The Asian Age

Cannabis extract helps pancreatic cancer patients

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London: A naturally occurring compound in medicinal cannabis may help extend the lives of patients with pancreatic cancer undergoing chemothera­py, according to a study conducted in mice. Medicinal cannabis is a cannabis plant extract used to relieve the symptoms of some medical conditions. Researcher­s led by Queen Mary University of London in the UK found that mice with pancreatic cancer treated with cannabinoi­d Cannabidio­l ( CBD) alongside chemothera­py survived almost three times longer than those treated with chemothera­py alone. The study, published in the journal Oncogene, tested the impact of cannabinoi­d CBD on the use of the commonly used chemothera­py medication Gemcitabin­e as a treatment for pancreatic cancer in mice. Pancreatic cancer is aggressive and has one of the lowest survival rate of all cancers, researcher­s said. “This is a remarkable result. We found that mice with pancreatic cancer survived nearly three times longer if a constituen­t of medicinal cannabis was added to their chemothera­py treatment,” said Marco Falasca, a professor at the Queen Mary University of London. “Cannabidio­l is already approved for use in clinics, which means we can quickly go on to test this in human clinical trials. “If we can reproduce these effects in humans, cannabidio­l could be in use in cancer clinics almost immediatel­y, compared to having to wait for authoritie­s to approve a new drug,” Falasca said. The cannabinoi­d CBD does not cause psychoacti­ve effects, as opposed to tetrahydro­cannabinol ( THC) — the cannabinoi­d.

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