News
From the Los Angeles Times
Puffing is the Best Medicine
By Lester Grinspoon
LESTER GRINSPOON is an emeritus professor of
psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and the author of "Marijuana, the
Forbidden Medicine" (Yale University Press, 1997).
May 5, 2006
THE FOOD AND Drug Administration is contradicting itself. It recently
reiterated its position that cannabis has no medical utility, but it
also approved advanced clinical trials for a marijuana-derived drug
called Sativex, a liquid preparation of two of the most therapeutically
useful compounds of cannabis. This is the same agency that in 1985
approved Marinol, another oral cannabis-derived medicine.
Both Sativex and Marinol represent the "pharmaceuticalization" of
marijuana. They are attempts to make available its quite obvious
medicinal properties — to treat pain, appetite loss and many other
ailments — while at the same time prohibiting it for any other use.
Clinicians know that the herb — because it can be smoked or inhaled via
a vaporizer — is a much more useful and reliable medicine than oral
preparations. So it might be wise to consider exactly what Sativex can
and can't do before it's marketed here.
A few years ago, the British firm GW Pharmaceuticals convinced Britain's
Home Office that it should be allowed to develop Sativex because the
drug could provide all of the medical benefits of cannabis without
burdening patients with its "dangerous" effects — those of smoking and
getting high.
But there is very little evidence that smoking marijuana as a means of
taking it represents a significant health risk. Although cannabis has
been smoked widely in Western countries for more than four decades,
there have been no reported cases of lung cancer or emphysema attributed
to marijuana. I suspect that a day's breathing in any city with poor air
quality poses more of a threat than inhaling a day's dose — which for
many ailments is just a portion of a joint — of marijuana.
Further, those who are concerned about the toxic effects of smoking can
now use a vaporizer, which frees the cannabinoid molecules from the
plant material without burning it and producing smoke.
As for getting high, I am not convinced that the therapeutic benefits of
cannabis can always be separated from its psychoactive effects. For
example, many patients with multiple sclerosis who use marijuana speak
of "feeling better" as well as of the relief from muscle spasms and
other symptoms. If cannabis contributes to this mood elevation, should
patients be deprived of it?
The statement that Sativex, "when taken properly," won't cause
intoxication hinges on the phrase "when taken properly." "Properly" here
merely means taking a dose — by holding a few drops of liquid under the
tongue — that is under the level required for the psychoactive effect.
As with Marinol, people who want to use Sativex to get high will
certainly be able to do so.
One of the most important characteristics of cannabis is how fast it
acts when it is inhaled, which allows patients to easily determine the
right dose for symptom relief. Sativex's sublingual absorption is more
efficient than orally administered Marinol (which requires 1 1/2 to two
hours to take effect), but it's still not nearly as fast as smoking or
inhaling the herb.
That means "self-titration," or self-dosage, is difficult if not
impossible. Further, many patients cannot hold Sativex, which has an
unpleasant taste, under the tongue long enough for it to be absorbed. As
a consequence, varying amounts trickle down the esophagus. It then
behaves like orally administered cannabis, with the consequent delay in
the therapeutic effect.
Cannabis will one day be seen as a wonder drug, as was penicillin in the
1940s. Like penicillin, herbal marijuana is remarkably nontoxic, has a
wide range of therapeutic applications and would be quite inexpensive if
it were legal. Even now, good-quality illicit or homegrown marijuana,
which is, at the very least, no less useful a medicine than Sativex, is
less expensive than Sativex or Marinol.
The "pharmaceuticalization" of marijuana has promise. No doubt the
industry could produce unique analogs of the naturally occurring
cannabinoids that would be useful in ways smoked cannabis is not. But
for now, medicines such as Sativex provide only one advantage over the
herb: They're legal.
I have yet to see a patient who preferred Marinol to smoked marijuana.
Similarly, the commercial success of Sativex will largely depend on how
vigorously the marijuana laws are enforced. It is not unreasonable to
believe that drug companies have an interest in sustaining the
prohibition against the herb.
Geoffrey Guy, who founded GW Pharmaceuticals, claims his aim was to keep
people who find marijuana useful out of court. There is, of course, a
way to do this that would be much less expensive — both economically and
in terms of human suffering.