| Literature DB >> 32973998 |
Edward Chesney1, Philip McGuire2, Tom P Freeman3, John Strang4, Amir Englund5.
Abstract
Over the past 5 years, public interest in the potential health benefits of cannabidiol (CBD) has increased exponentially, and a wide range of over-the-counter (OTC) preparations of CBD are now available. A substantial proportion of the population appears to have used these products, yet the extent to which they are effective or safe is unclear. We reviewed the evidence for whether CBD has significant pharmacological and symptomatic effects at the doses typically found in OTC preparations. We found that most of the evidence for beneficial effects is derived from studies of pure, pharmaceutical grade CBD at relatively high doses. Relatively few studies have examined the effect of OTC CBD preparations, or of CBD at low doses. Thus, at present, there is little evidence that OTC CBD products have health benefits, and their safety has not been investigated. Controlled trials of OTC and low-dose CBD preparations are needed to resolve these issues.Entities:
Keywords: CBD; cannabidiol; cannabis oil; efficacy; health supplement; over the counter; safety
Year: 2020 PMID: 32973998 PMCID: PMC7491225 DOI: 10.1177/2045125320954992
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ther Adv Psychopharmacol ISSN: 2045-1253
Figure 1.Google search trends for the terms ‘THC’ [tetrahydrocannabinol] and ‘CBD’ [cannabidiol], worldwide January 2004–February 2020.
Figure 2.OTC CBD products: (a) Capsules, (b) Spray, (c) Oil and dropper, (d) Gummies, a type of ‘edible’. (e) Dried plant material, (f) A dry vaporizer, (g) Joint, and (h) e-Liquid vaporizer
The affinity and half-maximal concentrations for the putative molecular targets of CBD.
| Target | EC50/IC50, SEM (nM) | Ki (nM) |
|---|---|---|
| CB1 orthosteric site | – | 3245 nM |
| CB1 allosteric site | 304 | |
| CB2 orthosteric site | 503 ± 2080 | 3612 ± 1382 |
| CB2 allosteric site | 2–8 | 3.6 ± 0.3 |
| FAAH | 19,800 ± 4770 | – |
| Anandamide transporter | 10,200 ± 3030 | |
| TRPM8 | 70 ± 14 | – |
| TRPA1 | 100 ± 10 | – |
| TRPV1 | 1900 ± 802 | 3600 ± 200 |
| TRPV2 | 12,200 ± 9770 | – |
| D2 | 66 ± 20 | 11 |
| Adenosine uptake (ENT1) | 122 | – |
| GPR55 | 433 ± 43 | – |
| PPARγ receptors | 5000 | – |
| α3 Glycine receptor | 11,000 | – |
| 5HT1A | – | 16,000 |
EC50, half-maximal effective concentration; IC50, half-maximal inhibitory concentration; Ki, inhibitory constant, the affinity of the ligand for a receptor.
Data from McPartland et al.,[49] Martinez-Pinilla et al.,[48] Laprairie et al.[41] and Seeman.[47]
The binding affinity of (+) and (–) enantiomers of CBD to CB receptors.
| Compound | CB1 Ki (nM) | CB2 Ki (nM) |
|---|---|---|
| (–)-CBD | >10,000 | >10,000 |
| (–)-7-OH-CBD | >10,000 | >10,000 |
| (–)-7-COOH-CBD | >10,000 | >10,000 |
| (+)-CBD | 842 ± 36 | 203 ± 16 |
| (+)-7-OH-CBD | 5.3 ± 0.5 | 101 ± 5 |
| (+)-7-COOH-CBD | 13.2 ± 0.4 | 322 ± 16 |
Data from Morales et al.,[55] Bisogno et al.[56] and Fride et al.[57]
Placebo controlled clinical studies of low dose CBD and CBD predominant cannabis-based medicine extracts.
| Study | Patient group | Participants | Design | Low-dose CBD arms | Comparison arms | Type of CBD & administration | Efficacy of low-dose CBD | Adverse effects |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Naftali | Crohn’s disease | 19 | Parallel groups | CBD 10 mg BD ( | Placebo ( | Natural extract | None | None |
| Tomida | Ocular hypertension & glaucoma | 6 | 4-arm crossover | CBD 20 mg | Placebo | Natural extract | Transient elevation in intraocular pressure with CBD 40 mg | Minimal |
| Notcutt[ | Chronic pain | 34 | ‘N of 1’ design | CBME (>95% CBD) 2.5 mg as required (median 8/day) | Δ9-THC 2.5 mg | Natural extract | No efficacy for pain | Minimal |
| Carlini and Cunha[ | Healthy volunteers | 10 | Parallel groups | CBD 10 mg ( | Placebo ( | Natural extract | N/A | None |
| Carlini and Cunha[ | Healthy volunteers | 4 | Mixed | CBD 5 mg BD oral ( | Placebo ( | Natural extract | N/A | Somnolence in 2/3 CBD participants |
| Carlin and Cunha[ | Insomniacs | 15 | Crossover | CBD 40 mg | CBD 80 mg | Natural extract | Reduced dream recall at 40 mg. No changes to other sleep parameters | None |
| CAMS[ | Spasticity in multiple sclerosis | 630 | Parallel groups | CBME (>95% CBD) 1.25 mg, 2–5 capsules BD ( | Δ9-THC 2.5 mg, 4–10 capsules/day ( | Natural extract | No difference in Ashworth score of spasticity or walking speed. Subjective improvement in pain and spasticity | Constipation, diarrhoea, increased appetite |
| CAMS-LUTS[ | Urge incontinence in multiple sclerosis | 522 | Parallel groups | CBME (>95% CBD) 1.25 mg, 2–5 capsules BD ( | Δ9-THC 2.5 mg, 2–5 capsules BD ( | Natural extract | 25% reduction ( | None |
| Morgan | Smokers | 24 | Parallel groups | CBD 400 μg PRN ( | Placebo ( | Synthetic | Reduced cigarette consumption | None |
BD, twice a day.