Marijuana Fights Cancer and Helps Manage Side Effects, Researchers Find
Mounting evidence shows ‘cannabinoids’ in marijuana slow cancer growth, inhibit formation of new blood cells that feed a tumor, and help manage pain, fatigue, nausea, and other side effects.
Cristina
Sanchez, a young biologist at Complutense University in Madrid, was
studying cell metabolism when she noticed something peculiar. She had
been screening brain cancer cells because they grow faster than normal cell lines and thus are useful for research purposes. But the cancer cells died each time they were exposed to tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), the principal psychoactive ingredient of marijuana.
Instead of gaining insight into how cells function, Sanchez had stumbled upon the anti-cancer properties of THC. In 1998, she reported
in a European biochemistry journal that THC “induces apoptosis [cell
death] in C6 glioma cells,” an aggressive form of brain cancer.
Subsequent peer-reviewed studies in several countries would show that THC and other marijuana-derived compounds, known as “cannabinoids,” are effective not only for cancer-symptom management (nausea, pain, loss of appetite, fatigue), they also confer a direct antitumoral effect.
Around the same time, Harvard University scientists ++reported++[ http://www.nature.com/bjc/journal/v95/n2/abs/6603236a.html] that THC slows tumor growth in common lung cancer and “significantly reduces the ability of the cancer to spread.” What’s more, like a heat-seeking missile, THC selectively targets and destroys tumor cells while leaving healthy cells unscathed. Conventional chemotherapy drugs, by contrast, are highly toxic; they indiscriminately damage the brain and body.
There is mounting evidence, according to a report in Mini-Reviews in Medicinal Chemistry, that cannabinoids “represent a new class of anticancer drugs
that retard cancer growth, inhibit angiogenesis [the formation of new
blood cells that feed a tumor] and the metastatic spreading of cancer
cells.”
Dr.
Sean McAllister, a scientist at the Pacific Medical Center in San
Francisco, has been studying cannabinoid compounds for 10 years in a
quest to develop new therapeutic interventions for various cancers.
Backed by grants from the National Institute of Health (and with a
license from the DEA), McAllister discovered
that cannabidiol (CBD), a nonpsychoactive component of the marijuana
plant, is a potent inhibitor of breast cancer cell proliferation,
metastasis, and tumor growth.
In 2007, McAllister published a detailed account
of how cannabidiol kills breast cancer cells and destroys malignant
tumors by switching off expression of the ID-1 gene, a protein that
appears to play a major role as a cancer cell conductor.
The
ID-1 gene is active during human embryonic development, after which it
turns off and stays off. But in breast cancer and several other types of
metastatic cancer, the ID-1 gene becomes active again, causing
malignant cells to invade and metastasize. “Dozens of aggressive cancers
express this gene,” explains McAllister. He postulates that CBD, by
virtue of its ability to silence ID-1 expression, could be a
breakthrough anti-cancer medication.
“Cannabidiol
offers hope of a non-toxic therapy that could treat aggressive forms of
cancer without any of the painful side effects of chemotherapy,” says
McAllister, who is seeking support to conduct clinical trials with the marijuana compound on breast cancer patients.
McAllister’s
lab also is analyzing how CBD works in combination with first-line
chemotherapy agents. His research shows that cannabidiol, a potent
antitumoral compound in its own right, acts synergistically with various
anti-cancer pharmaceuticals, enhancing their impact while cutting the
toxic dosage necessary for maximum effect.
Investigators
at St. George’s University in London observed a similar pattern with
THC, which magnified the effectiveness of conventional antileukemia
therapies in preclinical studies. THC and cannabidiol both induce
apoptosis in leukemic cell lines. At the annual summer conference of the International Cannabinoid Research Society, held this year in Freiburg, Germany, 300 scientists from around the world discussed their latest findings, which are pointing the way toward novel treatment strategies for cancer and other degenerative diseases. Italian investigators described CBD as “the most efficacious inducer of apoptosis” in prostate cancer. Ditto for cannabidiol and colon cancer, according to British researchers at Lancaster University.
Within the medical science community, the discovery that cannabinoids have anti-tumoral properties is increasingly recognized as a seminal advancement in cancer therapeutics.
Martin A. Lee is the author of Smoke Signals: A Social History of Marijuana – Medical, Recreational and Scientific (Scribner, August 2012). He is the cofounder of the media watch group FAIR, director of Project CBD, and the author of Acid Dreams and The Beast Reawakens. For more information and regular updates, follow Smoke Signals—the book on Facebook.
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