| Literature DB >> 18728714 |
Abstract
This article reviews recent research on cannabinoid analgesia via the endocannabinoid system and non-receptor mechanisms, as well as randomized clinical trials employing cannabinoids in pain treatment. Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC, Marinol((R))) and nabilone (Cesamet((R))) are currently approved in the United States and other countries, but not for pain indications. Other synthetic cannabinoids, such as ajulemic acid, are in development. Crude herbal cannabis remains illegal in most jurisdictions but is also under investigation. Sativex((R)), a cannabis derived oromucosal spray containing equal proportions of THC (partial CB(1) receptor agonist ) and cannabidiol (CBD, a non-euphoriant, anti-inflammatory analgesic with CB(1) receptor antagonist and endocannabinoid modulating effects) was approved in Canada in 2005 for treatment of central neuropathic pain in multiple sclerosis, and in 2007 for intractable cancer pain. Numerous randomized clinical trials have demonstrated safety and efficacy for Sativex in central and peripheral neuropathic pain, rheumatoid arthritis and cancer pain. An Investigational New Drug application to conduct advanced clinical trials for cancer pain was approved by the US FDA in January 2006. Cannabinoid analgesics have generally been well tolerated in clinical trials with acceptable adverse event profiles. Their adjunctive addition to the pharmacological armamentarium for treatment of pain shows great promise.Entities:
Keywords: analgesia; cannabidiol; cannabinoids; multiple sclerosis; pain management; tetrahydrocannabinol
Year: 2008 PMID: 18728714 PMCID: PMC2503660 DOI: 10.2147/tcrm.s1928
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Clin Risk Manag ISSN: 1176-6336 Impact factor: 2.423
Figure 1Molecular structures of four cannabinoids employed in pain treatment.
Results RCTs of cannabinoids in treatment of pain syndromes ()
| Drug | Subject number N = | RCT indication | Trial duration | Results/Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ajulemic Acid | 21 | Neuropathic pain | 7 day crossover | VAS improved over placebo (p = 0.02) ( |
| Cannabis, smoked | 50 | HIV neuropathy | 5 days | Decreased daily pain (p = 0.03) and hyperalgesia (p = 0.05), 52% with >30% pain reduction vs placebo (p = 0.04) ( |
| Cannabis, Smoked | 21 | Chronic neuropathic pain | 5 days | No acute benefit on pain, average daily pain lower on high THC cannabis vs placebo (p = 0.02 ) ( |
| Cannador | 419 | Pain due to spasm in MS | 15 weeks | Improvement over placebo in subjective pain associated with spasm (p = 0.003) ( |
| Cannador | 65 | Post-herpetic neuralgia | 4 weeks | No benefit observed ( |
| Cannador | 30 | Post-operative pain | Single doses, daily | Decreasing pain intensity with increased dose (p = 0.01)( |
| Marinol | 24 | Neuropathic pain in MS | 15–21 days, crossover | Median numerical pain (p = 0.02), median pain relief improved (p = 0.035) over placebo ( |
| Marinol | 40 | Post-operative pain | Single dose | No benefit observed over placebo ( |
| Nabilone | 41 | Post-operative pain | 3 doses in 24 hours | NSD morphine consumption. Increased pain at rest and on movement with nabilone 1 or 2 mg ( |
| Sativex | 20 | Neurogenic pain | Series of 2-week N-of-1 crossover blocks | Improvement with Tetranabinex and Sativex on VAS pain vs placebo (p < 0.05), symptom control best with Sativex (p < 0.0001) ( |
| Sativex | 24 | Chronic intractable pain | 12 weeks, series of N-of-1 crossover blocks | VAS pain improved over placebo (p < 0.001) especially in MS (p < 0.0042) ( |
| Sativex | 48 | Brachial plexus avulsion | 6 weeks in 3 two-week crossover blocks | Benefits noted in Box Scale-11 pain scores with Tetranabinex (p = 0.002) and Sativex (p = 0.005) over placebo ( |
| Sativex | 66 | Central neuropathic pain in MS | 5 weeks | NRS analgesia improved over placebo (p = 0.009) ( |
| Sativex | 125 | Peripheral neuropathic pain | 5 weeks | Improvements in NRS pain levels (p = 0.004), dynamic allodynia (p = 0.042), and punctuate allodynia (p = 0.021) vs placebo ( |
| Sativex | 56 | Rheumatoid arthritis | Nocturnal dosing for 5 weeks | Improvements over placebo morning pain on movement (p = 0.044), morning pain at rest (p = 0.018), DAS-28 (p = 0.002), and SF-MPQ pain at present (p = 0.016) ( |
| Sativex | 117 | Pain after spinal injury | 10 days | NSD in NRS pain socres, but improved Brief Pain Inventory (p = 0.032), and Patients Global Impression of Change (p = 0.001) (unpublished) |
| Sativex | 177 | Intractable cancer pain | 2 weeks | Improvements in NRS analgesia vs placebo (p = 0.0142), Tetranabinex NSD ( |
| Sativex | 135 | Intractable lower urinary tract symptoms in MS | 8 weeks | Improved bladder severity symptoms including pain over placebo (p = 0.001) (unpublished) |
Abbreviations: MS, multiple sclerosis; NRS, numerical rating scale; NSD, no signifi cant difference; RCTs, randomized clinical trials; VAS, visual analogue pain scales.
Figure 2Comparison of adverse events (AE) encountered with long term therapeutic use of herbal cannabis in the Netherlands (Janse et al 2004; Gorter et al 2005) and Canada (Lynch et al 2006), vs that observed in safety-extension (SAFEX) studies of Sativex oromucosal spray (Russo 2006; Wade et al 2006).