Pubdate: Thu, 08 Jul 1999 Source: eye (Canada) Copyright: 1999 Eye Communications Ltd. Contact: 471 Adelaide St. W., Toronto, ON, M5V 1T1 Fax: (416) 504-4348 Website: http://www.eye.net/ Forum: http://www.eye.net/eye/feedback/feedback.html Page: 11 Author: Nate Hendley SMOKING FOR SCIENCE Toronto Researchers Plan Pot Study On the sixth floor of a nondescript downtown office tower, two researchers are spending the summer studying pot and making history. Epidemiologists James Austin and Siamak Tenzif belong to the Community Research Initiative of Toronto (CRIT), a group that's drafting a protocol for a precedent-setting national cannabis study. CRIT, which primarily studies AIDS issues, got involved with pot following heavy lobbying from HIV patients. Strong anecdotal evidence suggests cannabis can relieve nausea and stimulate appetite in people with AIDS. "I was not personally familiar with medical marijuana before the HIV community contacted us," Austin says. "Once I started reading the literature, I saw the need for more study." CRIT decided to write a research protocol for an experiment designed to determine the scientific basis behind pot's role in treating HIV. "We were working on the protocol when Health Canada approached us," recalls Tenzif. Under pressure to legalize medical marijuana, which thousands of patients use illegally, Health Canada invited CRIT to take part in a $3.5 million national pot trial. Founded 10 years ago, CRIT seems an unlikely candidate for cannabis research. The organization is small -- with a staff consisting of Austin, Tenzif and two administrators -- and doesn't enjoy a huge budget. Last year, the group received a quarter-million dollars in funding from the Ontario Ministry of Health, the Ontario HIV Treatment Network, DuPont Pharma and other donors. Previous CRIT studies have looked at such subjects as the role of vitamin therapy and protease inhibitors in combatting AIDS. If all goes to plan, the Canadian HIV Trials Network should start carrying out CRIT's research protocol on live subjects later this year. Until then, CRIT has to sort out how much money it will get from the feds and how many patients will be involved in their leg of the pot trials. These issues will be determined at a mid-summer meeting with federal officials and fellow researchers, says Tenzif. That leaves the issue of where exactly Health Canada is supposed to find the pot it needs for their studies. "They can get it from three sources," says Austin, "NIDA and GW Pharmaceuticals are two choices." The U.S. National Institute on Drug Abuse is the only legal supplier of research-grade pot on the continent. GW Pharmaceuticals are a British company that's developing a cannabis inhaler for use in medical marijuana tests. The third option, which Rock has seriously considered, is to purchase homegrown grass. Such musings have some observers wondering whether full legalization of marijuana is on the horizon. For their part, the CRIT crew refuse to take sides in the decrim debate. CRIT has "no real stand about legalizing medical marijuana," says Austin. "Our goal is to do the best science possible" -- and leave the laws to the politicians. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake