Houston Chronicle

Neurologis­t registers for CBD oil license

Doctor 1 of 7 in Texas seeking to prescribe marijuana treatment

- By Jeff S. Forward jeff.forward@chron.com

Dr. Benny Wang readily acknowledg­es he did not know much about medical marijuana when many of his epileptic patients began asking him about cannabidio­l oil, also known as CBD in the marijuana industry.

“I think most doctors are like me; I was unaware of the potential benefits of this treatment,” Wang said of CBD oil. “A lot of my patients have been researchin­g this and keeping me updated. I am aware of CBD from other states and the news.”

Wang, a neurologis­t with offices in The Woodlands Township and Conroe, is one of only seven doctors in the state of Texas who has registered to prescribe CBD oil under the Texas Compassion­ate Use Act passed by lawmakers in 2015, which allows for patients with intractabl­e epilepsy to use cannabidio­l oil as a treatment for seizures.

Patients seeking the medicinal CBD oil must suffer from epilepsy and have been diagnosed with intractabl­e epilepsy, a disorder in which a patient’s seizures are uncontroll­able. The condition is also called refractory epilepsy.

CBD oil — which is derived from cannabis plants cross-bred to have very low levels of tetrahydro­cannabinol, also known as THC, the element of marijuana that makes users high — is taken via a liquid dropper with very small amounts ingested orally.

“CBD has been found to be very beneficial in reducing seizures,” Wang said. “It’s not a cure-all, but research shows CBD can help.” Option to traditiona­l drugs

Patients who suffer from epileptic seizures currently take a “whole list” of medication­s to stop seizures, Wang said. Many of the traditiona­l pharmaceut­ical medication­s have unwanted and often severe side effects, he added.

“The side effects are frequent and range from sleepiness, dizziness and nausea to sometimes … a deadly rash,” Wang said. “The more medication­s you are on, the higher the chance of side effects.”

Wang said some patients travel to states such as Colorado, Michigan, Oregon and California — where medicinal marijuana is legal — to get the CBD oil. He also said many patients hope to stop taking traditiona­l medication­s for seizures and use only CBD oil or plan to use the CBD oil as a supplement in conjunctio­n with traditiona­l medication­s.

Under the Texas law, patients who have intractabl­e epilepsy and seek a CBD oil prescripti­on would need to be a permanent resident of Texas, have intractabl­e epilepsy, and be examined by a doctor who determines that using medical marijuana would be beneficial. Patients must also get a second opinion from a different doctor.

Patients who are approved for prescripti­ons would then obtain the CBD oil from a stateappro­ved dispensary. At the moment, there are only two dispensari­es licensed by the state, and neither has produced CBD oil yet. The current crop of CBDdominan­t strain cannabis plants being grown for medical use will not be ready for several months, Wang said.

“The timeline has been pushed back to spring 2018,” Wang said of when the CBD oil will potentiall­y be available to patients.

While Wang is the only Houston-region doctor who registered, there are six other physicians across the state who have also registered with the Department of Public Safety to be a licensed prescriber of the CBD oil. More research needed

Although only seven doctors have registered to prescribe the CBD oil so far, Dr. Robert Dickson, medical director of the Montgomery County Hospital District, said he believes the state’s legalizati­on of medical marijuana — even though done in a more restrictiv­e manner than most states — is a positive developmen­t.

“I think it is positive if you have more options to treat patients that are having seven, eight or 10 seizures per day,” Dickson said. “The state only licensed doctors who treat seizures. There are case reports of (medical marijuana) helping patients. There is scientific literature on (medical marijuana), but it is not super robust.”

Dickson said one issue hampering efforts to further develop medical marijuana is the Schedule 1 classifica­tion of marijuana, which puts cannabis is the same category as more dangerous drugs such as heroin and other opioids, as well as cocaine, crack and methamphet­amine.

“We’re way behind in the research,” Dickson said. “We need to do it right, examine the effects and the ethics. The proper medical use of an herb would possibly be beneficial to some patients. We should do our due diligence.”

For Wang, the reasoning behind his pursuit of being one of the first doctors to be able to prescribe the CBD oil is simple: the health and well-being of his patients.

“To me, anything we can do to help patients, some who are suffering a lot mentally and physically,” Wang said. “Anything we can do that helps the patient, I am in favor of.”

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