Pubdate: Tue, 13 Apr 1999 Source: Standard-Times (MA) Copyright: 1999 The Standard-Times Contact: http://www.s-t.com/ Author: John A. Benson Jr., Stanley J. Watson Jr. Note: John A. Benson Jr. is dean and professor of medicine emeritus at the Oregon Health Sciences University School of Medicine, Portland. Stanley J. Watson Jr. is co-director and research scientist at the Mental Health Research Institute, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. They were co-principal investigators of the Institute of Medicine's study on the medical use of marijuana. STRIKE A BALANCE IN THE MARIJUANA DEBATE Everyone seemed to declare victory when a study on the medical use of marijuana was issued last month. Advocates for legalizing such use said the report aided their cause by concluding that the compounds in marijuana do have some potential as medicine. Their opponents, on the other hand, cheered the report's conclusion that the harmful effects of smoking far outweigh potential benefits for most patients. In reality, both sides are right. The study -- which we led for the Institute of Medicine -- firmly concluded that the active compounds in marijuana do have potential as medicine. But that future does not involve smoking. Scientific hair-splitting? Hardly. To date it has been nearly impossible to separate scientific evidence about marijuana's potential from larger societal concerns about its use. But doing so may be the key needed to advance the rancorous debate that has engulfed this issue since medical marijuana began to appear on state ballot initiatives in the mid-1990s. Those who have followed the debate may be surprised to learn that in the scientific realm, we found remarkable consensus that marijuana's components have potential to relieve symptoms such as pain, nausea and vomiting, and the poor appetite associated with wasting in AIDS or cancer. For most symptoms there are more effective drugs already on the market, but physicians encounter patients who do not respond well to standard medications, or who need additional therapies. These patients could benefit from new drugs based on cannabinoids, the active components in marijuana. Marijuana's future as medicine rests in developing new ways of delivering these cannabinoids -- including the most common one, THC. Presently there is only one such drug on the market. Marinol, a THC capsule, is approved by the Food and Drug Administration for treatment of nausea and vomiting associated with chemotherapy, as well as poor appetite and weight loss associated with AIDS. However, some who have used Marinol complain that it takes effect slowly, and its results are variable. Sufferers of pain, nausea and vomiting obviously need fast-acting medication. For that reason, we recommend that clinical trials move forward with the goal of developing a rapid-onset, non-smoked delivery system, such as an inhaler. This type of device could deliver precise doses without the health problems associated with smoking. Admittedly, an inhaler could take years to produce. What do we do right now? In deciding whether marijuana should be smoked as medicine, society must weigh the reality of this crude drug-delivery system against the benefits it might bestow. Chronic smoking of marijuana increases a person's chances of developing cancer, lung damage, and problems with pregnancies, including low birth weight. Therefore, it simply is not an acceptable long-term option. Smoking should be allowed only for short-term use among patients with debilitating symptoms, or who are terminally ill and do not respond well to approved medications. Even in these cases, marijuana use should be limited to carefully controlled settings. Patients who are prescribed marijuana should be enrolled in short-term clinical trials that are approved by an oversight strategy such as institutional review boards, and involve only those patients most likely to benefit. They should be fully informed that they are experimental subjects and are using a harmful drug-delivery system, and their condition should be closely monitored and documented under medical supervision. These clinical trials of smoked marijuana should not be designed to develop it as a licensed drug, but should be a stepping stone to the development of new, safe delivery systems of cannabinoids. There is no evidence that using marijuana in controlled settings -- or cannabinoids in the form of drugs such as Marinol -- will lead to increased illicit drug use throughout society. Our review of the science behind marijuana and cannabinoids convinces us that the debate so far has been miscast. Rather than focusing on drug control policy, the medical marijuana debate should really be about the promise of future drug development. Mining the pharmaceutical promise of cannabinoids will require the same kind of drug development that brought us any number of pain-killing drugs prescribed by physicians today. With public investments in research, or enough incentives to convince private companies to develop these drugs, the perceived need to smoke marijuana to alleviate symptoms could vanish. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck