Daily Mirror

Parkinson’s sufferers ‘to get relief in’ cannabis pill

Clinical trial covers 145,000 patients

- BY AMY-CLARE MARTIN amyclare.martin@mirror.co.uk @AmyClareMa­rtin

A MAJOR clinical trial will probe whether a cannabis-based medicine can relieve debilitati­ng symptoms in Parkinson’s sufferers.

The £1.2million study of cannabidio­l (CBD) starting next year covers 145,000 patients and will focus on the hallucinat­ions and delusions that hit up to 60% of cases.

The move comes after laws on cannabis-based medicines were relaxed last year, making them available on prescripti­on for conditions including epilepsy and multiple sclerosis.

Low-level concentrat­ions of CBD oil – which lacks the psychoacti­ve element of cannabis – are available from health food shops too. But CBD is not available on prescripti­on for Parkinson’s.

Parkinson’s sufferer Paula Scurfield has had hallucinat­ions and started buying CBD oil from high street chain Holland & Barrett. The 71-year-old, from Beckenham, South London, said patients are “desperate” and willing to try anything. She added: “I think this clinical trial is important.

“The trouble is people are doing what I am and taking unregulate­d medicines. Or there’s people who may well get cannabis from a dealer or other unregulate­d sources.”

The trial will be led by Parkinson’s UK and King’s College London.

Dr Arthur Roach of Parkinson’s UK said: “There are many unanswered questions about the value of CBD for Parkinson’s but this will help determine whether it can help with hallucinat­ions and delusions.”

Lead researcher Professor Sagnik Bhattachar­ya added: “We hope this will progress to large-scale trials – the final step towards becoming a new treatment that will improve the lives of people with Parkinson’s.” HOPES Paula Scurfield

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