| Literature DB >> 32230864 |
Abstract
Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) is the primary psychoactive ingredient in cannabis. While the safety of THC and cannabis has been extrapolated from millennia of recreational use, medical marijuana programs have increased exposure among medically complex individuals with comorbid conditions and many co-prescribed medications. Thus, THC should be recognized as a pharmacologically complex compound with potential for drug-drug interactions and adverse drug events. This review summarizes potential adverse drug events related to THC when combined with other medications. Metabolic drug-drug interactions are primarily due to THC conversion by CYP3A4 and CYP2C9, which can be impacted by several common medications. Further, CYP2C9 polymorphisms are highly prevalent in certain racial groups (up to 35% in Caucasians) and increase the bioavailability of THC. THC also has broad interactions with drug-metabolizing enzymes and can enhance adverse effects of other medications. Pharmacodynamic interactions include neurological effects, impact on the cardiovascular system, and risk of infection. General clinical recommendations for THC use include starting with low doses and titrating to desired effects. However, many interactions may be unavoidable, dose-limiting, or a barrier to THC-based therapy. Future work and research must establish sufficient data resources to capture medical marijuana use for such studies. Meanwhile, clinicians should balance the potential risks of THC and cannabis and the lack of strong evidence of efficacy in many conditions with patient desires for alternative therapy.Entities:
Keywords: THC; adverse drug events; cannabis; drug–drug interactions; medical marijuana; safety; tetrahydrocannabinol
Year: 2020 PMID: 32230864 PMCID: PMC7231229 DOI: 10.3390/jcm9040919
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Med ISSN: 2077-0383 Impact factor: 4.241
Product information for cannabis-derived pharmaceutical products that contain tetrahydrocannabinol (THC).
| Product (Approval Date) | Active Ingredient(s) | Dosage Form | Route | Recommended Dose | Indication(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SATIVEX a (2011–12) | Delta-9-THC and cannabidiol | Solution, spray | Buccal | Titrated up to 12 sprays per day (patient median is 4–8 sprays). 2.7 mg THC and 2.5 mg CBD per spray. | Adjunctive treatment of spasticity and neuropathic pain in MS |
| Adjunctive analgesic for moderate to severe pain in advanced cancer | |||||
| MARINOL (1985) | Dronabinol b | Capsules | Oral | 2.5 mg 2× daily; max 5 mg 2× daily | Anorexia associated with AIDS |
| 5 mg/m2 4–6× daily; max 15 mg/m2 4–6× daily | Nausea and vomiting with chemotherapy in patients for whom conventional treatment failed | ||||
| SYNDROS (1985) | Dronabinol b | Solution | Oral | 2.1 mg 2× daily; max 8.4 mg daily | Anorexia associated with AIDS |
| 4.2 mg/m2 4–6× per day; max 12.6 mg/m2 4–6× per day | Nausea and vomiting with chemotherapy in patients for whom conventional treatment failed |
a Sativex is not approved in the United States, but was approved in most other countries between 2011 and 2012. b Dronabinol is a synthetic form of THC not extracted from cannabis. THC = tetrahydrocannabinol; MS = multiple sclerosis.
In vivo pharmacokinetic drug–drug interaction study of Sativex [38].
| Product | Population Studied | Interacting Drugs | Results |
|---|---|---|---|
| THC+CBD mucosal spray (Sativex), 4 sprays | Healthy Adults ( | Rifampicin 600 mg | THC: 36% decrease |
| Ketoconazole 400 mg | THC: 27% increase | ||
| Omeprazole 40 mg | No change in THC or 11-OH-THC |
All participants in the study reported a serious adverse effect when THC was combined with ketoconazole, primarily neuropsychiatric in nature.
Figure 1Potential pharmacokinetic drug–drug interactions involving key metabolism enzymes that convert THC to its metabolites for excretion.
Figure 2Enzyme targets and example medications that could be affected by THC if co-administered.
Figure 3Representation of main adverse effects of tetrahydrocannabinol use that can be potentiated by other medications.