| Literature DB >> 30405366 |
Abstract
Neurological therapeutics have been hampered by its inability to advance beyond symptomatic treatment of neurodegenerative disorders into the realm of actual palliation, arrest or reversal of the attendant pathological processes. While cannabis-based medicines have demonstrated safety, efficacy and consistency sufficient for regulatory approval in spasticity in multiple sclerosis (MS), and in Dravet and Lennox-Gastaut Syndromes (LGS), many therapeutic challenges remain. This review will examine the intriguing promise that recent discoveries regarding cannabis-based medicines offer to neurological therapeutics by incorporating the neutral phytocannabinoids tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), cannabidiol (CBD), their acidic precursors, tetrahydrocannabinolic acid (THCA) and cannabidiolic acid (CBDA), and cannabis terpenoids in the putative treatment of five syndromes, currently labeled recalcitrant to therapeutic success, and wherein improved pharmacological intervention is required: intractable epilepsy, brain tumors, Parkinson disease (PD), Alzheimer disease (AD) and traumatic brain injury (TBI)/chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE). Current basic science and clinical investigations support the safety and efficacy of such interventions in treatment of these currently intractable conditions, that in some cases share pathological processes, and the plausibility of interventions that harness endocannabinoid mechanisms, whether mediated via direct activity on CB1 and CB2 (tetrahydrocannabinol, THC, caryophyllene), peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-gamma (PPARγ; THCA), 5-HT1A (CBD, CBDA) or even nutritional approaches utilizing prebiotics and probiotics. The inherent polypharmaceutical properties of cannabis botanicals offer distinct advantages over the current single-target pharmaceutical model and portend to revolutionize neurological treatment into a new reality of effective interventional and even preventative treatment.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer disease; Parkinson disease; brain tumor; cannabis; epilepsy; microbiome; pain; traumatic brain injury
Year: 2018 PMID: 30405366 PMCID: PMC6200872 DOI: 10.3389/fnint.2018.00051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Integr Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5145
Neurological conditions for which cannabis-based treatments have been employed (revised, reformatted and supplemented from MacCallum and Russo, 2018).
| Condition | Preparation | Level of evidence | Type of evidence |
|---|---|---|---|
| Multiple sclerosis (MS) spasticity | Nabiximols | Conclusive | Phase III RCTs, Regulatory approval |
| Epilepsy (Dravet and Lennox-Gastaut syndromes) | Cannabidiol (Epidiolex®) | Conclusive | Phase III RCTs, Regulatory approval |
| Chronic pain | THC, nabiximols | Substantial | Phase II RCTs |
| Schizophrenia, positive and negative symptoms | CBD | Substantial | Phase II RCTs |
| Sleep disturbance secondary to neurological symptoms | THC, nabilone, nabiximols | Moderate | Phase II–III RCTs |
| Glaucoma | THC, cannabis | Moderate | Phase II RCTs |
| Lower urinary tract symptoms (LUTS) in MS | Nabiximols | Moderate | Phase II RCTs |
| Tourette syndrome | THC, cannabis | Moderate | Phase II RCTs, observational studies |
| Dementia with agitation | THC, cannabis | Limited | Observational studies |
| Parkinson disease symptoms | THC, CBD, cannabis | Limited | Observational studies |
| Post-traumatic stress disorder | Cannabis | Limited | Observational studies |
| Social anxiety | CBD | Limited | Phase II RCT, observational studies |
Figure 1The pharmacology of phytocannabinoids pertinent to treatment of neurodegenerative disorders (molecular structures drawn by ER with ACD/ChemSketch 2015.2.5).
Figure 2Cannabis, the endocannabinoid system and the gut-brain-skin axis (diagrams of brain, gut by Mikael Hagstrom, face by Mouagip, all public domain).