| Literature DB >> 32310048 |
Kylie J Nabata1, Emmanuel K Tse1, Tom E Nightingale1, Amanda H X Lee1, Janice J Eng1, Matthew Querée2, Matthias Walter1, Andrei V Krassioukov1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: People with spinal cord injuries (SCI) commonly experience pain and spasticity; limitations of current treatments have generated interest in cannabis as a possible therapy.Entities:
Keywords: Spinal cord injury; cannabinoids; cannabis; marijuana; pain; spasticity
Year: 2021 PMID: 32310048 PMCID: PMC8033968 DOI: 10.2174/1570159X18666200420085712
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Neuropharmacol ISSN: 1570-159X Impact factor: 7.363
e-1. Search terms.
| Search keywords for spinal cord injury | spinal cord OR spinal injur* OR SCI OR spinal cord damage OR spinal cord stroke OR spinal cord insult OR paraplegi* OR tetraplegi* OR quadriplegi* |
|---|---|
| Search keywords for cannabis | cannabis OR marijuana OR cannabinoid OR tetrahydrocannabinol OR THC OR cannabidiol OR CBD |
e-2. Database search results.
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|
| PubMed | February 29, 2020 | 3968 |
| Embase | February 29, 2020 | 2168 |
| Web of Knowledge | February 29, 2020 | 981 |
| Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature | February 29, 2020 | 115 |
e-3. Quality of the observational studies.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dunn & Davis, 1974 [ | + | - | ? | + | - | - | - | - | + | - | - | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
| Malec | + | - | + | + | - | - | - | - | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
| Heinemann | + | - | + | + | - | N/A | + | - | - | + | + | N/A | + | + | POOR |
| Rothstein | + | - | ? | + | - | - | - | + | + | N/A | + | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
| Young | + | - | - | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | + | POOR |
| Kolakowsky-Hayer | + | + | ? | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | + | FAIR |
| Warms | + | + | + | + | - | - | - | - | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
| Grotenhermen & Schnelle, 2003 [ | + | - | ? | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
| Gorter, 2005 [ | + | - | - | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | - | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
| Cardenas & Jensens, 2006 [ | + | + | + | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | - | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
| Mahoney | + | - | + | + | N/A | - | - | - | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | N/A | POOR |
| Aggarwal | + | - | + | + | - | - | ? | - | + | N/A | - | N/A | N/A | N/A | POOR |
| Heutink | + | + | + | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
| Hwang | + | - | ? | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | + | FAIR |
| Fekete | + | + | + | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | + | FAIR |
| Shroff, 2015 [ | + | - | ? | + | N/A | - | - | - | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | N/A | POOR |
| Drossel | + | - | + | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
| Andresen | + | + | + | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | + | FAIR |
| Clark | + | + | + | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | + | FAIR |
| Patel | + | - | + | + | - | - | ? | - | + | N/A | + | N/A | N/A | - | FAIR |
| Bruce | + | - | + | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | N/A | POOR |
| Hawley | + | - | ? | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
| Bourke | + | - | ? | + | N/A | - | - | - | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | N/A | POOR |
| Eldridge | + | - | - | + | - | - | ? | - | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
| Graupensperger | + | - | + | + | - | - | ? | - | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | + | FAIR |
| Stillman | + | - | - | + | - | - | - | + | + | - | + | N/A | N/A | - | POOR |
Note: N/A: not applicable, for study designs where the question could not be applied; ?: cannot be determined; +: yes; -: no.
e-4. Quality of the randomized control trial studies.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karst | + | + | + | + | + | - | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | GOOD |
| Wade | + | + | + | + | + | N/A | + | N/A | ? | - | + | + | + | + | FAIR |
| Hagenbach | + | ? | + | + | ? | + | + | + | + | + | + | - | + | + | FAIR |
| Wilsey | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | + | - | + | + | - | + | + | FAIR |
| Rintala | + | + | + | + | + | + | - | ? | + | + | + | - | + | + | POOR |
| Pooyania | + | + | + | + | ? | - | + | + | + | - | + | - | + | + | POOR |
| Wilsey | + | + | + | + | ? | + | + | + | + | - | + | - | + | + | FAIR |
N/A: not applicable, for study designs where the question could not be applied; ?: cannot be determined; +: yes; -: no.
e-5. Quality of the pre-/post-studies.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kogel | + | + | + | NR | - | + | + | - | + | +/- | + | N/A | POOR |
N/A: not applicable, for study designs where the question could not be applied; NR: not reported; +: yes; -: no.
Patterns of cannabinoid use from observational studies.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dunn & Davis, 1974 [ | Cross-sectional | Illegal (Florida, USA) | 10/10 | SCI patients using cannabis | - | 10/0/0 | NR | NR | NR | N/A- cannabis use was inclusion criteria | |||||||||||||||||
| Malec | Cross-sectional | Illegal | 43/43 | SCI patients | - | 38/5/0 | NR | NR | NR | Within last yr: 56% | |||||||||||||||||
| Heinemann | Case-series | Illegal | 86/86 | 13-66 age, 2+ yr since tSCI, English language, no cognitive impairment | - | 59/27/0 | 39.5 | 47/39 | 13.1 ± 10.2 | 6 mo pre-SCI: 31%; Post-SCI: 42% | |||||||||||||||||
| Rothstein | Cross-sectional | MC legal (New York, USA) | 153/153 | Male veterans with SCI | - | 153/0/0 | 53 ± 1 (20-76) | NR | NR | Current (urinary cannabinoid test): 10% | |||||||||||||||||
| Young | Cross-sectional | Illegal (Texas, USA) | 123/123 | 17+ age, 9+ mo since tSCI, residual motor disability with assistive walking device if ambulatory | - | 82/41/0 | 36 ± 10.9 (19-76) | Complete tetra: 53, complete para: 53, incomplete: 17 | 9.7 ± 6.6 | Current (regular basis at time of study): 16% | |||||||||||||||||
| Kolakowsky-Hayner | Cross-sectional | Illegal (Virginia, USA) | 30/60 | SCI and brain injury patients treated in trauma centre | - | 56/4/0 | 35.0 ± 10.85 | NR | 1.4 | Past 6-12 mo: 50% among illicit drug users (n=6 SCI, n=1 TBI) | |||||||||||||||||
| Warms | Cross-sectional | MC legal starting Nov 1998, study V1 Feb 1997 – Jul 1998, V2 Aug 1998 – June 2000 (Washington, USA) | 471/471 | 18+ age, 6+ mo since SCI | - | 334/137/0 | 42.5 ± 13.2 | 240/221, unknown: 9 | NR | Ever: 3% | |||||||||||||||||
| Grotenhermen & Schnellea, 2003 [ | Cross-sectional | Dronabinol prescription | 4/165 | Members of Association for Cannabis as Medicine | No severe disease | 101/64/0 | Median age: 40.3 ± 12.4 (16-87) | NR | NR | Ever: 87% | |||||||||||||||||
| Gortera, 2005 [ | Cross-sectional | MC legal (Netherlands) | ?/107 | Members of Multiple Sclerosis society | - | 48/59/0 | Median age: 58.0 | NR | NR | N/A- MC was inclusion criteria | |||||||||||||||||
| Cardenas & Jensen, 2006 [ | Cross-sectional | MC legal (Washington, USA) | 117/117 | 18+ age, tSCI, chronic pain | Incomplete questionnaires | 85/32/0 | 48.8 ± 11.7 | 56/61 | 17.3 ± 10.9 | Ever: 32%; Current: 20% | |||||||||||||||||
| Mahoney | Interview | Illegal (Texas, USA) | 24/24 | 1+ yr since SCI, spasticity, English language | - | 17/7/0 | 45.1 | 13/11 | 16 | NR | |||||||||||||||||
| Aggarwal | Retrospective chart review | MC legal (Washington, USA) | 5/139 | 18+ age, pain clinic patients, access to MC with valid doctor documentation | Cannabinoid receptor 1 blocker drug rimonabant | 88/51/0 | Median age: 48 (18-84) | NR | NR | N/A- MC was inclusion criteria | |||||||||||||||||
| Heutink | Cross-sectional | MC legal starting 2003, study 1990-2005 (the Netherlands) | 279/279 | 18+ age, SCI rehab patients, living in community | - | 173/106/0 | 51.3 ± 14.0 (25-81) | 103/165, unknown: 11 | 11.6 ± 10.7 | Past, discontinued: 6%; Current (at study): 3% | |||||||||||||||||
| Hwang | Cross-sectional | Illegal (Florida, USA) | 215/215 | SCI before age 19, current age 21-25, former hospital patient | - | 127/88/0 | 23.4 ± 0.9 | 112/101, unknown: 2 | 10.2 ± 4.9 | Current (at least mo): 11% | |||||||||||||||||
| Fekete | Cross-sectional | MC permit (Switzerland) | 511/511 | 16+ age, tSCI or non-tSCI; | New SCI with palliative care, neurodegenerative diseases or Guillain-Barre syndrome; congenital conditions leading to SCI | 373/138/0 | 52.9 ± 14.8 | 158/353 | 17.6 ± 13.0 | Current (last 30 d): 7% | |||||||||||||||||
| Shroff, 2015 [ | Interview | MC legal (Canada) | 53/53 | 19-65 age, 1+ years since SCI, BC resident, member of paraplegic association | - | 42/11/0 | NR | NR | NR | NR | |||||||||||||||||
| Drossel | Cross-sectional | MC legal (Michigan & California, USA) | 244/244 | 18+ age, 5+ years since tSCI, English language, neurogenic bowel and/or bladder, no cognitive limitations | - | 181/63/0 | 49.7 | 134/110 | 18.6 | Ever: 23% | |||||||||||||||||
| Andresen | Cross-sectional | MC legal starting 2011, study 1990-2012 (Denmark) | 537/537 | Inclusion: 18+ age, acquired tSCI, rehab clinic patients | Incomplete questionnaires | 413/124/0 | 54.6 ± 14.6 (18-88) | 247/263, unknown: 27 | 18.2 ± 12.8 | Ever: 36%; Current (last 2 yrs): 9% | |||||||||||||||||
| Clark | Cross-sectional | MC illegal (Georgia & South Carolina, USA) | 1619/1619 | 18+ age, 1+ year since tSCI, some residual impairment | No painful condition, no prescription pain med | 1166/453/0 | 49.3 ± 14.2 | 453/1166 | 11.5 ± 9.2 | Current (mo): 16% | |||||||||||||||||
| Patel | Retrospective chart review | MC legal (Canada) | 19/19 | Patients of mobility clinic with documented SCI | - | 14/5/0 | 46.7 (18-89) | NR | NR | Current: 16% | |||||||||||||||||
| Bruce | Interview | MC legal (Illinois, USA) | 6/30 | 18+ age, smoked MC in past 3 mo, qualifying health condition for MC | - | 19/11/0 | 44.6 ± 15.9 | NR | NR | N/A- MC was inclusion criteria | |||||||||||||||||
| Hawley | Cross-sectional | MC and recreational legal (Colorado, USA) | 51/116 | SCI rehab patient | - | 95/21/0 | 47.1 ± 13.8 (22-74) | Tetra ABC: 38, para ABC: 31, tetra/para D: 41, unknown: 5 | 13.0 | Before injury: 67%; After injury: 53% | |||||||||||||||||
| Bourke | Interview | Illegal (New Zealand) | 8/8 | 18+ age, SCI patients using cannabis for pain, residing in New Zealand, English speaking, | Comorbid conditions inhibiting communication and participation in interview | 6/2/0 | Age 20-39: n = 1, 40-59: n= 5, 60+: n=2 | Tetra: 6 | NR | N/A- MC was inclusion criteria | |||||||||||||||||
| Eldridge | Retrospective chart review | Illegal | 20/20 | 18+ age, SCI patients received medical care at Eskenazi Medical Center | - | 17/3/0 | 45.05 ± 13.84 | NR | NR | Before injury: 25% | |||||||||||||||||
| Graupensperger | Retrospective chart review | MC legal starting 2016 and implemented Feb 2018, study Jan 1997-April 2018 (Pennsylvania, USA) | 6192/1466985 | 16+ age, patients at Penn State Hershey Medical Center | - | 3368/2824/0 | NR | NR | NR | Cannabis use disorder with SCI: 1% vs. non-SCI 0.2% | |||||||||||||||||
| Stillman | Cross-sectional | 39 states in USA, not disclosed; mixed legality | 353/353 | SCI patients included in mailing lists maintained by Thomas Jefferson | - | 183/107/3 | 52.74 (19-82) | NR | 17.49 | Current: 39% | |||||||||||||||||
Abbreviations: d: days; freq: frequency; MC: medical cannabis; mo: monthly; N/A: not applicable; NR: not reported; qd: daily; SCI: spinal cord injury; TBI: traumatic brain injury; THC: tetrahydrocannabinol; tSCI: traumatic spinal cord injury, wk: weekly; yr: yearly. adata listed not limited to people with SCI.
Reasons for cannabinoid use from observational studies.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardenas & Jensen, 2006 [ | Cross-sectional | MC legal (Washington, USA) | 117/117 | 18+ age, tSCI, chronic pain | Incomplete questionnaires | 85/32 | 48.8 ± 11.7 (21-79) | 56/61 | 17.3 ± 10.9 | Chronic pain |
| Shroff, 2015 [ | Interview | MC legal (Canada) | 53/53 | 19-65 age, 1+ years since SCI, BC resident, member of paraplegic | - | 42/11 | NR | NR | NR | Pain, spasm relief, relaxation, recreation |
| Drossel | Cross-sectional | MC legal (Michigan & California, USA) | 244/244 | 18+ age, 5+ years since tSCI, English language, neurogenic bowel and/or bladder, | - | 181/63 | 49.7 | 134/110 | 18.6 | Pain relief 70%, spasticity 46%, anxiety 30%, bowel 11%, recreation 9%, bladder: 6% |
| Andresen | Cross-sectional | MC legal starting 2011, study 1990-2012 (Denmark) | 537/537 | Inclusion: | Incomplete questionnaires | 413/124 | 54.6 ± 14.6 (18-88) | 247/263, unknown: 27 | 18.2 ± 12.8 | First use: pleasure 89%; SCI medicinal: pain and/or spasticity 22%; |
| Bruce | Interview | MC legal (Illinois, USA) | 6/30 | 18+ age, smoked MC in past 3 mo, qualifying health condition for MC | - | 19/11 | 44.6 ± 15.9 | NR | NR | Medicinal cannabis |
| Hawley | Cross-sectional | MC and recreational legal (Colorado, USA) | 51/116 | SCI rehab patient | - | 95/21 | 47.1 ± 13.8 (22-74) | Tetra ABC: 38, para ABC: 31, tetra/para D: 41, unknown: 5 | 13.0 | Spasticity 70%, |
Abbreviations: ABCD: American Spinal Injury Association classification A (complete injury), B (incomplete – sensory is preserved), C (incomplete – most muscle groups below the level of injury have strength <3), D (incomplete– most muscle groups below the level of injury have strength >3); BC: British Columbia; MC: medical cannabis; NR: not reported; SCI: spinal cord injury; tSCI: traumatic spinal cord injury; mo: monthly.
adata listed not limited to people with SCI.
Experimental studies: effect of cannabinoids on pain.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| *Karst | Neuropathic and somatic pain for | No N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist and cannabinoid concomitant pain-relieving medications. Severe organic or psychiatric disease, pregnancy/attempting to conceive, lactation, use of any investigational drug within 30d prior to the first dose of study drug, non-German speaking | 3/21 | 13/8 | 51y | 0/3 | NR | CT-3 (10.0mg–max 80.0mg) before placebo sequence | Placebo | VRS pain, VAS pain (100-mm scale) | ↓ Pain | 3hr VRS: ↓0.55/↓0.50 | ||||||||||||
| *Wade | Neurologic diagnosis and be able to identify troublesome symptoms which were stable and unresponsive to standard treatments. | History of drug or alcohol abuse, serious psychiatric illness (excluding depression associated with neurological condition), serious cardiovascular disease or active epilepsy | 4/20 | 10/10 | 48y | NR | NR | CBD-rich sublingual spray (2.5mg–max 120mg/d) | Placebo (Inert Plant Material) | VAS pain (daily 100-mm scale, 2wk 11-point scale) | ↓ Pain | VAS pain/d: ↓0.45 | ||||||||||||
| THC-rich sublingual spray (2.5mg–max 120mg/d) | Placebo (Inert Plant Material) | ↓ Pain | VAS pain/d: ↓0.39 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| 1:1 THC:CBD sublingual spray (2.5mg–max 120mg/d) | Placebo (Inert Plant Material) | = Pain | VAS pain/d: ↓0.19 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| *Wilsey | Adults with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS type 1), SCI, peripheral neuropathy, or nerve injury. Previous cannabis exposure. Must refrain from smoking cannabis or taking oral synthetic delta-9-THC medications for 30d before study session | Candidates who met the criteria for severe major depressive disorder, or candidates with a history or diagnosis of schizophrenia or bipolar depression. Uncontrolled hypertension, cardiovascular disease, chronic pulmonary disease (asthma, chronic pulmonary obstructive disease), active substance abuse | 6/38 | 20/18 | 46y | NR | 6y | 3.5% delta 9-THC cigarettes (9 puffs) | Placebo | VAS pain intensity (100-mm scale), VAS pain unpleasantness, Global Impression of Change, Neuropathic pain scale, VAS allodynia, Heat pain threshold | ↓ Pain (p=0.03 CI -0.0069 to -0.0003) | Insufficient data | ||||||||||||
| 7% delta 9-THC cigarettes (9 puffs) | Placebo | ↓ Pain (p=0.04 CI -0.0068 to -0.0002) | Insufficient data | |||||||||||||||||||||
| *Rintala | Adults who had sustained an SCI | Previous adverse reaction to any cannabinoid or sesame oil, current or history substance abuse, serious psychological or psychiatric disorder, renal or hepatic insufficiency, history of tachycardia, pregnant or nursing | 7/7 | 5/2 | 50.1 ± 8.3y | ¾ | 21.9 ± 9.3y (4-32y) | Dronabinol (5.0mg–max 20.0mg) | Placebo (diphenhydramine) | Brief Pain Inventory | = Pain | Brief Pain Inventory: ↑0.83 | ||||||||||||
| *Wilsey | Age 18-70y, with pain intensity >4/10, who attend the UC Davis Medical Center Spinal Cord Injury Clinic | Diagnosis of bipolar depression, schizophrenia, severe depression, or affirmation to the statements “I felt life was not worth living”; “I felt like hurting myself”; | 29/42 | 29/13 | 46.4y | NR | 11.6 ± 10.1y | 2.9% delta 9-THC vaporized cannabis (4-8 puffs) | Placebo | VAS 100-mm pain scale, Patient Global Impression of Change, Neuropathic Pain Scale, VAS allodynia, Heat-pain threshold | ↓ Pain Intensity (60min p<0.05, 120/240min p<0.01, 300min p<0.05, 360min p<0.05, 420min p<0.05) | Insufficient data | ||||||||||||
| 6.7% delta 9-THC vaporized cannabis (4-8 puffs) | Placebo | ↓ Pain Intensity | Insufficient data | |||||||||||||||||||||
| Hagenbach | Terminated taking all spasmolytic medication | Pregnant, severe somatic and known psychiatric diseases | 22/22 | 20/2 | 40.9y (19-73y) | 11/11 | 13.3y | Dronabinol capsule oral (2.5mg, 5.0mg, 10.0mg) | Baseline | 6-point pain scale | ↓ Pain (1d p=0.047) | |||||||||||||
Abbreviations: ↑: increase; ↓: decrease; =: no change; *: pain studied as a primary outcome; CBD: cannabidiol; CT-3: 1’,1’-dimethylheptyl-Δ8-tetrahydrocannabinol-11-oic acid in capsules; CI: confidence interval; d: day; f/u: follow-up; MAS: Modified Ashworth Scale; mo: month; NR: not reported; SCI: spinal cord injury; THC: tetrahydrocannabinol; UC: University of California; VAS: visual analog scale; VRS: verbal rating scale; wks: weeks, y: years.
e-6. Summary coding of studies examining the effect of cannabinoids on SCI-specific outcomes.
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|
| Pain | 5/6 (83%) | ++ |
| Spasticity | 5/5 (100%) | ++ |
| Quality of life and daily function | 0/3 (0%) | 00 |
| Cognition | 3/6 (50%) | ? |
| Mood and emotion | 0/3 (0%) | 00 |
| Bladder function | 0/3 (0%) | 00 |
| Cardiovascular, hematologic and respiratory | 0/3 (0%) | 00 |
Abbreviations: n: number of studies reporting a difference in the expected direction. N: number of identified studies of interest. (%): percentage of studies reporting differences in the expected direction. 0: no effect, 0–33% of studies reported significant differences. ?: inconsistent, 34–59% of studies reported significant differences. +/-: positive (+) or negative (−) effect, 60–100% of studies demonstrated significant differences. ≥4 studies: positive (++), negative (−−), no effect (00), inconsistent findings (??).
e-7. Effect sizes and relative differences of randomized control studies of the effects of cannabinoids among adults with chronic SCI.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| ||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karst | VRS pain | CT-3 – placebo sequence | CT-3 10.0mg-80.0mg | 3hrs | 10 | -0.36 (0.47) | 10 | -0.11 (0.40) | -0.57 (0.44) [-1.44-0.34] | 0.55 (↓) | |||||||||||
| Placebo – CT-3 sequence | 3hrs | 11 | -0.61 (1.01) | 11 | -0.19 (0.55) | -0.52 (0.81) [-1.35-0.35] | 0.50 (↓) | ||||||||||||||
| VAS pain, 100-mm scale | CT-3 – placebo sequence | 3hrs | 10 | -13.07 (13.76) | 10 | -1.52 (12.98) | -0.86 (13.38) [-1.74-0.09] | 0.82 (↓) | |||||||||||||
| Placebo – CT-3 sequence | 3hrs | 11 | -13.00 (22.14) | 11 | -3.14 (13.11) | -0.54 (18.19) [-1.37-0.33] | 0.52 (↓) | ||||||||||||||
| Wade | VAS pain, 100-mm scale | CBD | 2.5mg-120.0mg/d | Daily | 20 | 54.8 (22.6) | 20 | 44.5 (22.7) | 0.46 (22.6) [-0.18-0.43] | 0.45 (↓) | |||||||||||
| VAS pain, 11-point scale | CBD | 2wks | 20 | 3.8 (2.9) | 20 | 4.4 (3.2) | -0.20 (3.05) [-0.81-0.43] | 0.19 (↓) | |||||||||||||
| Wilsey | VAS pain intensity, 11-point scale | 3.5% THC | 9 puffs | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 hrs | 36 | NR | 33 | NR | Insufficient data | Insufficient data | |||||||||||
| Rintala | Brief Pain Inventory, 11-point scale | Dronabinol | 5.0-20.0mg/d | 4wks | 7 | -0.27 (0.84) | 5 | -1.80 (2.49) | 0.90 (1.70) [-0.37-2.02] | 0.83 | |||||||||||
| Wilsey | VAS pain, 100-mm scale | 2.9% THC | 4-8 puffs | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 hrs | 42 | NR | 42 | NR | Insufficient data | Insufficient data | |||||||||||
| Wade | NRS spasms, 100-mm scale | CBD | 2.5mg-120.0mg/d | Daily | 20 | 54.6 (19.1) | 20 | 47.3 (22.6) | 0.35 (20.9) [-0.28-0.97] | 0.34 (↓) | |||||||||||
| NRS spasticity, 100-mm scale | CBD | 20 | 47.8 (18.5) | 20 | 42.3 (18.1) | 0.30 (18.3) [-0.33-0.92] | 0.29 (↓) | ||||||||||||||
| Spasticity severity, 11-point scale | CBD | 2wk | 20 | 3.8 (2.0) | 20 | 5.4 (2.3) | -0.74 (2.15) [-1.37-(-0.09)] | 0.73 (↓) | |||||||||||||
| Spasticity frequency, | CBD | 20 | 4.6 (2.2) | 20 | 4.9 (2.5) | -0.36 (2.25) [-0.97-0.28] | 0.35 (↓) | ||||||||||||||
| AS | CBD | 20 | 1.7 (1.2) | 20 | 1.7 (1.0) | 0.00 (1.10) [-0.62-0.62] | 0.00 | ||||||||||||||
| Hagenbach | MAS | Oral THC | (2.5mg, | 1hr | 6 | 7.57 (7.37) | 7 | 12.00 (6.11) | -0.66 (6.71) [-1.73-0.50] | 0.61 (↓) | |||||||||||
| Pooyania | AS – most involved group | Nabilone | 0.5-1.0mg/d | 4wk | 11 | 6.45 | 11 | 7.45 | Insufficient data | Insufficient data | |||||||||||
| AS – 8 muscle groups | Nabilone | 11 | 26.9 | 11 | 29.45 | Insufficient data | Insufficient data | ||||||||||||||
| VAS spasticity, | Nabilone | 11 | 44.09 | 11 | 53.18 | Insufficient data | Insufficient data | ||||||||||||||
| Spasm frequency scale | Nabilone | 11 | 3.45 | 11 | 3.45 | Insufficient data | Insufficient data | ||||||||||||||
| Wilsey | Spasticity severity scale 11-point | 2.9% THC | 4-8 puffs | 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 hrs | 42 | NR | 42 | NR | Insufficient data | Insufficient data | |||||||||||
Abbreviations: AS: Ashworth Scale, CBD: cannabidiol, MAS: modified Ashworth Scale, THC: tetrahydrocannabinol, VAS: visual analog scale, VRS: verbal rating scale, ↓: decrease. *Mean (SD), if not indicated otherwise. **Based on mean difference scores of intervention vs control group; see formula below [39]. Δ outcome change from baseline.
CG: Control Group, ES: Effect Size, M: Mean, N: number, SD: Standard Deviation, t= Time Point, TG: Treatment Group, μweighted: weighted mean, w: Weights, x: Value
Reported benefits of cannabinoid use from observational studies.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dunn & Davis, 1974 [ | Cross-sectional | Illegal | 10/10 | SCI patients using cannabis | - | 10/0/0 | NR | Relief: 50% (headache), 40% | Relief: 50% | Pleasant sensations: 50% | ||||||||
| Malec | Cross-sectional | Illegal | 43/43 | SCI patients | - | 38/5/0 | NR | NR | Relief: 88% (Complete relief 38%, reduction to mild 46%, severe to moderate 4%) | NR | ||||||||
| Warms | Cross-sectional | MC legal starting Nov 1998, study V1 Feb 1997 – Jul 1998, V2 Aug 1998 – June 2000 (Washington, USA) | 471/471 | 18+ age, 6+ mo since SCI | - | 334/137/0 | 42.5 ± 13.2 | Pain helpfulness: 4.25 ± 0.76 | NR | Pain relief greater than opioids, mexiletine, baclofen, acetaminophen, TCAs, NSAIDs, gabapentin, carbamazepine, | ||||||||
| Grotenhermen & Schnellea, 2003 [ | Cross-sectional | Dronabinol prescription and ∆9-THC special permit (Germany) and permit (Switzerland) | 4/165 | Members of Association for Cannabis as Medicine | No severe disease | 101/64/0 | Median age: 40.3 ± 12.4 (16-87) | NR | NR | Large disease improvement: 75%, small improvement: 13%, no improvement: 2%, unknown: 7%, | ||||||||
| Gortera, 2005 [ | Cross-sectional | MC legal (Netherlands) | ?/107 | Members of Multiple Sclerosis society | - | 48/59/0 | Median age: 58.0 | NR | NR | Efficacy: excellent 18%, good 47%, somewhat 18%, none 18%; Statistical | ||||||||
| Cardenas & Jensen, 2006 [ | Cross-sectional | MC legal (Washington, USA) | 117/117 | 18+ age, tSCI, chronic pain | Incomplete questionnaires | 85/32/0 | 48.8 ± 11.7 (21-79) | Relief: 6.62 ± 2.54 (max 10) | NR | Pain relief greater than opioids, mexiletine, baclofen, acetaminophen, TCAs, NSAIDs, gabapentin, carbamazepine, | ||||||||
| Mahoney | Interview | Illegal | 24/24 | 1+ y since SCI, spasticity, English language | - | 17/7/0 | 45.1 (21-68) | NR | Prevents, modulates and stops spasms | NR | ||||||||
| Aggarwal | Retrospective chart review | MC legal (Washington, USA) | 5/139 | 18+ age, pain clinic patients, access to MC with valid doctor documentation | Cannabinoid receptor 1 blocker drug rimonabant | 88/51/0 | Median age: 48 (18-84) | Chronic pain relief; often described as the most effective pain | NR | Preferred for less side effects; adjunctive use with opioids reduced opioid dosages and 6% used to reduce opioid dependence | ||||||||
| Heutink | Cross-sectional | MC legal starting 2003, study 1990-2005 (the Netherlands) | 279/279 | 18+ age, SCI rehab patients, living in community | - | 173/106/0 | 51.3 ± 14.0 (25-81) | (Alcohol and cannabis pooled) Largely effective 83%, | NR | NR | ||||||||
| Shroff, 2015 [ | Interview | MC legal (Canada) | 53/53 | 19-65 age, 1+ years since SCI, BC resident, member of paraplegic association | - | 42/11/0 | NR | NR | NR | Preferred for less side effects | ||||||||
| Andresen | Cross-sectional | MC legal starting 2011, study 1990-2012 (Denmark) | 537/537 | Inclusion: 18+ age, acquired tSCI, rehab clinic patients | Incomplete questionnaires | 413/124/0 | 54.6 ± 14.6 (18-88) | Relief: good 35%, very good 24% | Relief: good 32%, very good 27% | NR | ||||||||
| Bruce | Interview | MC legal (Illinois, USA) | 6/30 | 18+ age, smoked MC in past 3 mo, qualifying health condition for MC | - | 19/11/0 | 44.6 ± 15.9 | NR | NR | Preferred over other pain treatments for quick action, long effects, symptom relief, less side effects; adjunctive use with opioids reduced opioid dose and dependence | ||||||||
| Bourke | Interview | Illegal (New Zealand) | 8/8 | 18+ age, SCI patients using cannabis for pain, residing in New Zealand, English | Comorbid conditions inhibiting communication and participation in the interview | 6/2/0 | Age 20-39: n = 1, 40-59: n= 5, 60+: n=2 | Pain relief improving function, community participation and decreased disability | NR | Preferred for relatively lower fatigue and drowsiness as of prescribed medications | ||||||||
| Stillman | Cross-sectional | 39 states in USA, not disclosed; mixed legality | 353/353 | SCI patients included in mailing lists maintained by Thomas Jefferson University, University of Washington at Seattle, and University of Alabama at Birmingham | - | 183/107/3 | 52.74 (19-82) | NR | NR | Muscle relaxation: 90% | ||||||||
Abbreviations: BC: British Columbia; d: days; hr: hours; MC: medical cannabis; min: minutes; mo: months; NR: not reported; NSAIDs: nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs; SCI: spinal cord injury; TCAs: tricyclic antidepressants; ∆9-THC: delta-9-tetracannabidiol; tSCI: traumatic spinal cord injury; y: years. adata listed not limited to people with SCI.
Experimental studies: effect of cannabinoids on spasticity.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Randomized Control Trials (Mixed Samples) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
| *Wade | Neurologic diagnosis and be able to identify troublesome symptoms which were stable and unresponsive to standard treatments. | History of drug or alcohol abuse, serious psychiatric illness (excluding depression associated with neurological condition), serious cardiovascular disease or active epilepsy | 4/20 | 10/10 | 48y | NR | NR | CBD-rich sublingual spray (2.5mg–max 120mg/d) | Placebo (Inert Plant Material) | NRS spasticity, AS, 10-point spasticity severity scale; spasm frequency/day | ↓ Spasticity | NRS spasm/d: ↓ 0.34 | ||||||||||||
| THC-rich sublingual spray (2.5mg–max 120mg/d) | Placebo (Inert Plant Material) | ↓ Spasticity (daily, 2wk NRS p<0.05) | NRS spasm/d: ↓ 0.48 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| 1:1 THC:CBD sublingual spray (2.5mg–max 120mg/d) | Placebo (Inert Plant Material) | ↓ Spasticity (daily, 2wk NRA p<0.05) | NRS spasm/d: ↓ 0.35 | |||||||||||||||||||||
| *Hagenbach | Terminated taking all spasmolytic medication | Pregnant, severe somatic and known psychiatric diseases | 13/13 | 11/2 | 40.9y | 5/8 | 14.3y | Dronabinol capsule oral (2.5mg, 5.0mg, 10.0mg) | Placebo (sesame oil) | MAS, 7-point spasticity severity scale | ↓ Spasticity (p=0.001 placebo of this phase vs open label of oral phase) (day one self-rating p=0.033) | MAS: ↓ 0.61 | ||||||||||||
| **Non-RCT phase | 22/22 | 20/2 | 40.9y (19-73y) | 11/11 | 13.3y | Dronabinol capsule oral (2.5mg, 5.0mg, 10.0mg) | Baseline | ↓ Spasticity | - | |||||||||||||||
| 8/8 | 8/0 | 48.8y (32-66y) | 5/3 | 15.5y | Rectal THC (5.0mg, 10.0mg) | Baseline | ↓ Spasticity (AS at 1/8/43d p<0.05) | - | ||||||||||||||||
| *Pooyania | Aged 18-65 with a level of injury at C5 or below, and injury occurred more than 1 year previously. Stable neurologic level, with moderate spasticity (>3 AS). Spasticity medications had to be unchanged for at least 30 days before inclusion and no botulinum toxin injections | History of heart disease, psychotic disorders, schizophrenia, or any active psychologic disorder. Previously documented sensitivity to marijuana or other cannabinoid agents, severe liver dysfunction, cognitive impairment, a major illness in another body area, fixed tendon contractures. Pregnant or nursing. History of drug dependency, smoked cannabis <30d before study onset, or unwilling to not smoke during the study | 12/12 | 12/0 | 42.4y | 6/6 | NR | Nabilone (0.5mg-1.0mg/d) | Placebo | AS, Spasm frequency scale, VAS spasticity, Pendulum test, Global Impression of Change (subject/ | ↓ Spasticity (aAS in most spasticity group p=0.003, AS in 8 muscle groups p=0.001) | Insufficient data | ||||||||||||
| *Wilsey | Age 18-70, with pain intensity >4/10, who attend the UC Davis Medical Center Spinal Cord Injury Clinic | Diagnosis of bipolar depression, schizophrenia, severe depression, or affirmation to the statements “I felt life was not worth living”; “I felt like hurting myself”; “I felt like killing myself”. A history of coronary artery disease, obstructive pulmonary disease, severe liver disease, impaired renal function. Current substance use disorder. | 29/42 | 29/13 | 46.4y | NR | 11.6 ± 10.1y | 2.9% delta 9-THC vaporized cannabis (4-8 puffs) | Placebo | 11-point spasticity severity scale (spasms, pain, muscle stiffness), Global Impression of Change | ↓ Spasticity (420min p<0.0001) | Insufficient data | ||||||||||||
| 6.7% delta 9-THC vaporized cannabis (4-8 puffs) | Placebo | = Spasticity | Insufficient data | |||||||||||||||||||||
| *Kogel | SCI staff selected. Chronic problematic spasticity that has not responded to more commonly prescribed spasmolytic medications. | - | 5/5 | 5/0 | 41y | 5/0 | 6mo-9y | Dronabinol (15.0 mg – 60.0mg/d) | Baseline | Pendulum Drop Test | ↓ Spasticity | |||||||||||||
Note: a:clinically meaningful change in AS as defined as a decrease of 1 point. ↑: increase; ↓: decrease; =: no change; *: pain studied as a primary outcome; AS: Ashworth Scale; CBD: cannabidiol; d: day; f/u: follow-up; MAS: Modified Ashworth Scale; mo: month; NR: not reported; NRS: numerical rating scale; SCI: spinal cord injury; THC: tetrahydrocannabinol; UC: University California; wks: weeks, y: years.
Observational studies: reported side effects from cannabinoids.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dunn & Davis, 1974 [ | SCI patients using cannabis | - | 10/10 | 10/0 | NR | NR | NR | Urinary retention: 20% |
| Heinemann | 13-66 age, 2+ years since tSCI, English language, no cognitive impairment | - | 43/43 | 38/5 | NR | NR | NR | Marijuana use problems 6 months pre-SCI: 21%, |
| Grotenhermen & Schnellea, 2003 [ | Members of Association for Cannabis as Medicine | No severe disease | 4/165 | 101/64 | Median age: 40.3 ± 12.4 | NR | NR | Side effects; none 73%, moderate 22%, no answer 4% |
| Gortera, 2005 [ | Members of Multiple Sclerosis society | - | ?/107 | 48/59 | Median age: 40.3 ± 12.4 | NR | NR | Dry mouth: 27%, sleepiness: 14%, euphoria: 13%, loss of concentration: 12%, feeling high: 11%; |
| Aggarwal | 18+ age, pain clinic patients, access to MC with valid doctor documentation | Cannabinoid receptor 1 blocker drug rimonabant | 5/139 | 88/51 | Median age: 48 (18-84) | NR | NR | No side effects with MC |
| Shroff, 2015 [ | 19-65 age, 1+ years since SCI, BC resident, member of paraplegic association | - | 53/53 | 42/11 | NR | NR | NR | Incapacitation |
| Andresen | Inclusion: 18+ age, acquired tSCI, rehab clinic patients | Incomplete questionnaires | 537/537 | 413/124 | 54.6 ± 14.6 (18-88) | 247/263, unknown: 27 | 18.2 ± 12.8 | Inertia: 63%, feeling subdued: 50%, absent-minded: 29%, risky behaviour: 27% |
| Clark | 18+ age, 1+ year since tSCI, some residual impairment | No painful condition, no prescription pain med | 1619/1619 | 1166/453 | 49.3 ± 14.2 | 453/1166 | 11.5 ± 9.2 | Frequent MC use 1.8x pain med misuse, occasional MC use 2.7x pain med misuse |
| Hawley | Cross-sectional | MC and recreational legal (Colorado, USA) | 51/116 | 95/21/0 | 47.1 ± 13.8 (22-74) | Tetra ABC: 38, para ABC: 31, tetra/para D: 41, unknown: 5 | 13.0 | Amotivation: 30%, social stigma: 26%, other: |
| Bourke | 18+ age, SCI patients using cannabis for pain, residing in New Zealand, English speaking | Comorbid conditions inhibiting communication and participation in an interview | 8/8 | 6/2/0 | Age 20-39: n = 1, 40-59: n= 5, 60+: n=2 | Tetra: 6 | NR | Dysphoria: detrimental effect on the mind and ability to participate within the community |
| Stillman | Cross-sectional | 39 states in USA, not disclosed; mixed legality | 353/353 | 183/107/3 | 52.74 | NR | 17.49 | Dry mouth: 55%, |
Abbreviations: BC: British Columbia; MC: medical cannabis; min: minutes; NR: not reported; SCI: spinal cord injury; tSCI: traumatic spinal cord injury. adata listed not limited to people with SCI.
Experimental studies: reported side effects from cannabinoids.
|
|
|
|
|
|
| ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Karst | Neuropathic and somatic pain for | No N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist and cannabinoid concomitant pain-relieving medications. Severe organic or psychiatric disease, pregnancy/attempting to conceive, lactation, use of any investigational drug within 30d prior to first dose of study drug, non-German speaking | CT-3 (10.0mg–max 80.0mg) | Placebo | ↑ Fatiguef; ↑ Dry mouthf ; ↑ Limited power of concentrationf; ↑ Painf; = Objective concentration; = Vitals (RR, HR, BP, wt, temp, ECG, hematologic and blood chemistry) | ||
| Wade | Neurologic diagnosis and be able to identify troublesome symptoms which were stable and unresponsive to standard treatments | History of drug or alcohol abuse, serious psychiatric illness (excluding depression associated with neurological condition), serious cardiovascular disease or active epilepsy | CBD-rich sublingual spray (2.5mg–max 120mg/d) | Placebo (Inert Plant Material) | = Objective concentration; = Bladder function; = Daily functioning | ||
| THC-rich sublingual spray (2.5mg–max 120mg/d) | Placebo (Inert Plant Material) | ↓ Objective Concentration (SOMC) j; ↑ Appetite (daily VAS) j; = Bladder function; = Daily functioning | |||||
| 1:1 THC:CBD sublingual spray (2.5mg–max 120mg/d) | Placebo (Inert Plant Material) | = Objective concentration; = Bladder function; = Daily functioning; | |||||
| Hagenbach | Terminated taking all spasmolytic medication | Pregnant, severe somatic and known psychiatric diseases | Dronabinol capsule oral (2.5mg, 5.0mg, 10.0mg) | Placebo (sesame oil) | ↑ Reaction Time; = Vitals (HR, BP, ECG, hematologic and blood chemistry); = Mood; = Functional independence | ||
| *Non-RCT phase | Dronabinol capsule oral (2.5mg, 5.0mg, 10.0mg) | Baseline | ↓ Systolic BP; ↑ Vital capacity (43d) g; = Mood; = Functional independence; = objective concentration; = Bladder function; ↑ Fatigue (36%); ↑ Dry mouth (32%); ↑ Anxiety (32%); ↑ Disturbance of attention (27%); ↑ Pain (23%); ↑ Dizziness (23%) | ||||
| Rectal THC (5.0mg, 10.0mg) | Baseline | ↑MCC (43d) k; = Vitals (HR, BP, ECG, hematologic and blood chemistry); = Mood; = Functional independence | |||||
| Wilsey | Adults with complex regional pain syndrome (CRPS type 1), SCI, peripheral neuropathy, or nerve injury. Previous cannabis exposure. Must refrain from smoking cannabis or taking oral synthetic delta-9-THC medications for 30d before study session | Candidates who met the criteria for severe major depressive disorder, or candidates with a history or diagnosis of schizophrenia or bipolar depression. Uncontrolled hypertension, cardiovascular disease, chronic pulmonary disease (asthma, chronic pulmonary obstructive disease), active substance abuse | 3.5% delta 9-THC cigarettes (9 puffs) | Placebo | ↑ “Feeling high”j; ↑ “Feeling stoned”j; ↑ “Impaired”d; ↑ Sedationd; ↑ Hungerb; ↓ Attention; ↓ Learning/memory; ↓ Psychomotor speed; ↑ “Good drug effect”b; ↑ Calmnessi | ||
| 7% delta 9-THC cigarettes (9 puffs) | Placebo | ↑ “Feeling high”b; ↑ “Feeling stoned”c; ↑ “Bad drug effect”d; ↑ “Impaired”d; ↑ Sedatione; ↑ Hungere; ↓ Learning/memory; ↑ “Good drug effect”e; ↑ HR (immediately); = Mood; = Spasticity ; = Neurocognition (overall) | |||||
| Pooyania | Aged 18-65 with a level of injury at C5 or below, and injury occurred more than 1 year previously. Stable neurologic level, with moderate spasticity (>3 AS). Spasticity medications had to be unchanged for at least 30 days before inclusion and no botulinum toxin injections >4mo | History of heart disease, psychotic disorders, schizophrenia, or any active psychologic disorder. Previous documented sensitivity to marijuana or other cannabinoid agents, severe liver dysfunction, cognitive impairment, a major illness in another body area, fixed tendon contractures. Pregnant or nursing. History of drug dependency, smoked cannabis <30d before study onset, or unwilling to not smoke during the study | Nabilone (0.5mg-1.0mg/d) | Placebo | ↑ Drowsiness (27.2%); ↑ Dry mouth (18.1%); ↑ Asthenia (18.1%); ↑ Vertigo (18.1%) | ||
| Rintala | Adults who had sustained an SCI | Previous adverse reaction to any cannabinoid or sesame oil, current or history substance abuse, serious psychological or psychiatric disorder, renal or hepatic insufficiency, history of tachycardia, pregnant or nursing | Dronabinol (5.0mg–max 20.0mg) | Placebo (diphenhydramine) | ↑ Constipation; ↑ Fatigue; ↑ Dry mouth; ↑ Abdominal discomfort | ||
| Wilsey | Age 18-70, with pain intensity >4/10, who attend the UC Davis Medical Center Spinal Cord Injury Clinic | Diagnosis of bipolar depression, schizophrenia, severe depression, or affirmation to the statements “I felt life was not worth living”; “I felt like hurting myself”; “I felt like killing myself”. A history of coronary artery disease, obstructive pulmonary disease, severe liver disease, impaired renal function. Current substance use disorder. | 2.9% delta 9-THC vaporized cannabis (4-8 puffs) | Placebo | ↑ “Good Drug Effect”a; ↑ “Bad Drug Effect”a; ↑ Higha; ↑ Drunka; ↑ Stoneda; ↑ Sedateda; ↑ Nauseaa; ↑ Changes Perceiving Time/Spacea; ↑ HR (immediately); ↑ calmness; = Neurocognition (overall) | ||
| 6.7% delta 9-THC vaporized cannabis (4-8 puffs) | Placebo | ↑ Confuseda; ↑ Desires Morea; ↑ Hungrya; ↑ Difficulty Paying Attention/ Remembering Thingsa; ↑ “Good Drug* Effect”a; ↑ “Bad Drug Effect”a; ↑ High*a; ↑ Drunk*a; ↑ Impaired*a; ↑ Stoned*a; ↑ Sedated*a; ↑ Nauseaa; ↑ Changes Perceiving Space*/Timea | |||||
| Kogel | SCI staff selected. Chronic problematic spasticity that has not responded to more commonly prescribed spasmolytic medications. | NR | Dronabinol (15.0 mg - 60.0mg/d) | Baseline | ↓ Subjective Concentration; ↓ vigor; = objective concentration; ↑ | ||
Abbreviations: ↑: increase; ↓: decrease; =: no change; adata listed not limited to people with SCI; AS: Ashworth Scale; BP: blood pressure; CBD: cannabidiol; CT-3: 1’,1’-dimethylheptyl-Δ8-tetrahydrocannabinol-11-oic acid in capsules; d: day; ECG: electrocardiogram; f/u: follow-up; HR: heart rate; MAS: Modified Ashworth Scale; MC: Medical Cannabis; MCC: maximal cystometric capacity; mo: month; N/A: not applicable; NR: not reported; RR: respiratory rate; SOMC: short orientation-memory-cognition test; temp: temperature; THC: tetrahydrocannabinol; UC: University California; VAS: visual analog scale; wt: weight; y: year. *denotes that higher dose was significant vs lower dose; adenotes p<0.0001; bdenotes p<0.001; cdenotes p=0.001; ddenotes p=0.003; edenotes p<0.01; fdenotes p=0.02; gdenotes p=0.028; hdenotes p=0.03; idenotes p<0.03; jdenotes p<0.05; kdenotes p=0.075.
e-8. Clinical trials conducted on adults with SCI with cannabinoids interventions searched February 29th, 2020.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cannabinoids and an Anti-inflammatory Diet for the Treatment of Neuropathic Pain after Spinal Cord Injury | Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT04057456 | 2 | Spinal Cord Injuries | Placebo diet | Informed consent; SCI >12mo duration; neuropathic pain >3/10 in severity on NRS with average >3/10 pain over the past 7d on screening; ongoing constant pain for >3mo or relapsing/remitting pain for >6mo; dosing of other pain medications stable for >1mo; cannabinoids stopped >7d prior to screening | History of psychotic disorder/convulsive disorder/substance abuse, current SI, intolerance to cannabinoids, traumatic SCI superimposed on prior congenital stenosis; pregnancy; unwilling to stop PRN pain medications; other medical conditions that confound the assessment of neuropathic pain | Average Pain intensity; Sensory Changes; Pain relief | Patient global impression of change; Work productivity and activity; Mood; Depression; Sleep; Spasticity; Pro-inflammatory Biomarkers (IL-2, IL-6, IL-1β, tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-α), interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) and prostaglandin E2 (PGE2)); Anti-inflammatory Biomarkers (IL-4, IL-10 and IL-1a) |
| Effect of Cannabinoids on Spasticity and Neuropathic Pain in Spinal Cord Injured Persons | Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT01222468 | 2 | Muscle Spasticity as a Result of Spinal Cord Injury | Nabilone 0.5mg | SCI; 12mo post-injury; C2-T12, ASIA A-D, stable level of injury; moderate to severe spasticity or moderate to severe neuropathic pain; no cognitive impairment; medications unchanged for >30d or inadequate pain control at a stabilized dose of gabapentin/pregabalin for >30d; no botulinum toxin injections <6mo | Significant CVS; major illness in another body area; history of psychological disorders or predisposition to psychosis; sensitivity to cannabinoids; severe liver disfunction; history of drug dependency; fixed tendon contractures; used cannabis <30d; unwilling to refrain from smoking cannabis during the study; pregnant or nursing mother | Ashworth Scale; VAS | Spasticity; Sleep; Subject's Global Impression of Change; Clinician's Global Impression of Change; Pain |
| A Study of Cannabis Based Medicine Extracts and Placebo in Patients with Pain Due to Spinal Cord Injury | Clinicaltrials.gov, NCT01606202 | 3 | Pain | GW-1000-02 (THC 27mg/ml: CBD 25mg/ml) in 100uL | Informed consent; | History of significant psychiatric disorder other than depression associated with their underlying condition; history of alcohol/substance abuse; severe CVS disorder, (other than atrial fibrillation), poorly controlled htn or severe HF; history of AD, epilepsy; pregnant or nursing mother; significant renal/hepatic impairment; procedures requiring GA during the study; terminal illness; inappropriate for placebo medication; significant disease or disorder in the opinion of the investigator; regular levodopa therapy <7d; known or suspected hypersensitivity/adverse reaction to cannabinoids, intention to travel internationally during the study; intention to donate blood during the study; participation in another research <12wks to study entry; previous randomisation into this study; <18yrs | Mean Central Neuropathic Pain; | Spasticity; Concentration; Quality of Life; Patient Global Impression of Change; Pain; Caregiver Strain; Sleep; Incidence of Adverse Events; Use of Escape Medication |
Abbreviations: AD: autonomic dysreflexia; AS: Ashworth Scale; COPD: chronic obstructive pulmonary disease; CVS: cardiovascular disease; d: day; GA: general anesthetic; HF: heart failure; htn: hypertension; IL: interleukin; mo: month; NRS: numerical rating scale, PRN: as needed; SCI: spinal cord injury; SI: suicidal ideation; SZA: schizophrenia; TB: tuberculosis; TBI: traumatic brain injury; wk: week; yrs: year.