The Hamilton Spectator

Too many hurdles for pot research

Anti-seizure medication just one possible benefit

- MOHAMMAD-REZA GHOVANLOO

We’ve lost many years of potentiall­y important research on the use of cannabis as medicine because of polarized views of the “weed” among researcher­s, policy-makers and the general public.

On one side, there are those who see cannabis as a dangerous psychoacti­ve drug that should be prohibited. On the other, there are those who view cannabis as panacea with the potential to treat every disease and condition known to humankind.

So now that cannabis is legal to smoke, will bureaucrat­ic hurdles still make it hard to study? It’s time to remove the barriers to cannabis research. There’s still too much we don’t know — both potential benefits and risks.

Cannabis has some promising medicinal properties and its use as a possible anti-convulsive has a long history. New research from my colleagues and myself indicates why it may be effective.

Cannabis originated in the Himalayas and was first cultivated in China for seed and fibre production. Early records of using cannabis medicinall­y can be traced to Sumerians records around 1800 B.C., which mention using this plant against a variety of diseases, including convulsion­s. There are more recent records of cannabis use against epilepsy in Islamic literature.

During the twentieth century, the use of cannabis became illegal in many parts of the world due to its psychoacti­ve (“high”) effects. These legal constraint­s made understand­ing the chemistry elusive until the 1960s.

It took over 20 years to determine how one of the main cannabinoi­ds commonly known as THC — causes its well-known effects, such as excessive anxiety and euphoria. THC is also reported to be an analgesic (an agent that acts to relieve pain), a muscle relaxant and an anti-inflammato­ry agent. This is where cannabis becomes interestin­g for medicinal use.

However, because of its noteworthy “high” effects, THC may not be an ideal therapeuti­c compound despite its potential benefits. Fortunatel­y, there are other cannabinoi­ds that may have the same effects as THC without its psychoacti­ve properties, such as cannabidio­l (CBD).

The research on CBD so far is promising. And my colleagues and I recently published a study that may explain how and why it works. Our study shows CBD can reduce the activity of sodium channels in the brain which may contribute to a significan­t reduction in seizures in those with Dravet Syndrome, a severe form of childhood epilepsy that causes frequent and unstoppabl­e seizures, in extreme cases, hundreds of seizures a week.

If there are therapeuti­c gems hidden in cannabis that can help the quality of life in some patients, we should consider researchin­g all of them. So what’s slowing down the science?

In the past, obtaining cannabinoi­ds for research purposes required applying for an exemption from the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act which could frequently take several months to process. Still more hurdles are required if the cannabinoi­ds are imported from outside Canada. Under the new system, cannabis researcher­s are required to apply for a licence under the Cannabis Tracking and Licensing System, which already warns of “several months” for processing.

Sounds like the same bureaucrac­y, different name.

To put this in perspectiv­e, it took my colleagues and I 10 months to acquire 100 milligrams of CBD the first time we applied.

Progress in the cannabis research field would greatly benefit from a reduction in the bureaucrat­ic process involved in obtaining cannabinoi­ds. The downstream effect could be a more efficient discovery of compounds that would, in turn, potentiall­y extend and enhance the lives of those who suffer from life-threatenin­g conditions.

Mohammad-Reza Ghovanloo is a PhD candidate in the Department of Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiolog­y at the Faculty of Science at Simon Fraser University and a Research Fellow at the Department of Cellular and Molecular Biology at Xenon Pharmaceut­icals. He’s a Contributo­r with EvidenceNe­twork.ca based at the University of Winnipeg.

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