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Marijuana and Cancer Pain

Marijuana Cancer Pain
Medical marijuana is increasingly being used to manage cancer-specific pain, with scientific studies supporting this shift in treatment. The body produces endocannabinoids in response to tissue damage, which regulate inflammation and pain sensation through interaction with cannabinoid receptors. These receptors are targeted by cannabinoids found in marijuana, allowing them to play a moderating role in various types of cancer pain. Furthermore, cannabis-derived medications like Nabiximols (Sativex) are being developed and tested for their efficacy in relieving neuropathic cancer pain.
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In addition to treating cancer therapy side effects (including nausea, depression, and loss of appetite), medical marijuana is being increasingly utilized to treat cancer-specific pain.

Today, CannaMD takes a closer look at the scientific studies supporting this new shift in treatment.

Types of cancer pain

There are several types of cancer pain, including: nociceptive, neuropathic, and centralized/referred pain.

Nociceptive pain, caused by body tissue damage, is the only type of pain with a reliable system for alerting the brain to specific tissue problems. In response to injury, immune cells release a number of neurotransmitters and other signalers which are carried by nerves up to the brain. The patient then begins to feel sharp, aching, or throbbing pain in the affected area.

Bone pain (a frequent cancer symptom) falls under this category.

Neuropathic pain, also called nerve pain, is caused by nerve damage. This type of pain sends inaccurate pain messages. For instance, in diabetic neuropathy, the origin of pain is actually in the peripheral nerves, not the foot.

Likewise, centralized pain tells the brain pain is occurring all over; however, this sensation is actually the result of an amplification of peripheral signals due to central nervous system dysfunction. (Note: Peripheral nerves are the links between your brain and spinal cord and the rest of your body.)

Referred pain is similar to centralized pain. Pain sensations are felt in areas of the body other than where the pain is originating. Unlike centralized pain, though, discomfort occurs in one specific area instead of all over.

Cancer patients may also suffer from phantom pain, which is defined as the sensation of pain in a part of the body that has been removed.

How does marijuana help cancer pain?

When body tissue is damaged, your cells produce endocannabinoids – chemical compounds that mirror the cannabinoids that are produced by marijuana. Endocannabinoids regulate inflammation and pain sensation through interaction with cannabinoid receptors. (These receptors are the same receptors targeted by cannabinoids.)

Your body produces two types of endocannabinoids in response to tissue damage:  anandamide and 2-arachidonoyl-sn-glycerol (2-AG). When you experience inflammation and nerve injury, anandamide springs into action and helps regulate nociceptive pain signals by activating cannabinoid receptors. Its partner, 2-AG, plays a big role in decreasing pain during acute stress.

Since cannabinoid receptors are present across the central nervous system and in pain circuits from peripheral sensory nerve endings all the way up to the brain, endocannabinoids are able to play a moderating role in all different types of cancer pain.

In 1999, researchers with Life Sciences confirmed that, similar to opioid receptors, increased levels of cannabinoid receptors are found in regions of the brain that regulate nociceptive processing. Cannabinoids are also thought to act on mast cell receptors to slow and/or stop the release of inflammatory agents.

Recent animal model studies have shown that cannabinoids may also prevent chemotherapy-induced neuropathy in subjects exposed to chemotherapy agents such as paclitaxel, vincristine, and cisplatin.

Nabiximols

In June 2018, GW Pharmaceuticals made history when the FDA approved its cannabis-derived epilepsy medication, Epidiolex – making it the first FDA-approved marijuana-based medication in United States history.

GW Pharmaceuticals also manufactures Nabiximols (Sativex), a cannabis-derived oral spray designed to relieve neuropathic cancer pain. In addition to cancer pain, Nabiximols is also used to treat spasticity in multiple sclerosis patients.

Although still illegal in the United States, Nabiximols is currently undergoing phase three FDA trials – meaning treatment may become available to patients in the near future.

For a full list of marijuana and cancer pain clinical trials, see: U.S. Library of Medicine Clinical Trials.

Marijuana and cancer pain studies

In 2017, the Annals of Palliative Medicine published a review of clinical studies evaluating the efficacy of medical cannabis in cancer pain management. Results of several reported studies are summarized below:

Journal of Clinical Pharmacology (2013): In a study of ten advanced cancer patients, researchers found a correlation between higher does of THC and increased pain relief.

Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics (1975): Researchers observed “significant” decreases in pain between patients who received a placebo and those who received 20 mg of THC. Interestingly, there was no difference in pain relief between patients who received 10mg of cannabis and 60mg of codeine.

Journal of Pain and Symptom Management (2010):  In a study of 177 advanced cancer patients, researchers found a “statistically significant” change in favor of Nabiximols over placebo. Patients taking Nabiximols required significantly fewer doses of breakthrough pain medication when compared to placebo.

The Journal of Pain (2012): In a study of 263 advanced cancer patients, researchers found that low and medium doses of Nabiximols were “significantly more effective” at reducing average daily pain than placebo.

What do doctors say about marijuana and cancer pain?

According to Massachusetts-based physician, Dr. Jordan Tishler:

Cannabis and opiates for moderate to severe pain really stand out as being equally efficacious […]. There’s clearly a place for opiates in our medical treatment regimen, but if you start with cannabis, maybe you don’t need to get to opiates, or if you do you need to get opiates, we have really good data that you need a lot less.

If you use cannabis and opiates together, you typically use only twenty percent of the amount of opiates you would have otherwise needed. With opiates, your risk goes up every time you increase [the] dose by a milligram. If you have someone who would need 100 mg of opiates, if you cut back to 20 mg, you’ve saved them eighty percent of the risk of the opiate. That’s huge.

What is the best type of marijuana for cancer pain?

According to a survey conducted by the Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine, study participants demonstrated a statistically significant preference for indica strains in managing pain and treating neuropathy.

Indica is a specific type of marijuana defined by its stout, broad leaves and sedating effects. It stands in contrast to sativa, a tall, narrow-leaf cannabis variety that elicits a more invigorating response.

For more on indica, sativa, and available medical cannabis products, visit CannaMD‘s full list of Florida Medical Marijuana Treatment Centers (MMTCs) to connect with a product education specialist in your area.

Updated: March 21, 2024

Article Written By:

Jessica Walters

Jessica Walters serves as CannaMD's Chief Medical Researcher. Prior to her time at CannaMD, Jessica earned her degree from Harvard where she focused on neuropsychology. Her personal research interests include psychosocial interventions for obesity, depression, and generalized anxiety disorders.

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