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Study was bound to conclude that cannabinoids had limited efficacy
EDITOR What is surprising, in contrast, is that the authors chose to broaden the
alleged impact of their limited investigation to relegate the use of
cannabis and cannabinoids to a back
seat in future analgesic applications. This contention is not
supported by their limited data. I see nothing published about pioneering British doctors and their clinical
successes with cannabis extracts in
a myriad of painful conditions between 1840 and 1940.2-4
I see virtually nothing of modern scientific studies showing the
multifactorial benefits of cannabis on a range of neurotransmitter
systems, which I have reviewed.5
No mention is made of bureaucratic and political obstructions to
clinical research into cannabis; one
cannot show results when the requisite studies are not permitted.
Thus until recently we have been left with an overwhelming (but
ignored) body of anecdotal evidence from patients and their
doctors. What is truly newsworthy here is that the BMJ has ignored peer review
and editorial standards in a scandalous manner. The popular media
have seized the opportunity, and in the process valuable laboratory
and clinical research, and their funding, in analgesia and pain
control have been severely compromised. Great shame accrues to the
journal as a result. Instead of probity we have
propaganda.
Campbell et al's paper on whether cannabinoids are
effective and safe in the management of pain purports to be qualitative
and systematic,1
but it is neither. Because it focused on two clinically questionable
synthetic cannabinoids and oral delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)
without providing any focus on the synergistic components of herbal
cannabis, and examined only certain
facets of the broad topic of pain, it ensured that a conclusion of
limited efficacy was reached. That is not news.
Montana Neurobehavioral
Specialists, 900 North Orange Street, Missoula, MT 59802, USA erusso@blackfoot.net
Competing interests: Professor Russo has been a scientific adviser to GW Pharmaceuticals (a manufacturer of cannabis-based medicine extracts), which has reimbursed expenses for travel with regard to visits and clinical research. He is also the editor in chief of Journal of Cannabis Therapeutics.
| 1. | Campbell FA, Tramèr MR, Carroll D, Reynolds DJM, Moore RA,
McQuay HJ. Are cannabinoids an effective and safe option in the management
of pain? A qualitative systematic review. BMJ 2001; 323:
13-16 |
| 2. | Dixon WE. The pharmacology of Cannabis indica. BMJ 1899;
ii: 1354-1357 |
| 3. | O'Shaughnessy WB. On the preparations of the Indian hemp,
or gunjah (Cannabis indica);
their effects on the animal system in health, and their utility in the
treatment of tetanus and other convulsive diseases. Transactions of the
Medical and Physical Society of Bengal 1838-18; 40: 71-102 |
| 4. | Reynolds JR. Therapeutical uses and toxic effects of Cannabis indica. Lancet 1890;
i: 637-638 |
| 5. | Russo EB. Hemp
for headache: An in-depth historical and scientific review of cannabis in migraine treatment.
Journal of Cannabis
Therapeutics 2001; 1: 21-92 |
Few well controlled trials of cannabis exist for systematic review
EDITOR Unfortunately, this did not deter the authors from coming to a series of
emphatic but ill founded conclusions. I hope that these will not be
taken as the last word on the topic: large and well controlled
clinical trials are about to start in the United Kingdom3
and a wealth of animal data support a role for cannabinoids in pain
modulation.4
Competing interests: None declared.
Spasticity is not the same as pain
EDITOR Spasticity and pain are distinctly different entities. Although pain may
accompany symptoms of spasticity such as flexor or tonic spasms, the
assessments of spasticity do not usually include the types of measure
seen with analgesics. Our results have been confirmed by other
researchers, and antispastic activity has been documented for
marijuana,3
THC,4
and nabilone.5
More importantly, all studies that have been published have shown an
antispastic effect for the cannabinoids. Currently, considerable
research effort is under way to evaluate cannabinoids in multiple
sclerosis. This effort is undermined when review articles are
cited in the media as evidence that cannabinoids are either
ineffective or unsafe. Competing interests: None declared.
Cannabinoid receptor agonists will soon find their place in
modern medicine
EDITOR Cannabinoids are weak analgesics compared with the opiates.3
The question of interest is not so much whether they are potent
analgesics compared with codeine but, rather, which painful
conditions they are effective in. By stating that cannabinoids may
have potential in neuropathic pains, particularly with spastic
components, even Kalso hints at a need for such a differentiated
assessment.4
The same is true for side effects. Levonantradol has not been brought on to
the market, because it has a higher rate of side effects than
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC). Today an interesting question might be,
by which strategies could psychotropic side effects be reduced?
Interindividual variation in side effects is high. Some patients may
profit more because they tolerate relatively high doses without
perceiving any unpleasant effects. Will we learn which patients have
a favourable risk:benefit ratio? With regard to antiemetic efficacy, I agree that modern serotonin receptor
antagonists are effective to treat nausea and vomiting in cancer
chemotherapy, but sometimes they fail and sometimes cannabinoids seem
to be superior.5
The study by Maurer et al of 1990 cited by Campbell et al refers to
another important aspect I believe that cannabinoid receptor agonists will find their place in modern
medicine within the next few years. It will be interesting to see
which indications they will be approved for and whether they will be
limited to synthetic derivatives from drug companies engaged in
cannabinoid research. Competing interests: The author is chairman of the International Association
for Cannabis as Medicine,
Cologne.
Authors' reply
EDITOR So why did we not include in our reviews, as Russo comments, "any focus on the
synergistic components of herbal cannabis"? Because, despite
including cannabis and marijuana in
our search strategies, using various spellings, we found none. We did
find information in the form of randomised controlled trials of
tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and synthetic cannabinoids. If there was
good evidence on the efficacy and harm of herbal cannabis in the form of randomised
controlled trials then we missed it. It is unlikely that such
evidence exists. If the BMJ ignored the peer review process it was not obvious to us.
The route to publication was long and occasionally tortuous, with
considerable argument with editors and peer reviewers. Like most
authors, we believe that we could have been treated better, but the
BMJ can be cleared of the slur that it shirked its
responsibilities. For acute pain, our attitude to any drug with dismal efficacy and a high rate
of serious and potentially serious adverse events would be the same
as it was for cannabis in these
trials. We already have better drugs. For more difficult problems,
such as painful spasms and neuropathic pain, none of us would want to
overlook any possibility. For nausea and vomiting our attitude was
similarly cautious. Where serious and common adverse events occur,
this will limit the use of cannabinoids. Circumstances will
sometimes dictate otherwise, as Grotenhermen points out.
We are surprised that these reviews were not done before fresh trials were
funded. If they had been, the quality of the debate and of the
decision making would have been higher. Large controlled studies are
to be welcomed for some clinical problems, but their design should
take into account the pitfalls of preceding trials lest the same
mistakes are repeated. The ethics of starting a trial without doing a
systematic review are questionable. The question that the trial seeks
to solve is critical. Previous trials do not answer important questions about relief of painful
spasm. They do, however, suggest little future for existing
cannabinoids in acute pain management and emesis. Competing interests: None declared.
Campbell et al gave themselves an impossible task with
their systematic review.1
Anyone who has reviewed the scientific literature on the medical uses
of cannabis rapidly finds that
there is a dearth of well controlled clinical trials.2
A meta-analysis of the use of cannabis in treating pain is therefore
likely to find little of substance to comment on.
Department of Pharmacology,
University of Oxford, Oxford OX3 9DU les.iversen@pharm.ox.ac.uk
1.
Campbell FA, Tramèr MR, Carroll D, Reynolds DJM, Moore RA,
McQuay HJ. Are cannabinoids an effective and safe option in the management
of pain? A qualitative systematic review. BMJ 2001; 323:
13-16
2.
Iversen LL. The science of marijuana. Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2000.
3.
House of Lords Select Committee on Science and Technology.
Second report on therapeutic uses of cannabis. London: Stationery
Office, 2001.
4.
Pertwee RG. Cannabinoid receptors and pain. Prog
Neurobiol 2001; 63: 569-611
The systematic review on cannabinoids in the treatment of
pain1
referenced a paper that I coauthored on the efficacy of a cannabinoid
(delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)) in spasticity.2
My confusion in reading the review was the implication that that
paper had anything to do with pain.
Arlington, VA 22209, USA djpmsmd@aol.com
1.
Campbell FA, Tramèr MR, Carroll D, Reynolds DJM, Moore RA,
McQuay HJ. Are cannabinoids an effective and safe option in the management
of pain? A qualitative systematic review. BMJ 2001; 323:
13-16
2.
Petro DJ, Ellenberger Jr C. Treatment of human spasticity
with delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol. J Clin Pharmacol 1981; 21(suppl
8-9): S413-S416
3.
Meinck HM, Schonle PW, Conrad B. Effect of cannabinoids on
spasticity and ataxia in multiple sclerosis. J Neurol 1989; 236:
120-122
4.
Ungerleider JT, Andyrsiak T, Fairbanks L, Ellison GW, Myers
LW. Delta-9-THC in the treatment of spasticity associated with multiple
sclerosis. Adv Alcohol Subst Abuse 1987; 7: 39-50
5.
Martyn CN, Illis LS, Thom J. Nabilone in the treatment of
multiple sclerosis. Lancet 1995; 345: 579
I am unsure whether the methods applied in the systematic
reviews by Campbell et al and Tramèr et al are able to answer the
questions of today's interest. 1
2
If you pool the data from older studies of pain you will miss most of
the interesting information, particularly differences in efficacy for
different painful conditions, differences between the cannabinoids,
and interindividual differences with regard to side
effects.
the synergistic use of several pharmacological effects of
cannabinoids, in this case the analgesic and antispastic effects in
spinal cord injury. Results of research showing that cannabinoids
reduce opioid induced emesis and act synergistically with opioids
against pain point to a possible combination of analgesic and
antiemetic effects of cannabinoids.
nova-Institut, D-50354 Hürth, Germany franjo.grotenhermen@nova-institut.de
1.
Campbell FA, Tramèr MR, Carroll D, Reynolds DJM, Moore RA,
McQuay HJ. Are cannabinoids an effective and safe treatment option in the
management of pain? A qualitative systematic review. BMJ 2001; 323:
13-16
2.
Tramèr MR, Carroll D, Campbell FA, Reynolds DJM, Moore RA,
McQuay HJ. Cannabinoids for control of chemotherapy induced nausea and
vomiting: quantitative systematic review. BMJ 2001; 323:
16-21
3.
Grotenhermen F. Cannabis in der Schmerztherapie-ein
neues Adjuvans? [Cannabis in
pain therapy
a
new adjuvant?] Forschung und Praxis, Wissenschaftsjournal der
Ärztezeitung 1999; 276: 22-26
4.
Kalso E. Cannabinoids for pain and nausea. BMJ 2001;
323: 2-3
5.
Gonzalez-Rosales F, Walsh D. Intractable nausea and
vomiting due to gastrointestinal mucosal metastases relieved by
tetrahydrocannabinol (dronabinol). J Pain Symptom Manage 1997; 14:
311-314
Systematic reviews tell us about research that has already
been done. What we should learn from them is the research agenda for
the future. For clinical trials of interventions we know that certain
study architectures, particularly those that control selection bias
and observer bias by randomisation and masking, go a long way to
ensuring that those biases are minimised.
Pain Management
Centre, Queen's Medical Centre, Nottingham NG7 2UH fiona.campbell@mail.qmcuk-tr.trent.nhs.co.uk
Andrew Moore
Henry
J McQuay
Dawn Carroll
Pain Research, Nuffield Department
of Anaesthetics, The Churchill, Oxford Radcliffe Hospital, Oxford OX3
7LJ
Martin R Tramèr
Division d'Anesthésiologie,
Département APSIC, Hôpitaux Universitaires, CH-1211 Genève
14, Switzerland
D John
M Reynolds
Department of Clinical Pharmacology,
Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford OX2 6HE
© BMJ
2001
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