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Sativex, Pot-Based Prescription Drug, Seeks FDA Approval

Sativex

LISA LEFF   01/22/12 04:39 PM ET   AP

SAN FRANCISCO — A quarter-century after the U.S. Food and Drug Administration approved the first prescription drugs based on the main psychoactive ingredient in marijuana, additional medicines derived from or inspired by the cannabis plant itself could soon be making their way to pharmacy shelves, according to drug companies, small biotech firms and university scientists.

A British company, GW Pharma, is in advanced clinical trials for the world's first pharmaceutical developed from raw marijuana instead of synthetic equivalents_ a mouth spray it hopes to market in the U.S. as a treatment for cancer pain. And it hopes to see FDA approval by the end of 2013.

Sativex contains marijuana's two best known components – delta 9-THC and cannabidiol – and already has been approved in Canada, New Zealand and eight European countries for a different usage, relieving muscle spasms associated with multiple sclerosis.

FDA approval would represent an important milestone in the nation's often uneasy relationship with marijuana, which 16 states and the District of Columbia already allow residents to use legally with doctors' recommendations. The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration categorizes pot as a dangerous drug with no medical value, but the availability of a chemically similar prescription drug could increase pressure on the federal government to revisit its position and encourage other drug companies to follow in GW Pharma's footsteps.

"There is a real disconnect between what the public seems to be demanding and what the states have pushed for and what the market is providing," said Aron Lichtman, a Virginia Commonwealth University pharmacology professor and president of the International Cannabinoid Research Society. "It seems to me a company with a great deal of vision would say, `If there is this demand and need, we could develop a drug that will help people and we will make a lot of money.'"

Possessing marijuana still is illegal in the United Kingdom, but about a decade ago GW Pharma's founder, Dr. Geoffrey Guy, received permission to grow it to develop a prescription drug. Guy proposed the idea at a scientific conference that heard anecdotal evidence that pot provides relief to multiple sclerosis patients, and the British government welcomed it as a potential way "to draw a clear line between recreational and medicinal use," company spokesman Mark Rogerson said.

In addition to exploring new applications for Sativex, the company is developing drugs with different cannabis formulations.

"We were the first ones to charge forward and a lot of people were watching to see what happened to us," Rogerson said. "I think we are clearly past that stage."

In 1985, the FDA approved two drug capsules containing synthetic THC, Marinol and Cesamet, to ease side-effects of chemotherapy in cancer patients. The agency eventually allowed Marinol to be prescribed to stimulate the appetites of AIDS patients. The drug's patent expired last year, and other U.S. companies have been developing formulations that could be administered through dissolving pills, creams and skin patches and perhaps be used for other ailments.

Doctors and multiple sclerosis patients are cautiously optimistic about Sativex. The National Multiple Sclerosis Society has not endorsed marijuana use by patients, but the organization is sponsoring a study by a University of California, Davis neurologist to determine how smoking marijuana compares to Marinol in addressing painful muscle spasms.

"The cannabinoids and marijuana will, eventually, likely be part of the clinician's armamentarium, if they are shown to be clinically beneficial," said Timothy Coetzee, the society's chief research officer. "The big unknown in my mind is whether they are clearly beneficial."

Opponents and supporters of crude marijuana's effectiveness generally agree that more research is needed. And marijuana advocates fear that the government will use any new prescription products to justify a continued prohibition on marijuana use. .

"To the extent that companies can produce effective medication that utilizes the components of the plant, that's great. But that should not be the exclusive access for people who want to be able to use medical marijuana," Americans for Safe Access spokesman Kris Hermes said. "That's the race against time, in terms of how quickly can we put pressure on the federal government to recognize the plant has medical use versus the government coming out with the magic bullet pharmaceutical pill."

Interest in new and better marijuana-based medicines has been building since the discovery in the late 1980s and 1990s that mammals have receptors in their central nervous systems, several organs and immune systems for the chemicals in botanical cannabis and that their bodies also produce natural cannabinoids that work on the same receptors.

One of the first drugs to build on those breakthroughs was an anti-obesity medication that blocked the same chemical receptors that trigger the munchies in pot smokers. Under the name Acomplia, it was approved throughout Europe and heralded as a possible new treatment for smoking cessation and metabolic disorders that can lead to heart attacks.

The FDA was reviewing its safety as a diet drug when follow-up studies showed that people taking the drug were at heightened risk of suicide and other psychiatric disorders. French manufacturer Sanofi-Aventis, pulled it from the market in late 2008.

Given that drug companies already were reluctant "to touch anything that is THC-like with a 10-foot- pole," the setback had a chilling effect on cannabinoid drug development, according to Lichtman.

"Big companies like Merck and Pfizer were developing their own versions (of Acomplia), so all of those programs they spent millions and millions on just went away..." he said.

But scientists and drug companies that are exploring pot's promise predict the path will ultimately be successful, if long and littered with setbacks.

One is Alexandros Makriyannis, director of the Center for Drug Discovery at Northeastern University and founder of a small Boston company that hopes to market synthetic pain products that are chemically unrelated to marijuana, but work similarly on the body or inhibit the cannabinoid receptors. He also has been working on a compound that functions like the failed Acomplia but without the depressive effects.

"I think within five to 10 years, we should get something," Makriyannis said.

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simian sez
Hands on your heads!
09:14 PM on 01/25/2012
Can you believe it?
Pot remains unapproved and illegal after how many centuries yet aspartame, which in recent studies has been known to have ties to neural degeneration and possibly Alzheimer's was approved like, what(?) ten minutes after Rumsfeld's Searle & Company introduced it in 65'.
BTW, Ajinomoto, who now makes it has renamed it and has begun a campaign to call it a "natural sweetener".
But when it comes to MJ, "natural" means nothing to the same FDA.
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undrgrndgirl
what's so funny 'bout peace, love & understanding?
08:55 PM on 01/25/2012
sativex is NOT the first pot-based prescription rx...that distinction goes to MARINOL which the physician's desk reference says CAN be made from whole plant cannabis. going futher back cannabis used to be prescribed...i have seen and verified prescriptions from the 30s...here are some images.
http://www.420magazine.com/forums/medical-marijuana-facts-information/72752-cannabis-prescriptions.html
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Bud Fallbrook
@BudFallbrook ...of course
09:34 AM on 01/24/2012
This story would be amazing if it wasn't so sad and predictable... so weed is still illegal and, according to my government, has 'no medical value' BUT a big pharma company can try to patent/sell/profit from a drug based on the plant? ... wow. USA ! USA !

If, instead of being used as a medicine for the past 5000+ years, marijuana was just discovered today in some Amazonian rainforest - it would be hailed as a 'new' wonder drug.

idiotic.
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fumes
Midnight Toker
12:01 PM on 01/24/2012
NCI (National Cancer Institute) thinks it's medicinal and then some:

National Cancer Institute (NCI)
www.cancer.gov

"In the practice of integrative oncology, the health care provider may recommend medicinal Cannabis not only for symptom management but also for its possible direct antitumor effect.
Cannabinoids may cause antitumor effects by various mechanisms, including induction of cell death, inhibition of cell growth, and inhibition of tumor angiogenesis and metastasis. [9-11] Cannabinoids appear to kill tumor cells but do not affect their nontransformed counterparts and may even protect them from cell death."
http://www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/pdq/cam/cannabis/healthprofessional/page1/AllPages#Section_26
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Florha Jones
Worship, workout & work !!!
06:30 PM on 01/25/2012
This is some bukk stuff right here. We, Americans, can patent our own for Americas benifit and profits.
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SkreetGil1
Obama changes: Not me, not ever
10:25 PM on 01/23/2012
This is the real reason why weed won't get legalized.

The drug companies needs to get paaaaaiiiiiiiidddddddddddd!!!
10:25 PM on 01/23/2012
"clearly beneficial" nothing the government is clearly beneficial, now compare aspirin to weed and come back to me in a week. kthxbai
10:20 PM on 01/23/2012
We have been told over and over that cannabis has "No medicinal value." I guess it is like when the first Europeans told the Native Americans that the yellow rocks are poisonous and have no value. Silly rabbit, tricks are for kids.
05:46 PM on 01/23/2012
If and when big-pharma is allowed to market a cannabis based prescription drug (not synthetic like Marinol/Dronabinol) there will be more severe penalties if you are caught with regular cannabis buds.

You could possibly be charged with not only possession of a controlled substance but also possession of a prescription medication without a prescription.
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undrgrndgirl
what's so funny 'bout peace, love & understanding?
08:58 PM on 01/25/2012
that's been my biggest fear all along with legal medical cannabis...let us do the research, they'll make the $$.
10:58 AM on 01/27/2012
The same thing happened with a form of Vitamin B6 and a food called Red Yeast Rice.

Before BigcorruptPharma developed statin medications red yeast rice was legal and common. But as soon as they started marketing statins as a prescription the FDA banned Red Yeast Rice in the US.

"The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) position is that red yeast rice products that contain monacolin K, i.e., lovastatin, are identical to a drug and, thus, subject to regulation as a drug."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_yeast_rice

The FDA also banned a form of Vitamin B6.

They are CORRUPT, period end of story, they are owned by BigPharma.

http://www.nutraingredients-usa.com/Regulation/FDA-finds-vitamin-B6-form-not-legal-in-supplements
11:14 AM on 01/27/2012
Let me try and post this again, either HP scrubbed it or they took too long to post it.

The same thing happened with a form of Vitamin B6 and a food called Red Yeast Rice.

Before BigPharma developed statin medication­s red yeast rice was legal and common. But as soon as they started marketing statins as a prescripti­on the FDA banned Red Yeast Rice in the US.

"The Food and Drug Administra­tion (FDA) position is that red yeast rice products that contain monacolin K, i.e., lovastatin­, are identical to a drug and, thus, subject to
regulation as a drug."

https://en­.wikipedia­.org/wiki/­Red_yeast_­rice

The FDA also banned a form of Vitamin B6. Google "Is Vitamin B6 Illegal in the U.S."

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pyridoxamine

They are CORRUPT, period end of story, they are owned by BigPharma.
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Midnight Toker
05:03 PM on 01/23/2012
Studies to Discover the Full Potential of Marijuana's Benefits

Already scientists, researchers and doctors have discovered a wide range of benefits unequaled by any other natural or chemical medication, ever. Period.

No other medication or herb offers relief from symptoms like these:
Relief of muscle spasms
Relief of chronic pain
Reduction in interlobular pressure inside the eye
Suppression of nausea
Weight loss - increase and restore metabolism

No other medication or herb offers treatment from a wide variety of diseases like these:
AIDS - Marijuana can reduce the nausea, loss of appetite, vomiting from the condition itself and the medications as well.
Glaucoma - Marijuana relieves the internal eye pressure of glaucoma, and therefore relieving the pain and slowing or even stopping the condition.
Cancer- Many side effects of the medication to stop cancer can be relieve with Marijuana, some studies suggest that Marijuana tends to slow down the progress of some types of cancer.
Multiple Sclerosis - Muscle pain, spasticity, tremors and unsteadiness are some of the effects caused by the disease that can be relieved by Marijuana.
Epilepsy - in some patients, epileptic seizures can be prevented with Marijuana use.
Chronic pain - Marijuana helps to alleviate the pain caused from many types of injuries and disorders.
Anxiety, Depression or Obsession - Even though mild anxiety is a common side effect in some users, cannabis can elevate your mood and expand the mind.
http://www.health-be.com/2011/05/is-marijuana-wonder-drug-that-could.html
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
n ferra
Live and learn, or what's the point of life?
04:37 PM on 01/23/2012
Just legalize the plant for cryin out lound! What is the difference between the plant and Big Pharmas making drugs out of the drug? I'm indifferent one way or another, but now this is is just TOO much.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Barbara0817
Why are My commets pending because I diagree?
04:11 PM on 01/23/2012
All drug s come from plants now if They could just find the plant thtat cures cancer We would be doing ok. It is helping sick people then it should be avavilable
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fumes
Midnight Toker
04:56 PM on 01/23/2012
POT SHRINKS TUMORS; GOVERNMENT KNEW IN '74

Wednesday, March 28, The United States Supreme Court rules on whether marijuana use for medicinal purposes can be a valid defense on charges of marijuana possession. The following article was listed as one of the top 25 censored stories of the year 2000. We reprint it here and pose the question, why would the government want to keep us from knowing this?

The term medical marijuana took on dramatic new meaning in February 2000, when researchers in Madrid announced they had destroyed incurable brain tumors in rats by injecting them with THC, the active ingredient in cannabis.

The Madrid study marks only the second time that THC has been administered to tumor-bearing animals. In 1974, researchers at the Medical College of Virginia, who had been funded by the National Institutes of Health to find evidence that marijuana damages the immune system, found instead that THC slowed the growth of three kinds of cancer in mice -- lung and breast cancer, and a virus-induced leukemia.
http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v01/n572/a11.html?1979
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KayoFrisco
Psychology and Special Education Instructor
02:11 PM on 01/23/2012
Cannabis is classified as a Schedule 1 drug with no medicinal benefits. I'll bet a gram of Grand Daddy Purple that the FDA will deny GW Pharma's application. Will this company then go around the Feds and offer the medication directly to the 16 legal states and DC?
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02:02 PM on 01/23/2012
having had scripts for marinol in the past and having taken sativex for like 5 years now i can tell you that none of these thc isolated pills work as well as real thc complex structures that can be easily taken from the ACTUAL PLANT ! I go to my cannabis dispensary everday and they dont sell marinol and they wont sell sativex either , both of these being ways for pharm corps to take peoples minds off the real issue and make a killing both literally and figuratively .
06:10 PM on 01/23/2012
There are many components of real cannabis than just THC.

This is why synthetic THC (Marinol) or isolates of just two components of Cannabis (delta 9-THC and cannabidiol) as is the case with Sativex, does not work as well.

http://the420site.com/health/27-cannabinoid-the-active-compounds-in-marijuana.html

Plus buying Marinol or Sativex costs more money then real cannabis. Being able to grow it yourself would be even better because you know what is in it because you grew it.

http://medicalmarijuana.procon.org/view.answers.php?questionID=000091

Humans have endocannabinoids in our bodies right now, even if you never smoked Cannabis. So, it's basically illegal to take something that your body already makes naturally.

https://www.cannacenters.com/blog/The+Endocannabinoid+System
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simian sez
Hands on your heads!
01:25 PM on 01/23/2012
Silly humans.
Pot can't get FDA approval, but pot based, manufactured and over priced medications can.
All this over a weed that grows naturally and has been tested by time for centuries.
01:24 PM on 01/23/2012
The Feds won't let that pass.
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Midnight Toker
01:16 PM on 01/23/2012
ya know what's really addictive?

those little donuts...