provide locally grown pot to people with serious illnesses. Some patients currently smoke or eat marijuana to treat those problems, a situation that has produced a conflict between those who want to legalize medical use of the drug and governments which oppose legalization. 'There are real clinical opportunities' to develop new drugs from cannabinoids, said Stanley J. Watson, co-director of the Mental Health Research Institute at the University of Michigan and co-chairman of the panel that conducted the review for the Institute of Medicine (IOM) , an independent advisory body. The IOM report had been eagerly awaited by both sides in the ongoing debate over whether marijuana should be made legally available for people with certain intractable symptoms, such as nausea caused by chemotherapy or wasting associated with AIDS. To the delight of many activists who have urged legalization of medical use of the drug, the panel concluded that some of marijuanas constituents are potentially effective therapies. Nevertheless, the report strongly opposes the use of smoked marijuana except in short-term scientific studies lasting less than six months, citing the dangers posed by tar, carcinogens and other substances present in the smoke. 'Numerous studies suggest that marijuana smoke is an important risk factor in the development of respiratory disease' and is associated with an increased risk of cancer, lung damage and poor pregnancy outcomes, the report states. 'While we see a future in the development of...cannabinoids drugs, we see little future in smoked marijuana as a medicine,' said panel co-chairman John A. Benson, an emeritus professor of medicine at Oregon Health Sciences University. How might cannabinoids drugs be used? `Analgesia (pain relief) may be the biggest market for commercial exploitation,' Benson said. For nausea and vomiting caused by chemotherapy , cannabinoids are mildly effective, but for most patients, neither marijuana or THC (an active ingredient of marijuana) works as well as other anti-naseau drugs currently available, the report found. Marijuana has been advocated to treat a number of other conditions, but the panel found the evidence for its benefits weak. It was not impressed with cannabinoids' potential for treating glaucoma. migraines or movement disorders such as Parkinson's disease of Huntington's disease. The report recognizes the dilemma faced by patients who have turned to marijuana because they cannot get relief from legal medicines, and said such patients 'will find little comfort in a promise of a better drug 10 years from now.' Some patients with chronic illnesses insist that marijuana has made their symptoms bearable and has even prolonged their lives. In such cases, if there is no alternative treatment, the panel suggested establishing a system under which marijuana could be provided on a compassionate basis, as an experimental drug, and patients' conditions would be monitored closely. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake