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Medical
Marijuana: Unpublished Federal Study Found THC- Treated Rats Lived Longer,
Had Less Cancer
John S. James
AIDS TREATMENT NEWS Issue #263, January 17, 1997; Published twice monthly
Subscription and Editorial Office: P.O. Box 411256 San Francisco, CA
94141 800/TREAT-1-2 toll-free U.S. and Canada 415/255-0588 regular office
number fax: 415/255-4659 Internet: aidsnews@aidsnews.org
AIDS TREATMENT NEWS has obtained a 126-page draft report of a major
toxicology study of THC, the main psychoactive ingredient of marijuana.
The study was completed over two and a half years ago, and passed peer
review for publication, but has been kept quiet until this month, when
someone leaked copies of the draft report. As far as we know, the public
has never been told about this research -- for example, the drug- reform
movement seems not to have known about its existence. This work may
have been hushed because its findings are not what the drug-war industry
would want.
The study gave huge doses of THC to rats and mice by stomach tube, and
looked for cancers and other evidence of toxicity. First there were
small toxicity studies, which used enough THC to kill some of the animals;
later, two-year studies were run in both rats and mice, using doses
which were still much higher than those of marijuana smokers. The two-year
studies tested THC in several hundred rats and several hundred mice.
In rats, those given THC had a clear survival advantage over the untreated
controls; this effect was statistically significant in all dose groups,
and in both males and females. In mice (which were given much larger
doses than the rats relative to body weight) there was no survival difference
among the groups -- except that those given the highest dose (which
was close to the lethal dose for mice) had worse survival.
In both mice and rats, in both males and females, "the incidence of
benign and malignant neoplasms ... were decreased in a dose-dependent
manner" -- meaning that the more THC the animals were given, the fewer
tumors they developed.
The treated animals weighed less than the controls (even though both
ate about the same amount of food); the researchers speculated that
the lower body weight may have partly accounted for the increased survival
and reduced tumors in the THC-treated animals.
The doses were large enough to cause seizures and convulsions in many
of the animals, especially when they were dosed or handled. These did
not start immediately, but after many weeks, depending on the dose.
The researchers looked for brain lesions in animals which had seizures,
but found none.
No evidence of carcinogenic activity in the rats, but there was "equivocal
evidence" of one kind of thyroid tumor in the mice -- with no evidence
of a dose-dependent response. Other tumors were less common in the treated
animals than in the controls -- except in one case, which the toxicologists
believed was due to the fact that the treated animals lived longer,
and therefore had more opportunity to develop tumors.
The report includes a professionally objective review of the biological
effects, possible toxicities, and possible medical uses of THC and marijuana.
The title of the report is "NTP Technical Report on the Toxicology and
Carcinogenesis Studies of 1-Trans-Delta(9)- Tetrahydrocannabinol (CAS
No. 1972-08-3) in F344/N Rats and B6C3F(1) Mice (Gavage Studies)." Over
35 researchers contributed to this study, and 12 others reviewed their
work; several institutions, including the National Toxicology Program
and SRI International, were involved. The document we received is report
NTP TR 446, NIH Publication No. 94-3362, of the U.S. Department of Health
and Human Services. ("NTP" stands for National Toxicology Program, which
is made up of four Federal agencies within Health and Human Services.)
Each page of the draft is stamped "not for distribution or attribution."
In addition to the 126-page document we have reviewed here, there are
11 appendices, which we have not seen.
According to the draft, the report will be available from NTP Central
Data Management, 919/541-1371. AIDS TREATMENT NEWS requested a copy
of the final report when it is ready, and also requested a copy of the
draft. Now that the existence of the report has become publicly known,
we have heard that draft copies are being sent if requested -- despite
the notice on each page not to distribute them.
Comment
It would be wrong to interpret this study as showing a beneficial or
protective effect of marijuana. The animals were given very large doses,
resulting in substantially lower body weight, which may itself have
caused much of the survival and tumor improvements. Also, this study
used THC, not marijuana smoke -- which like any smoke contains many
chemicals, some of which are likely to be harmful.
But the study does provide strong evidence that there is no significant
cancer risk (if any at all) from the main psychoactive ingredient of
marijuana; any such risk would be from incidental substances in the
smoke. And if there is such a risk, the modern high-potency marijuana
would likely reduce it, by reducing the amount of smoke required to
obtain the desired effect.
Also, there is no known case of any human death from overdose of marijuana
or THC, or from any other acute toxicity of these substances -- a remarkable
safety record, compared with alcohol, aspirin, or many other common
drugs. (The toxicology report does not say there have been no deaths,
but the authors listed none, after doing an exhaustive survey of the
literature.)
The literature review on the effects of THC and marijuana shows how
medical research has been politically skewed (although the paper itself
does not state this point). There are almost no studies of possible
medical uses of marijuana, but many studies looking for possible harm.
Any positive findings, therefore, can be used to support the drug war
-- while negative findings (those which fail to show any effect) are
usually ignored. Although many doctors and patients have reported important
medical benefits, scientific studies of medicinal use have seldom been
allowed to happen, since positive findings could challenge the official
public- relations tactic of demonization. The drug war itself has controlled
the medical research agenda, since it controls legal access to marijuana.
Like most permanent wars, it strives for self preservation.
The newly available Federal toxicology study provides the best evidence
yet that the risks of THC are small. What other drug would increase
life expectancy of rats when given in huge overdoses daily for two years?
The recent Federal attacks on medical marijuana -- against doctors and
desperately ill patients -- are needlessly cruel, and bizarrely inappropriate
to scientific and medical understanding.
Copyright (c) 1997 - John S. James. Distributed by AEGIS, your online
gateway to a world of people, knowledge, and resources. Direct Dial:
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