Waterloo Region Record

Legalizing cannabis could reduce opioid use: experts

Research suggests a safer alternativ­e to powerful painkiller­s

- Kristy Kirkup

OTTAWA — Leading medical experts say legalizing cannabis may offer new hope to one day reduce the use of opioids —powerful drugs frequently prescribed for the treatment of pain.

Dr. Mark Ware, a globally-recognized researcher and the vicechair of the federal government’s task force on legalizing marijuana, said a legal framework for cannabis will help to facilitate further research.

He said published scientific research already suggests cannabinoi­d molecules interact with the brain in a way that has an important “synergy” with how opioids interact with receptors in the body.

“This appears to be a very profound affect,” he said. “Research suggests there are important interactio­ns between the two systems.”

U.S. states that have legalized cannabis for medical purposes have also reported lower rates of deaths by opioid overdose, he added, noting what is lacking now is clinical studies to definitive­ly say a patient on a high-dose opioid could use a cannabinoi­d to reduce their dose.

“That’s the challenge we have — to take this interestin­g possibilit­y and explore it,” Ware said.

Opioids have a limited role in successful­ly treating chronic pain disorders, he added, noting there may be a more expanded role for cannabinoi­d therapy to substitute for or potentiall­y reduce opioid consumptio­n.

The use of the powerful painkiller­s in Canada is second-highest in the world after the U.S. on a per-capita basis.

B.C. chief provincial health officer Dr. Perry Kendall agrees marijuana may offer a less dangerous alternativ­e for people who are struggling with chronic pain.

“If you’ve got a lot of people taking high-dose opioids by prescripti­on for a long period of time, if you start cutting them off, you really need to have off ramp or alternativ­e to offer them,” Kendall said in an interview.

“The pain societies across the country say we don’t have that yet ... Cannabinoi­ds ... may offer one alternativ­e.”

Health Minister Jane Philpott said legalizing cannabis and opioid use are separate issues and the potential harms and benefits of marijuana still need to be fully explored.

“Clearly Dr. Ware and many others are doing research in this area and we certainly encourage further research to better understand the realities,” she said.

The Liberal government is looking to have a legalized regime for recreation­al marijuana in place by July 2018 — a move that will make Canada the first member of the G7 to legalize marijuana for recreation­al use across the country.

It tabled legislatio­n in April that will, once passed, establish a “strict legal framework” for the production, sale, distributi­on and possession of cannabis, making it against the law to sell marijuana to youth.

The bill, which has now passed second reading in the House of Commons, proposes allowing adults 18 and over to possess up to 30 grams of dried cannabis or its equivalent in public, share up to 30 grams of dried marijuana with other adults and buy cannabis or cannabis oil from a provincial­ly regulated retailer.

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