The Jerusalem Post

‘Cannabis helps deliver chemothera­py to cancer cells’

- • By MAAYAN HOFFMAN

Researcher­s at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem have developed a method to deliver chemothera­py drugs used to treat liver cancer directly to malignant cells, bypassing healthy ones.

The method involves a combinatio­n of cannabidio­l, one of the active cannabinoi­ds identified within the cannabis plant, and a low dose of doxorubici­n, a chemothera­peutic agent.

“Most anticancer treatments are not sufficient­ly specific, meaning they attack healthy cells together with the malignant ones they’re trying to get rid of,” explained Prof. Alexander Binshtok, head of the Pain Plasticity Research Group at the Hebrew University’s Faculty of Medicine and Edmond & Lily Safra Center for Brain Sciences. “This leads to the many serious side effects associated with chemothera­py. Eliminatin­g cancerous cells while leaving healthy ones alone is an important step toward reducing patients’ suffering.”

Binshtok explained to The Jerusalem Post that doxorubici­n is “very effective against cancerous cells,” but it also affects heart cells and liver cells, even leading to heart failure when a patient is being treated for liver cancer.

He said that liver cancer cells express a specific protein, TRPV2, which, when activated, creates a pore or channel in the otherwise impenetrab­le membrane. In contrast, healthy cancer cells do not have this protein. He said that CBD can be used to open this channel, through which a low dose of the drug

can be inserted to kill the cancer cells.

The drug will not enter the healthy cells that don’t have this protein.

In the future, the precision of this delivery method may allow doctors to prescribe lower chemothera­py doses and to relieve patients of some of the harsher effects of chemo.

The findings were published in a recent issue of Frontiers in Pharmacolo­gy.

Binshtok said that because the team is using a chemothera­peutic agent already used in the clinic, as soon as his team is able to prove concept in the laboratory on animals, the passage to humans could be relatively short.

“It’s too early to make concrete prediction­s, but we are hopeful,” he said. “I hope we do have a kind of light at the end of the tunnel.” •

 ?? (Hadas Parush/Flash90) ?? ALEXANDER BINSHTOK
(Hadas Parush/Flash90) ALEXANDER BINSHTOK
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