Archive for the ‘Cannabis’ Category

Woman with brain tumor says she was kicked out of hospital for using medical marijuana

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Posted 14 Mar 2012 — by James Street
Category Cannabis, Ethics of Physicians, Ethics of Science, Finance and Politics of cancer research and treatment, Legal

View more videos at: http://nbcbayarea.com.

By Cheryl Hurd, NBCBayArea.com

SAN FRANCISCO — A medical marijuana celebrity with a brain condition said a local hospital kicked her out after she attempted to use medical marijuana inside.

Angel Raich, who fought for the right to use medical cannabis in a case that went to the U.S. Supreme Court in 2004 and 2005, talked to us outside of UCSF Medical Center in San Francisco moments after she said they booted her out.

“The pharmacist says ‘you’re not allowed to have cannabis in this hospital,’” Raich said. “‘And if you’re gonna try to have cannabis in this hospital we’re going to call the feds.’”

Raich said she checked into the hospital Monday morning for doctor-ordered tests on her brain. She suffers from chronic pain and seizures from an inoperable brain tumor and doctors didn’t give her very long to live, she said.

“You’re basically saying if I stay it’s like giving me a death sentence ’cause I’d have to be without my cannabis,’” Raich said she told a hospital employee.

Raich said she had no choice but to leave the hospital.

“I’m in a state university hospital in the state of California,” Raich said. “I have the right to have the same medical care as any other patient does.”

UCSF Medical Center released the following statement:

“UCSF is a smoke-free campus and this includes medical marijuana. Several members of the media have asked if UCSF allows the use of a vaporized form of marijuana. It does not. Even a vaporized form of medical marijuana releases particles in the air that are damaging to the lung. Any particles from vapor and odor could have an impact on other patients and hospital employees.

Under federal and state law, a physician is at legal risk related to any activity that could be construed as prescribing medical marijuana to a patient.”

During our interview with Raich, she appeared to have a seizure. When the fire department and paramedics arrived, Raich refused to return to UCSF. Instead, they took her to St. Mary’s Hospital.

Federal Judge Tosses Medical Marijuana Case

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Posted 07 Jan 2012 — by James Street
Category Cannabis, Finance and Politics of cancer research and treatment, Legal, Marijuana

By Emily P. Walker, Washington Correspondent, MedPage Today
Published: January 06, 2012

A federal judge has thrown out Arizona governor Jan Brewer’s complaint against the state’s medical marijuana law.

The law, passed in 2010, created a system of marijuana dispensaries that are regulated by the state’s health department. Patients are banned from growing their own marijuana if they live within a 25-mile radius of a dispensary.

Brewer and the state’s attorney general filed the lawsuit just days before the state was scheduled to accept applications from potential dispensary operators. The suit asked for a judgment on whether state officials who administer Arizona’s medical marijuana programs could be at risk for federal prosecution, since marijuana is illegal under federal law.

U.S. District Judge Susan Bolton of Arizona on Wednesday dismissed the complaint, ruling that the Arizona officials failed to show that an imminent threat of prosecution exists for state employees, or that state employees in any of the 16 states with medical marijuana laws have faced prosecution for violating federal laws that make marijuana use and dispensing illegal.

Recently, federal authorities in California began cracking down on the state’s medical marijuana industry, but they are targeting those who are dispensing the drug illegally, and have said those who need marijuana for medical purposes — such as to help ease the effects of cancer or AIDS — will still be able to get it.

Even if the threat of prosecution for state employees in Arizona were imminent, Brewer and the other plaintiffs in the case — the director of the Arizona Department of Health Services and the director of the Arizona Department of Public Safety — didn’t show they would suffer direct harm or immediate hardship if the case wasn’t immediately decided, Bolton wrote, so the case is “not appropriate for judicial review.”

Matthew Benson, director of communications for Brewer’s office, called the ruling a disappointment.

“What this federal court has essentially said is, it won’t hear the state’s lawsuit until a state employee is prosecuted or notified that they imminently face federal prosecution for their part in administering Proposition 203,” he said in an email to MedPage Today.

The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) praised the decision.

“It is unconscionable for Governor Brewer to continue to force very sick people to needlessly suffer by stripping them of the legal avenue through which to obtain their vital medicine,” Ezekiel Edwards, director of the ACLU Criminal Law Reform Project, said in a press release. “[The] ruling underscores the need for state officials to stop playing politics and implement the law as approved by a majority of Arizona voters so that thousands of patients can access the medicine their doctors believe is most effective for them.”

In addition to Arizona, 15 other states have medical marijuana laws — Alaska, California, Colorado, Delaware, Hawaii, Maine, Michigan, Montana, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, and Washington. Medical marijuana also is legal in District of Columbia.

More Cannabis Science Brand Extracts Successful Cancer Treatments Confirmed As Self Medicating Squamous Cell Carcinoma Patient Reports Continued Shrinking of Cancer Tumor

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Posted 03 Jan 2012 — by James Street
Category Cannabis, Marijuana

COLORADO SPRINGS, Colo., Jan 03, 2012 (BUSINESS WIRE) — Cannabis Science, Inc. CBIS 0.00% a pioneering U.S. biotech company developing pharmaceutical cannabis (marijuana) products. The Company is very pleased to report the continuing successful progress by patient who has been topically self-administering Cannabis Science extracts for Squamous Cell Carcinoma Cancer. Cannabis Science is in a unique position to evaluate the effectiveness of different formulations by working closely with physicians and patients in medical marijuana states where patients can determine the effectiveness of various cannabis-based formulations.

For example, as previously announced, this patient has photo-documented dramatic shrinkage and subsequent disappearance in the cancer tumor. We will release documentation to the public once treatment is completed and has been properly confirmed by clinical biopsy.

Cannabis Science is focused on establishing clinically confirmed data that will lead to standardized products under the Cannabis Science label, thus confirming the numerous anecdotal reports confirming the anti-cancer properties of whole cannabis and cannabinoid extracts.

Cannabis Science is committed to making cannabis-based medicines available to the public as rapidly as possible. The Company is taking multiple approaches to accomplishing this aim in the United States. The science of cannabinoids has exploded over the past decade, laying the scientific foundation for the many medicinal uses of this unique plant. Cannabinoids are a class of biologically active compounds produced by all vertebrates (endocannabinoids) the Cannabis plant (phytocannabinoids), and more recently patentable synthetic compounds produced by chemists. Today’s modern peer-reviewed science supports the many historical uses that were discovered over thousands of years of medicinal use by herbalists.

Cannabis Science, in conjunction with several Colorado-licensed dispensaries and physicians, consults with a number of cancer patients who were seeking to inform themselves of the current peer-reviewed scientific literature, regarding modern and historical use of cannabis preparations for treating cancers so that they can make informed decisions regarding their self-directed, self administered cancer treatment.

The first two Cannabis Science Brand Formulations, Cannabis Science CT-1 and Cannabis Science MT-1 are now available at both Cannabis Therapeutics and Marisol Therapeutics exclusively for Colorado State licensed medical marijuana patients.

Cannabis Science MT-1: Produced by Marisol Therapeutics: A family-owned shop, Marisol Therapeutics was founded to assist medical marijuana patients in obtaining medical marijuana in Colorado. They believe patients have the right to safe, confidential, quality medical marijuana and products. They recommend medical marijuana from their own experience with unrelenting and previously untreatable pain. “We understand, we care, we want you to heal.” Marisal Therapeutics has produced a custom blend of but is derived from their proprietary strains that were developed over 30 years by a Native American Vietnam veteran in order to address his medical needs. Cannabis Science CT-1 has been analyzed and shown to be free of insecticides and molds. The product is produced in soil under organic roof conditions.

ADDRESS: 922 Kimble Drive, Pueblo West, CO 81007

PHONE: 719-547-4000

EMAIL: info@marisolmed.com or http://marisolmed.com/ for more information.

Cannabis Science CT-1: Produced by Cannabis Therapeutics was Colorado’s first dispensary. Working with local law enforcement, state officials, legal experts, medical physicians, and researchers, Cannabis Therapeutics sets a standard of both safety and consistent quality to its members as well as the community at large. Cannabis Therapeutics is a professional medical business that employs all its policies and regulations to ensure the most stringent adherence to the law. Second in importance to legality is implementation of standardizing techniques to ensure both repeatability in dosing and quality of medicine. Cannabis Therapeutics began as an organization built by individuals that did not receive satisfactory relief from conventional therapies. Cannabis Therapeutics has produced a high quality cannabis extract from a custom blend of buds hydroponically grown medical marijuana strains. Cannabis Science CT-1 has been analyzed and shown to be free of insecticides and molds.

ADDRESS: 907 E Fillmore St., Colorado Springs, CO 80907

http://www.cannabistherapeutics.net/ for more information.

About Cannabis Science, Inc.

Cannabis Science, Inc. is at the forefront of pharmaceutical grade medical marijuana research and development. The second formulations will address the needs of patients choosing to use concentrated cannabis extracts to treat their ailments. Eventually, all Americans will have access to a safe and effective FDA approved medicine regardless of which state they live in. To maintain that marijuana is a dangerous, addictive drug with no medical value is scientifically absurd. Cannabis medicines, with no effective lethal dose, are far safer than aspirin, acetaminophen, and most other OTC drugs that kill thousands of Americans every year.

The Company works with world authorities on phytocannabinoid science targeting critical illnesses, and adheres to scientific methodologies to develop, produce and commercialize phytocannabinoid-based pharmaceutical products. In sum, we are dedicated to the creation of cannabis-based medicines, both with and without psychoactive properties, to treat disease and the symptoms of disease, as well as for general health maintenance.

Forward Looking Statements

This Press Release includes forward-looking statements within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Act of 1934. A statement containing works such as “anticipate,” “seek,” intend,” “believe,” “plan,” “estimate,” “expect,” “project,” “plan,” or similar phrases may be deemed “forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. Some or all of the events or results anticipated by these forward-looking statements may not occur. Factors that could cause or contribute to such differences include the future U.S. and global economies, the impact of competition, and the Company’s reliance on existing regulations regarding the use and development of cannabis-based drugs. Cannabis Science, Inc. does not undertake any duty nor does it intend to update the results of these forward-looking statements.

SOURCE: Cannabis Science, Inc.

Clearing the Smoke: Lost Chances to Study Marijuana’s Potential

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Posted 19 Oct 2011 — by James Street
Category Cannabis, Ethics of Science, Finance and Politics of cancer research and treatment, Legal

Cover Image: October 2011 Scientific American Magazine See Inside

Clearing the Smoke: Lost Chances to Study Marijuana’s Potential

Marijuana remains tightly controlled, even though its compounds show promise

By Francie Diep  | Friday, October 14, 2011 | 25

Image: Illustrations by Thomas Fuchs

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Preliminary clinical trials show marijuana might be useful for pain, nausea and weight loss in cancer and HIV/AIDS and for muscle spasms in multiple sclerosis. Medical marijuana studies in the U.S. are dwindling fast, however, as funding for research in California—the only state to support research on the whole cannabis plant—comes to an end this year and federal regulations on obtaining marijuana for study remain tight.

In July the Drug Enforcement Administration denied a petition, first filed in 2002 and supported by the American Medical Association, to change marijuana’s current classification. So marijuana remains in the administration’s most tightly controlled category, Schedule I, defined as drugs that “have a high potential for abuse” and “have no currently accepted medical use in treatment in the U.S.” Many medical cannabis proponents see a catch-22 in the U.S.’s marijuana control. One of the DEA’s reasons for keeping marijuana in Schedule I is that the drug does not have enough clinical trials showing its benefits. Yet the classification may limit research by making marijuana difficult for investigators to obtain.

Even as prospects for whole-plant marijuana research dim, those who study isolated compounds from marijuana—which incorporates more than 400 different types of molecules—have an easier time. The drug’s main active chemical, delta 9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), is already FDA-approved for nausea and weight loss in cancer and HIV/AIDS patients. The Mayo Clinic​ is investigating the compound, trade-named Marinol, as a treatment for irritable bowel syndrome. Researchers at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston are studying Marinol for chronic pain.

Compared with smoked or vaporized marijuana, isolated cannabis compounds are more likely to reach federal approval, experts say. Pharmaceutical companies are more likely to develop individual compounds because they are easier to standardize and patent. The results should be similar to inhaled marijuana, says Mahmoud ElSohly, a marijuana chemistry researcher at the University of Mississippi, whose lab grows the nation’s only research-grade marijuana.

Other investigators say a turn away from whole-plant research would shortchange patients because the many compounds in marijuana work together to produce a better effect than any one compound alone. Inhaling plant material may also provide a faster-acting therapy than taking Marinol by mouth. While ElSohly agrees that other marijuana compounds can enhance THC, he thinks just a few chemicals should re-create most of marijuana’s benefits.

Medical Marijuana Inc. Patent Pending Extraction —- Cannabidiol (CBD) Possible Use In The Anti-Tumor and Anti-Cancer Nutraceutical and Pharmaceutical Industries

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Posted 03 Sep 2011 — by James Street
Category Cannabis, Marijuana

press release

Sept. 2, 2011, 6:00 a.m. EDT

SAN DIEGO, Sep 02, 2011 (BUSINESS WIRE) — Medical Marijuana Inc MJNA 0.00% is pleased to announce that studies have proven Cannabidiol (CBD) as an Anti-Tumor and Anti-Cancer agent. Currently Medical Marijuana Inc through CannaBANK has a patent pending on an extraction method from Cannabis and Hemp allowing Cannabidiol (CBD) to be isolated in its pure form. Research shows $200 billion a year is spent to treat Tumors and Cancer. The company is planning on expanding rapidly by allowing a heavily marketed nutraceutical or pharmaceutical company the use of its extraction technology through exclusive license agreements.

“Many qualified companies have shown great interest, and it won’t be long until we license the right one.” said a Medical Marijuana Inc spokesperson.

Given the vast number of nutraceutical and pharmaceutical companies across the country, it’s no doubt that CBD can be easily formulated into an array of already heavily marketed products, quickly becoming a major component of health and wellness in the near future.

Jared Berry, a CannaBANK executive stated. “Education is the key! The evidence is already overwhelming. Just look at what companies like GW Pharmaceutical’s is accomplishing with Sativex or simply google Cannabidiol (CBD) and the studies and research dedicated to this what’s called a ‘nutritional necessity’ is overwhelmingly obvious.”

List of public studies on Cannabidiol as an Anti-Tumor and Anti-Cancer agent can be found within the following links:

Study01

Study02

Study03

Study04

Study05

Study06

Clinical Trials

Study Search

ABOUT MEDICAL MARIJUANA INC MJNA 0.00%

Our mission is to be the world’s premier cannabis and hemp industry innovators, leveraging our team of professionals to source, evaluate, invest in and purchase value-added sustainable companies, while allowing them to keep their integrity and entrepreneurial spirit. We strive to create awareness within our industry, pay homage to the visionaries and activists of the past and present, and provide the platform from which the industry can emerge into a global sustainable economy for all. Medical Marijuana Inc recognizes the vast and unequaled opportunities that exist in the rapidly expanding hemp and medical marijuana industries. The scientific recognition of cannabis has brought legalized marijuana use to the forefront of mainstream discussion, thus opening the door for safe and lucrative investment opportunities.

www.medicalmarijuanainc.com

FORWARD-LOOKING DISCLAIMER

This press release may contain certain forward-looking statements and information, as defined within the meaning of Section 27A of the Securities Act of 1933 and Section 21E of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and is subject to the Safe Harbor created by those sections. This material contains statements about expected future events and/or financial results that are forward-looking in nature and subject to risks and uncertainties. Such forward-looking statements by definition involve risks, uncertainties and other factors, which may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of Medical Marijuana Inc to be materially different from the statements made herein.

FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION (FDA) DISCLOSURE

These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration, products and statements are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

SOURCE: Medical Marijuana Inc.

        Medical Marijuana Inc.
        Michelle Sides
        888-OTC-MJNA (888-682-6562)
        InvestorRelations@MedicalMarijuanaInc.com

Cannabis Oil Fights Cancer

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Posted 25 Jul 2011 — by James Street
Category Cannabis

Oil extracted from the marijuana plant has been shown to have extraordinary cancer-fighting properties.

A number of recent studies have confirmed the cancer-fighting, tumor-shrinking value of medical marijuana.

Although the first study to demonstrate that cannabis has anti-carcinogenic properties was done  back in 1974 by the U.S. National Institute of Health, more recent studies, which began abroad in 1999, have shown that cannabis can effectively and safely treat many forms of cancer.

Since 1999, there have now been a number of studies that clearly demonstrate that cannabis has the ability to effectively shrink tumors, kill cancer cells, and safely treat many aggressive forms of cancer, including brain, breast, skin, prostate, and lung cancer.

However, due to the political controversy that surrounds medical marijuana, some physicians still remain unaware of these valuable studies, and mistakenly believe the misguided government reports that cannabis actually causes cancer. In some cases, it may be important to educate your doctor about the important research discussed in this column.

A study done at UCLA in 2006 showed that not only does smoking marijuana not cause lung cancer, as had been previously thought, but that smoking cannabis actually protects the lungs from cancer. The study followed four groups of subjects: nonsmokers, cannabis-only smokers, tobacco-only smokers, and cannabis and tobacco smokers.

The results showed that nonsmokers and cannabis-only smokers had the same amount of lung cancer, and that tobacco-only smokers had the highest rate of lung cancer. Those subjects that smoked both cannabis and tobacco had significantly less lung cancer than those who just smoked tobacco. In other words, smoking cannabis actually had a protective effect on the tobacco smokers’ lungs.

Recent talks by medical marijuana expert Valerie Corral at the Santa Cruz Wo/Men’s Alliance for Medical Marijuana (WAMM) meetings have focused on the valuable medical properties of highly-refined, therapeutic cannabis oil, which may be the most powerful cancer-fighting agent that has been developed from the cannabis plant to date.

Cannabis oil, also commonly known as “golden oil” or “honey oil,” is a concentrated extract from the cannabis plant that is highly refined and chemically standardized, so that the amount of bioactive components (known as “cannabinoids”) in the oil are of a consistent strength. The clear-golden oil is a resinous matrix of cannabinoids, which is similar to dark-colored hash oil, only more distilled and much more potent.

Rick Simpson, founder of Phoenix Tears, an organization which studies and promotes the medical use of cannabis oil, has become a leading spokesperson for the medicinal value of cannabis oil, after effectively treating himself with the oil to help heal from a serious head injury in 1997. For years, Simpson has been supplying the valuable oil to medical marijuana patients free of charge. According to Simpson, many of the cancer patients who have used his oil were cured or vastly improved, and that many other illnesses have been effectively treated with the oil as well.

Although the medical establishment and the mainstream media have largely ignored the evidence that cannabis oil has powerful cancer-fighting properties, it appears that this silence is beginning to end as more and more people are discovering the truth about this forbidden medicine.

For example, according to ABC News, a father in Montana, Mike Hyde, claims that cannabis oil helped to cure his two-year-old son of a stage 4, malignant brain tumor on his optic nerve. Hyde said that he secretly slipped cannabis oil into his son Cash’s feeding tube out of desperation, after the boy’s chemotherapy treatments were making him too sick to eat. According to ABC News, Cash, who is now 3 years old, has made “a miraculous recovery.”

Spanish researcher Manuel Guzman has done a whole series of studies since 1999 demonstrating the efficacy of cannabinoids to fight cancer. Studies have demonstrated that (isolated chemical components of cannabis), such as THC (tetrahydrocannibinal) and CBD (cannabidiol), can  shrink tumors, and some reports suggest that the whole plant extracts are more effective than the isolated cannabinoids.

There is evidence that not only do some cannabinoids kill cancer cells, they cause healthy new cell growth in the brain–a process known as “neurogenesis”–and that the cannabinoids may have a protective effect on the nervous system as well.

WAMM is currently working with physicians and biochemists to develop the use of this enchanted oil further. Cannabis oil is extremely nontoxic, and unlike every pharmaceutical drug that is approved to treat cancer, there are no serious health risks associated with using it. In all of human history, no one has ever died from a cannabis overdose. It is arguably the safest, therapeutically-active drug known.

Cannabis oil can be vaporized, orally ingested with other oils, or used topically. Oral ingestion will produce the strongest effects, and would likely be the most effective for serious medical conditions.

And yes, the oil is also quite psychoactive. It can make you very high, and it can even bring on a full-blown psychedelic experience.  I think that this (often-sought and sometimes-criticized) aspect of the healing herb’s effects should not be disregarded, trivialized, ridiculed, or (Heaven forbid) removed. I suspect that that the well-known mental effects–an improved mood and transcendent perspective–are vital aspects of the healing mind/body magic that cannabis can provide.

To find out more about cannabis oil see: http://phoenixtears.ca/

To find out more about WAMM see: www.wamm.org

If you enjoy my column, and want to learn more about psychedelic and cannabis culture, “like” my Facebook page and follow me on Twitter.

Read previous Catch the Buzz columns here.

 

First federal agency to acknowledge medical marijuana removes anti-tumor information from database

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Posted 30 Mar 2011 — by James Street
Category Cannabis, Finance and Politics of cancer research and treatment
By Kyle Daly | 03.29.11 | 1:29 pm

Last week, The American Independent was first to report that the National Cancer Institute (NCI) had added a section on medical marijuana to its treatment database, making it the first federal agency to formally recognize marijuana’s medicinal properties. Now, NCI has altered the page, removing any mention of the evidence that marijuana can diminish and even reverse tumor growth.

In an edit that appeared Monday afternoon, NCI replaced a sentence about marijuana’s direct anti-tumor effect with one stating that it is prescribed mainly to battle nausea, pain and insomnia among cancer patients. The original passage, which was published on March 17, read:

The potential benefits of medicinal Cannabis for people living with cancer include antiemetic effects, appetite stimulation, pain relief, and improved sleep. In the practice of integrative oncology, the health care provider may recommend medicinal Cannabis not only for symptom management but also for its possible direct antitumor effect.

The amended version reads:

The potential benefits of medicinal Cannabis for people living with cancer include antiemetic effects, appetite stimulation, pain relief, and improved sleep. Though no relevant surveys of practice patterns exist, it appears that physicians caring for cancer patients who prescribe medicinal Cannabis predominantly do so for symptom management.

In its overview of the drug, NCI still acknowledges the following:

  • Cannabis has been used for medicinal purposes for thousands of years prior to its current status as an illegal substance.
  • Chemical components of Cannabis, called cannabinoids, activate specific receptors found throughout the body to produce pharmacologic effects, particularly in the central nervous system and the immune system.
  • Cannabinoids may have benefits in the treatment of cancer-related side effects.

The American Independent is awaiting reply from NCI on the reasons for the change. An image of the page as it appeared prior to Monday’s edit can be seen here.

Trying to connect with pot’s cancer-fighting properties

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Posted 20 Mar 2011 — by James Street
Category Cannabis, Natural Therapies

By Dana M. Nichols
March 20, 2011
Record Staff Writer

SAN ANDREAS – Two of the major compounds in marijuana – THC and CBD – have cancer-fighting properties, according to scientists researching them.

While THC and the biological mechanisms it uses are well documented, there are still mysteries surrounding the lesser-known chemical CBD.

Clinical trials prove that it eases pain and inflammation. Sean McAllister, a scientist at California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute in San Francisco, and his research associates have used the compound to shrink tumors.

But it does not fit well in the already discovered human receptors that fit THC, and scientists have not yet traced the mechanisms that allow it to modulate some of the same systems, McAllister said.

“There is not a lot of data on it,” McAllister said.

Right now, McAllister is looking at how CBD attacks a gene called Id-1 that is key to the functioning of cancerous cells.

“If cancer cells adopt this protein, it allows them to metastasize,” McAllister said. “The hypothesis would be that if you can knock this gene down or inhibit it, then the cancer won’t metastasize.”

One big advantage to both chemicals is that they are virtually non-toxic, unlike many cancer drugs.

“There is no way to actually kill yourself with the natural compounds,” McAllister said. Overdoses of the kind that kill opiate users are impossible with cannabis because they interact with different receptors.

“There are no cannabinoid receptors on the brain stem which controls breathing,” McAllister said. “It is quite a safe compound actually.”

Contact reporter Dana M. Nichols at (209) 607-1361 or dnichols@recordnet.com. Visit his blog at recordnet.com/calaverasblog.

What is the truth about medical marijuana?

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Posted 26 Nov 2010 — by James Street
Category Alternative Therapies, Cannabis, Drug Testing, Drugs, Legal, Lung Metastases, Metastases

Dr. Donald Tashkin

Stuart Richland

Department of Justice

The Marijuana Cancer Cure Cult

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Posted 25 Nov 2010 — by James Street
Category Cannabis

AlterNet

By Bruce Mirken, AlterNet
Posted on January 26, 2010, Printed on November 25, 2010

http://www.alternet.org/story/145159/

In his 1971 State of the Union speech, President Richard Nixon declared war on cancer, prompting passage of the National Cancer Act, aimed at making the “conquest of cancer a national crusade.” Just four years later, scientists from the National Cancer Institute published a study demonstrating that a group of compounds taken from a common, widely cultivated plant shrank lung tumors that had been implanted in mice, extending their survival.

In a world that made sense, this plant and the anticancer drugs it produced would have been rushed into further testing, and we’d have known in a few years whether they had potential as treatments for human cancers. Instead, research proceeded at a glacial pace, with almost no further progress till the 1990s. Since then, vast quantities of lab and animal data have confirmed those early findings, but studies of these plant compounds in actual human beings with cancer remain nearly nonexistent.

What got in the way was Nixon’s other war, the “war on drugs.” The plant in question was cannabis sativa — marijuana — public enemy number one in that other war, and discovering that marijuana had beneficial properties was the last thing the U.S. government wanted to do.

Dr. Manuel Guzman of Complutense University in Madrid, lead author of the only human study yet published of a cannabinoid as cancer treatment, puts it slightly more diplomatically. The lack of immediate followup to those early reports “remains a mystery to me,” he says. Guzman cites a number of obstacles to human trials, including the fact that cannabinoids are “still seen by many doctors and regulatory agencies as drugs of abuse,” as well as “lots of paperwork” and a lack of commercial interest in natural compounds that can’t be patented.

Complicating things further, the relative vacuum created by the lack of human studies and the hostility of the U.S. government to the whole question of marijuana’s beneficial effects has left the field wide open for zealots who promote cannabis as a “cure” for cancer as if it were already a proven fact rather than a possibility in desperate need of serious study.

A Protective Effect?

Instead of researching cannabinoids as anticancer drugs, federal officials have continued to falsely imply that marijuana causes lung cancer. For example, a 2002 brochure for parents, “Talk to Your Child About Marijuana,” still available on the Office of National Drug Control Policy Web site, advises, “Smoking marijuana is as least as bad as smoking cigarettes.”

In fact, the largest, most well-controlled studies have consistently failed to find an increased risk of lung cancer or other typically tobacco-related cancers among marijuana smokers. These include a 65,000-patient 1997 study conducted at Kaiser Permanente in Oakland, California and a 2006 case-control study (in which patients with cancer were matched with similar patients without cancer to compare risk factors) from the UCLA lab of Dr. Donald Tashkin, one of the world’s leading experts on the pulmonary effects of drugs.

In the UCLA study, there was a consistent trend — albeit short of statistical significance — toward lower cancer risk among even the heaviest marijuana smokers. This was a surprise to some, given that marijuana smoke contains many of the same carcinogenic compounds as tobacco smoke. The researchers wrote:

Although purely speculative, it is possible that such inverse associations may reflect a protective effect of marijuana. There is recent evidence from cell culture systems and animal models that 9-tetrahydrocannabinol, the principal psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, and other cannabinoids may inhibit the growth of some tumors by modulating key signaling pathways leading to growth arrest and cell death, as well as by inhibiting tumor angiogenesis. These antitumoral associations have been observed for several types of malignancies including brain, prostate, thyroid, lung, and breast.

In an October 2003 review in the journal Nature Reviews: Cancer, Guzman detailed the extensive body of test-tube and animal research showing that cannabinoids inhibit tumors of the lung, uterus, skin, breast, prostate and brain (including gliomas, the type of tumor that killed Sen. Edward Kennedy). He also noted: “Cannabinoids have favorable drug-safety profiles and do not produce the generalized toxic effects of conventional chemotherapies. Cannabinoids are selective antitumor compounds, as they can kill tumor cells without affecting their non-transformed counterparts.”

Such selectivity is exactly what you want in an anticancer drug. The reason chemotherapy can be so awful is that most chemo drugs aren’t selective enough; they kill cancer cells, but are also toxic to healthy cells, leading to vomiting, hair loss and other miseries.

The ‘Cure’?

Nearly all of the evidence about cannabinoids as anticancer drugs comes from lab studies using cell cultures or animals with experimentally implanted tumors. The annals of medical research are littered with drugs that looked promising in the lab but didn’t work in people. Still, that doesn’t stop some enthusiasts from touting cannabis as a cure for cancer, sometimes making even open-minded scientists and medical marijuana advocates nervous.

When I worked at the Marijuana Policy Project, we received several impassioned emails imploring us to tell Sen. Kennedy that cannabis could cure his brain tumor. Others touted Canadian Rick Simpson’s “Healing Hemp Oil” Web site, Phoenix Tears.

In a series of videos, letters and other materials on the site, Simpson — who has had repeated run-ins with law enforcement over his cannabis-related activities and was, according to a Dec. 14 posting, staying in Europe indefinitely to avoid arrest — promotes what he calls “hemp oil” as a “simple herbal cure for cancer. I have used these extracts to cure three areas of skin cancer on my own body, also, I have cured cancers for others.” Simpson also touts hemp oil for pain and a variety of other conditions.

The site includes video and written instructions for making the preparation. The procedure involves using a solvent such as naphtha or isopropyl alcohol to extract the THC from marijuana, then boiling off the solvent using a rice cooker to leave a thick oil with a high THC concentration.

Simpson warns readers away from conventional cancer treatments: “Hemp oil has a very high success rate in the treatment of cancer, unfortunately many people who come to me have been badly damaged by the medical system with their chemo and radiation etc. The damage such treatments cause have a lasting effect and people who have suffered the effects of such treatments are the hardest to cure.”

He offers numerous stories and testimonials describing seemingly hopeless cancers cured by hemp oil, but no controlled, scientific experiments.

And critics find plenty to worry about. First, they note, despite warnings and disclaimers on the site, the procedure for making the medicine is risky. Mitch Earleywine, author of Understanding Marijuana and a professor of psychology at the State University of New York at Albany, calls the do-it-yourself procedure “outrageously dangerous. Even if you don’t light yourself on fire, you may end up with leftover solvent that would slowly poison the healthiest of us.”

There’s a reason scientists don’t base conclusions on anecdotes, Earleywine explains. “Cancer remits spontaneously sometimes, which is a good thing. Unfortunately, it leads to superstitious conditioning so people think that whatever they did last must be the source of the cure. Especially with some cancers, where a great many people die, all the spontaneous recoveries associated with hemp oil get remembered while all those that don’t either get forgotten or attributed to the horrors of the disease.”

Earleywine stresses that he is not dismissing the possibility that some form of cannabis might be an effective cancer treatment. “THC killing tumors is actually true,” he says, “but we’re not at the human stage [of research].”

Simpson is dismissive of critics who cite the lack of human studies. “How are you going to do controlled studies when it is illegal in Canada to do so?” he said in an emailed response to questions.

In fact, researcher Mark Ware of McGill University in Montreal has done clinical trials of medical cannabis in Canada, including a study comparing several different cannabis preparations in use by chronic pain patients.

Simpson calls the idea of spontaneous cancer remissions “nonsense.” As for possible risks of his preparation, he argues, “It is irresponsible to give people liver toxic chemicals, chemotherapy and radiation, so if they are talking about irresponsible why do not look at their own medical system? It is not irresponsible to save peoples lives with a harmless natural, non-addictive medicine from nature. If you watch our documentary, you will see that I use a simple water purification process to get rid of solvent residue. I have been ingesting oil for over eight years and I have supplied this oil to thousands of people who also have experienced no problems with solvent residue.”

While cautious about reports that are “solely anecdotal,” Paul Armentano, deputy director and resident science wonk at the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, lays blame for the lack of proper data at the foot of prohibition. “It is a shame that lone individuals must try and engage in the work that the medical establishment should be undertaking, yet have turned a blind eye to,” he says. “Unfortunately, what we have is speculation rather than hard science, and we only have the politicization of cannabis to blame.”

The Long and Winding Research Road

The one human study of a cannabinoid cancer treatment published thus far was conducted by Dr. Guzman and colleagues and published online in June 2006 by the British Journal of Cancer. The scientists infused a THC solution directly into the tumors of nine patients with glioblastoma multiforme, a deadly form of brain cancer, for whom standard treatments had failed. This small pilot study wasn’t aimed at proving that THC worked, simply that it was safe to administer to these otherwise doomed patients .

It proved entirely safe, with no negative effects attributed to the THC and no “overt psychoactive effects.” And while there were no miracle cures, there were glimmers of possible efficacy. In one patient with an “extremely aggressive” cancer, tumor growth was curbed for nine weeks. In another, symptoms improved, although tumor growth was not stopped. And in some cases, lab tests with cells taken from tumor biopsies showed that THC decreased the number of viable cancer cells.

Guzman and colleagues noted that THC may not be the best cannabinoid to use as a cancer treatment, as others have been shown more potent in lab tests. And while the direct infusion technique delivered a high THC concentration to specific locations, it may not have reached all parts of these large tumors.

Still, the results were positive enough that the researchers urged further tests, including studies of cannabinoids in combination with other cancer drugs. Guzman is hoping to do more studies, but notes that with all the bureaucratic, procedural and financial hurdles, “The way ahead is long and winding.”

But if more human studies aren’t happening yet, lab work continues to produce intriguing results. Just this month, the journal Molecular Cancer Therapeutics published a new study providing the first evidence that combination cannabinoid therapy is more potent than using THC or other cannabinoids as single agents.

Sean McAllister and colleagues from the California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute in San Francisco tested THC, cannabidiol (CBD) and both drugs combined on human glioblastoma cell lines. In two of the three cell lines tested, the THC/CBD combination proved the most potent — more so than would be expected by just adding the anticancer effects of the two drugs together, suggesting a synergistic action.

“Combinations, compared to individual drug treatments with specific cannabinoid-based compounds, may represent an improvement for the treatment of patients with glioblastoma and perhaps additional cancers,” McAllister says. “It is also possible that other constituents of Cannabis sativa which are not structurally related to cannabinoids could improve antitumor activity when combined.”

That leads to an obvious question: Why not use the whole plant — whether smoked, vaporized, or in some sort of extract like Simpson’s? “In regard to brain cancer, it is highly unlikely that effective concentrations of either Δ9-THC or CBD could be reached by smoking cannabis,” McAllister says. “In regard to additional cancers, I feel defined formulations and dosing will be needed in order to effectively treat patients.”

McAllister says his team is moving toward “clinical trials in both breast and brain cancer, but it is a slow process.” The next step, he says, will be to try to replicate his test-tube results in animals. “No agency in the U.S. would allow me to move forward to clinical trials without some form of proof of concept data in a relevant preclinical in vivo model.”

That may be an accurate assessment, but Armentano thinks it’s too cautious “given the long established safety of cannabinoids, including THC which is already a legal pharmaceutical, and CBD, which is non-psychoactive, is not a central nervous system depressant and has no risk of overdose.”

Not only is there abundant evidence that cannabinoids kill cancer cells, Armentano says, “Investigators now even understand the mechanism of action; in other words, they know how and why cannabinoids kill cancerous cells and halt the spread of malignant tumors.”

The question of whether these cannabis compounds can cure cancer in people, he says, “ought to have been already answered decades ago.”

Bruce Mirken is a San Francisco-based writer and media consultant who served as director of communications for the Marijuana Policy Project from 2001 to

2009.

© 2010 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.
View this story online at: http://www.alternet.org/story/145159/