Caroline Alphonso
A team of Montreal researchers has  lent scientific credibility to the view that smoking marijuana can ease  chronic neuropathic pain and help patients sleep better.
People  suffering from neuropathic pain often turn to opioids, antidepressants  and local anesthetics, but those treatments have limitations and the  side effects can be punishing. Many physicians and policy-makers,  however, are reluctant to advocate the use of cannabis since there has  been little scientific research into its effectiveness, even though  patients champion its use.
The study, published Monday in the  Canadian Medical Association Journal, found that pain intensity among  patients decreased with higher-potency marijuana. It is one of a handful  of scientific attempts to determine the medicinal benefits of the drug.
“We’re  not saying that this is the final solution for chronic pain management.  As with any pain strategy, especially with chronic pain, we know that  the best approach is a multidisciplinary one,” said lead author Mark  Ware, director of clinical research at the Alan Edwards Pain Management  Unit of the McGill University Health Centre. “All that this does is open  the door to the cannabinoid being another tool in the toolbox in  treating chronic pain.”
Twenty-one adults with post-traumatic or  post-surgical chronic pain took part in the study and were randomly  assigned to receive marijuana at three different potencies: with a  tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) content of 2.5 per cent, 6 per cent and 9.4  per cent, and a placebo. THC is the active ingredient in the cannabis  plant. Participants inhaled a single 25-milligram dose through a pipe  three times daily for the first five days in each cycle, followed by a  nine-day period without marijuana. They continued this over two months,  rotating through all four strengths of THC.
The researchers  measured pain intensity using a standard scale, with study subjects  reporting the highest-strength drug was the most effective at reducing  the pain and allowing them to sleep.
The study does not address  questions about the long-term efficacy of using the drug to treat  chronic pain, the researchers acknowledge. Also, there were some adverse  effects among participants, including dizziness, numbness and a burning  sensation in areas of neuropathic pain.
Dr. Ware said further research will build upon this study.
“As  a cannabis user, it can be really hard to get people to take you  seriously,” said Amy Brown, 28, a Toronto woman who was not a subject in  the study but uses marijuana to relieve chronic pain and swelling in  her wrist, which was injured in a car crash five years ago.
“To me, this study is vindication.”
For  her, cannabis has been more effective than chemical painkillers, which  had unpleasant side effects. “I wasn’t me any more, I was a drone, I was  robot-like,” she said. “[When I started cannabis], I made a complete  180. I know what’s going on now. I have a clear head.”
The federal  government has given authorization to almost 5,000 people to possess  dried marijuana, and 3,500 people hold personal use production licences,  according to Health Canada. A doctor’s authorization is required before  a licence is issued. Several court judgments forced Health Canada to  get into the marijuana business a few years back, so that patients would  not have to rely on the black market for their supplies.
But  despite Health Canada’s regulations, Dr. Ware said many in the medical  community are not open to the use of marijuana to relieve pain.
“There’s  a lot of resistance from physicians, and in fact some of the  policy-makers, that there isn’t much evidence to support this. I know  some of the Colleges and the CMA want to see evidence behind these  claims before they will consider supporting or endorsing the  regulations,” he said. “[This study] should provide some support to the  fact that there is evidence now out there to support these claims.”
Henry  McQuay, a professor at Balliol College at the University of Oxford,  said the study adds to three previous investigations of smoked cannabis  in coping with neuropathic pain, two of which involved patients with  HIV. He noted, however, that the participant size of the study was  small, the trial was short and it remains to be seen if marijuana can  yield greater analgesia with fewer adverse effects than conventional  drugs.
“The current trial adds to the trickle of evidence that  cannabis may help some of the patients who are struggling at present,”  Prof. McQuay wrote in an accompanying commentary.