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Can Cannabinoids Treat Cancer?

by Rishika Gupta on November 7, 2017 at 5:18 PM

Cannabinoids can cause cell death in cancer cells by activating their cell death pathways found a new study published in Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine.


Their potential use as antitumor drugs and to boost the effectiveness of conventional cancer therapies is examined in an article published in The Journal, a peer-reviewed publication from Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers. The article is available free on JACM website.

‘Cannabinoids have shown strong activity against human tumor tissue growth in animal models, but have undergone minimal testing in patients. Federal rescheduling of cannabis is critical to understand it�s direct or indirect effects on cancer cells. ’

In "A Review of the Therapeutic Antitumor Potential of Cannabinoids," coauthors Vi�nja Bogdanovi And Jasminka Mrdjanovi, Oncology Institute of Vojvodina (Sremska Kamenica, Serbia), and Ivana Bori�ev, University of Novi Sad (Serbia) present the results of a detailed survey of the medical and scientific literature focused on the effects of cannabinoids on signaling pathways involved in tumor cell proliferation and death.

The researchers review the mechanisms of anticancer activity of cannabinoids, discuss the similarities and differences between exogenous (plant-derived) and endogenous cannabinoids, report on the clinical studies conducted to date to assess the anti-tumor effects of these compounds, and consider the possible adjuvant properties of cannabinoids in cancer treatment.

"Although medical cannabis is well-supported in the literature for symptom reduction from cancer treatment or the disease itself, there are many claims that cannabis can treat cancer itself," says Leslie Mendoza Temple, MD, ABOIM, University of Chicago Pritzker School of Medicine and Medical Director, Integrative Medicine Program. "So far, this is based on only a handful of small human studies, anecdote, or laboratory research.

This article nicely summarizes some of the work done in the lab for an understanding of cannabis' potential anti-cancer mechanisms, while pointing to the paucity of human trials." Dr. Temple adds, "Federal rescheduling of cannabis is critical so we can study its effects in humans and determine cannabis' direct or indirect effects on cancer cells."

"The value of the review from Bogdanovi, Mrdjanovi, and Bori�ev is describing the evidence landscape that is generating claims for this very political herb," says JACM Editor-in-Chief John Weeks, johnweeks-integrator.com, Seattle, WA. He adds: "The evidence supports freeing researchers to provide us with more answers."

Source: Eurekalert

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