UK Study Shows Chronic Pain Patients Benefit from Cannabis

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Chronic pain patients who used a variety of cannabis products experienced less pain, better sleep and improved quality of life, according to a new UK study that found the most improvement in patients who used oil-based cannabis products.

Researchers at Imperial College London assessed the safety and efficacy of cannabis in over 700 pain patients enrolled in the UK Medical Cannabis Registry. Participants were divided into three groups that used either oil-based cannabis, smoked or vaporized dried flowers, or a combination of both (CBMP) for six months. The oil-based products included extracts, lozenges and capsules.

The study findings, published in the journal Expert Review of Neurotherapeutics, show symptom improvement in all three groups, with patients using cannabis oil either alone or in combination with dried flower reporting the most improvement.

Researchers think the CBMP group derived the most benefit because the cannabis was ingested through two different administrative routes, one absorbed straight into the blood stream through inhaling (dried flowers) and the other slowly absorbed through the digestive system (oil-based cannabis).

“The findings in this study demonstrate treatment with oil-based, dried flowers, or a combination of both CBMPs are associated with statistically significant improvements in pain relief and sleep quality after 6 months in chronic pain patients,” researchers reported.

“Additionally, patients prescribed oils or both types of CBMPs experienced reduced anxiety and an improvement in their ability to perform daily activities. Patients prescribed a combination of both CBMPs recorded improvements in their self-care and mobility abilities. Collectively, this evidence signals that initiation of CBMP treatment is associated with improved HRQoL (health related quality of life).

In addition to symptom improvement, participants in the CBMP group reported a small reduction (3.28%) in their use of opioid analgesics.

About one in every four patients had an adverse side effect, such as fatigue, somnolence and dry mouth. Adverse events were more common in females, former cannabis users and cannabis naïve (new) users.  

A previous study of patients enrolled in the UK Medical Cannabis Registry found significant improvement in their pain, discomfort and sleep quality after using cannabis oil.

A recent survey of U.S. adults with chronic pain found that nearly a third have used cannabis for pain relief. Over half of those who used cannabis said it also enabled them to decrease their use of opioids and other pain medications.

Cannabis Oil Effective for UK Chronic Pain Patients

By Pat Anson, PNN Editor

Medical cannabis has been legal in the United Kingdom since 2018, but we’re only now getting the first evidence on the effectiveness of cannabis oil for UK chronic pain patients.

One hundred ten patients enrolled in the UK Medical Cannabis Registry reported significant improvements in their pain, discomfort and sleep quality after one, three and six months of treatment with cannabis oil. There was also statistically significant improvement in their health-related quality of life.

Due to strict rules, it is difficult to get a prescription for medical cannabis from the UK’s National Health Service. Patients can only be prescribed cannabis when conventional therapy has not provided adequate relief for conditions such as pain, anxiety and multiple sclerosis.

Most of the patients (65%) in the study had never used cannabis before. Their most common primary diagnosis was chronic non-cancer pain (48%), followed by neuropathic pain (24%) and fibromyalgia (16%).

“With the increasing number of prescriptions for medical cannabis in the UK, capturing patient outcomes and real-world evidence is essential for wider understanding and appropriate access for eligible patients,” Dr. Simon Erridge, head of research at Sapphire Medical Clinics, said in a statement.

“This research is the first of its kind in Europe and we continue to review condition and product-specific outcomes via the UK Medical Cannabis Registry. Though this is still observational data it will inform critical future research including randomised controlled trials.”

Sapphire Medical Clinics created the registry and surveyed patients to help fill some of the gaps in knowledge about medical cannabis. The findings were recently published in the Journal of Clinical Pharmacology.

“Despite promising preclinical data, there is a paucity of high-quality evidence to support the use of CBMPs (cannabis-based medicinal products). The evidence base, while broad, is inconclusive, variable across chronic pain types, and thus insufficient to inform guidelines, funders, and licensing agencies,” researchers said.

The cannabis oil used in the study is made by Adven, a subsidiary of Curaleaf International, Europe’s largest independent cannabis company. The median CBD dose was 20 mg per day, while the median THC dose was 1 mg per day, giving the oil a CBD/THC ratio of 20 to 1. Adverse events such as nausea, dizziness and constipation were reported by nearly a third of patients, with most symptoms being mild or moderate.

Sapphire Medical Clinics is planning further studies of cannabis products as more participants enroll in its cannabis registry.

‘Mother of All Cannabinoids’

Another study conducted in the U.S. found that people who use cannabis products that are rich in cannabigerol (CBG) reported significant improvement in their pain, anxiety, depression and insomnia.

CBG is known as the “mother of all cannabinoids” because it rapidly converts into THC and CBD. Only trace amounts of CBG are found in most cannabis plants, but in recent years cultivated strains rich in CBG have been grown in the Pacific Northwest.

Researchers at Washington State University and the University of California Los Angeles surveyed 127 people who self-identified as consumers of CBG-dominant cannabis. Most reported their pain and other symptoms were “very much improved” or “much improved” by CBG.

About 75% said CBG-predominant cannabis was superior to conventional medications for chronic pain, depression, insomnia and anxiety. A little over half reported minor side effects such as dry mouth, sleepiness, increased appetite, and dry eyes. Most reported no withdrawal symptoms.

“This is the first patient survey of CBG-predominant cannabis use to date, and the first to document self-reported efficacy of CBG-predominant products, particularly for anxiety, chronic pain, depression, and insomnia. Most respondents reported greater efficacy of CBG-predominant cannabis over conventional pharmacotherapy, with a benign adverse event profile and negligible withdrawal symptoms,” researchers reported in the journal Cannabis and Cannabinoid Research

“This study demonstrates that CBG-predominant cannabis and related products are available and being used by cannabis consumers and demonstrates the urgent need for randomized controlled trials of CBG-predominant cannabis-based medicines to be studied rigorously to assess safety and efficacy.”

Preliminary research suggests CBG has antibacterial properties and might be useful in treating inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), glaucoma, Huntington’s disease and some forms of cancer.