The Maui News - Weekender

Medical cannabis company works to stay ahead of curve

New products come amid pandemic, uptick in medical cannabis registrati­ons statewide

- By KEHAULANI CERIZO Staff Writer

KULA — Maui Grown Therapies believes they have just the thing for managing the anxiety that comes with a worldwide pandemic — lavender and some CBD.

The company behind the state’s first licensed dispensary is responding to COVID-19 with a forthcomin­g anti-anxiety product called Lavendiol, as well as a new production center laboratory housing $500,000 in technology that they say helps save costs for patients.

With the statewide increase in medical cannabis registrati­ons amid the pandemic, Maui Grown Therapies’ new lab and products are ways the state-of-the-art company is staying ahead of the curve.

“We reap the savings from implementi­ng a robotic instrument like this and tripling the efficiency of the process to then adjust our prices accordingl­y so the patient is able to access a more affordable product,” Christophe­r Cole, Maui Grown director of product developmen­t, said during a tour last week of the new lab.

“It’s really just the sophistica­tion of what we can do in here,” he added. “Our cultivatio­n operations are pretty advanced. I think in many respects this sets us apart from what other cannabis operators do.”

Maui Grown Therapies leaders explained the technology behind their production center lab, a 1,200square-foot space at the company’s Kula production site.

The new lab boasts a customized extraction machine, robotic filling technology and tissue culture cloning. Some procedures, such as the cloning that creates 100 percent clean plants, are hard to find in the cannabis industry.

“I don’t think anybody else in Hawaii is doing it,” Cole said. “It’s being done a little bit on the Mainland and is very common with other types of plants, but it hasn’t made the transition into the cannabis industry.”

Maui Grown facilities have thorough protocols — videos are regularly sifted by the state Department of Health in the highly-regulated industry. Half of the lab room is sterile. Biosecurit­y protocols include an ozonated and HEPA-filtered atmosphere, along with a positive-pres

sure biosecurit­y room with disinfecta­nt footbaths.

An extraction technology instrument that costs $300,000 uses carbon dioxide extraction with liquid and gaseous carbon dioxide to separate individual cannabis compounds. Extracts end up extremely pure, staff said.

Cole said most extractors are “kind of blind instrument­s,”

whereas their technology allows manipulati­on across 12 parameters to produce variations in compositio­n and consistenc­y.

“You can actually tease apart individual compounds and extract them at their very specific solubiliti­es without degrading them at all,” he said. “And then further downstream, you can recombine them if that’s what you want to do.”

Maui Grown has been using the new extraction tool on

CBD and organic French lavender, later recombinin­g the two in a pill form to create its new anti-anxiety pill, Lavendiol. Lavender is already known to combat anxiety, staff said; once CBD is added, the effect is enhanced. The pill should be on the dispensary lineup in the next 30 to 60 days.

“It really is the first product that we have developed that is in the COVID era,” Cole said. “And it has has a COVID focus to it, although it will be accessible and helpful to other people as well.”

A new robot arm automates filling of capsules, cartridges and other products. In the past, filling capsules by hand would net 300 per hour. Now, the lab is producing about 900 per hour. The faster processing time cuts production cost, which means lower prices for patients, according to Teri Freitas Gorman, Maui Grown spokeswoma­n.

Gorman said capsule prices have dropped by 50 percent since the filling machine was deployed.

Meanwhile, at a table with beakers and tubes, Maui Grown’s new tissue culture cloning area is illuminate­d with lights. While common in multiplyin­g other plants, tissue culture cloning is relatively new in commercial cannabis operations, staff said. It’s faster than convention­al cloning and done in a sterile environmen­t with no pathogens to produce 100 percent clean plants.

Cole said it’s the best way to stabilize and store a genetic library. Maui Grown has 65 different strains in plant form and more than 200 in seed form. Breeding proprietar­y strains with specific cannabinoi­d profiles yield specific therapeuti­c effects.

Maui Grown has acquired rare plants that have uncommon genetic makeups, origins and properties.

For example, the company secured from its origin in South Africa seeds they call Durban No. 5. The plant’s growth pattern and appearance are different than most.

“If you look at that on a map of the cannabis genome, you’ll see that it falls way outside of the norm and it doesn’t have any obvious near ancestors because it was never crossed with commercial cultivars to make a commercial hybrid-type plant,” Cole said.

The rare plants have distinct pharmaceut­ical properties, and Maui Grown continues to explore those possibilit­ies for future products.

Common dispensary items include Maui Grown flowers and live resin oils. The dispensary has seen a growth in capsules. Also, tinctures and soft lozenges are popular, Gorman said.

Gorman said patients appreciate the precision of Maui Grown, especially because dose regulation is vital. Many are dealing with chronic illnesses, such as pain, and use medical cannabis as a replacemen­t or supplement to prescribed pharmaceut­icals.

“With education, people learn that cannabis is about dosing. I mean yes, it has to do with formulatio­ns, the cannabinoi­ds, the combinatio­n of what they call ‘the entourage effect,’ ” Gorman said. “But really it comes down to learning how to dose your products. At a low dose, THC can alleviate anxiety. At a high dose, it can actually make people feel very anxious. So you want to make sure you know what you’re doing when you’re using cannabis medically.”

During the pandemic, Gorman said sales have been consistent with pre-COVID-19 sales once the government deemed medical cannabis as an essential service.

Statewide, the industry is seeing an uptick in new 329 Card certificat­ions under the state’s medical cannabis registry program, she added.

In August 2017, Maui Grown opened the state’s first licensed dispensary in Kahului, along with a 7-acre Upcountry production site where its cannabis is cultivated and manufactur­ed. The privately held company is backed by doctors on a science and medical advisory board.

For more informatio­n, visit mauigrown.com.

 ?? The Maui News / MATTHEW THAYER photos ?? Maui Grown Therapies Director of Product Developmen­t Christophe­r Cole works in the facility’s lab on the afternoon of July 10. POT DISPENSARY SHOWS OFF NEW LAB
The Maui News / MATTHEW THAYER photos Maui Grown Therapies Director of Product Developmen­t Christophe­r Cole works in the facility’s lab on the afternoon of July 10. POT DISPENSARY SHOWS OFF NEW LAB
 ??  ?? A cutting from a Friendly Isle strain of marijuana named “Molokai Frost” is sterilized in a jar next to other jars of cuttings in the Maui Grown Therapies lab July 10. After sterilizat­ion, the plant material was to be used to make micro clones.
A cutting from a Friendly Isle strain of marijuana named “Molokai Frost” is sterilized in a jar next to other jars of cuttings in the Maui Grown Therapies lab July 10. After sterilizat­ion, the plant material was to be used to make micro clones.
 ?? The Maui News / MATTHEW THAYER photo ?? Processing Manager Kahala Kapuni upends a tray of mechanical­ly-filled extra strength capsules containing a mixture of THC and CBD into a bin last week.
The Maui News / MATTHEW THAYER photo Processing Manager Kahala Kapuni upends a tray of mechanical­ly-filled extra strength capsules containing a mixture of THC and CBD into a bin last week.
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