Pubdate: Sat, 28 Jul 2001
Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU)
Copyright: 2001 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc.
Contact:  http://www.montrealgazette.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274
Author: Charlie Fidelman
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjcn.htm (Cannabis - Canada)

GOING TO POT

Giggle if you want, says the doctor who will lead clinical trial of 
marijuana. But the weed could ease the suffering of thousands

Dr. Mark Ware has heard the question before:  "Have you ever smoked 
marijuana yourself?" He just smiles. "Let's leave this to the patients."

Sometimes, it seems nothing can take the giggle out of marijuana research.

"You've got to have a sense of humour," says Dr. Mark Ware, who's about to 
conduct a first-ever clinical trial to measure the effects of smoked pot 
and pain. "I think I've heard it all and then somebody has another one."

Usually, he says, people snicker and ask if he has any samples to give 
away. Then there are the friends who are eager to volunteer for his study.

And, of course, the inevitable question, asked at the press conference to 
announce his ground-breaking study: "Dr. Ware, for the record, have you 
ever smoked marijuana yourself?"

Ware, a McGill University researcher, smiled and shot back: 
"Congratulations. You're not the first one to ask that. But you know what, 
let's leave this to the patients."

Right now, the sole question for Ware is whether pot really lives up to 
miraculous tales of pain relief. And that's no joke, he told a roomful of 
reporters.

"We're talking about human suffering. We're talking about using cannabis as 
medicine. Next question, please," said Ware, whose pilot study, approved by 
Health Canada, is generating quite a buzz. It's the first peer-reviewed 
clinical trial involving smoking weed. Heading a team of McGill 
researchers, Ware will be seeking scientific evidence to back anecdotal 
claims about cannabis as a pain reliever. Patients will be asked to smoke 
three pipes a day - not in a hospital or laboratory setting but in their 
own homes.

The year-long study is to start in January at the McGill Pain Clinic at the 
Montreal General Hospital.

"This is not a joke, this is a landmark study," said Dr. Nicholas 
Steinmetz, director of planning at the McGill University Health Centre.

The project, he added, is funded by a $235,000 grant from the Canadian 
Institutes of Health Research, a branch of Health Canada.

The 36-year-old Ware got his first taste of marijuana as a child when his 
nanny boiled the leaves for tea whenever someone got ill.

"It's quite a common remedy in Jamaica," he recalls. "People think nothing 
of boiling it up and giving it to their 4-year-old for a fever or to (older 
children) to help them study for exams.

"They use it to make kids smart," said British-born Ware, who grew up in 
Jamaica, the son of a microbiologist mother from Guyana and a British 
construction worker. His accent was formed by years of British boarding 
schools.

These days, Ware, an assistant professor of anesthesia at McGill, occupies 
an office the size of a closet at the Montreal General Hospital, an 
impressive feat considering he's 6-foot-5.

Folding himself into a chair, he declares: "If cannabis is as good as 
people feel it is, it will pass clinical trials with flying colours."

Ware has been interested in studying the effects of smoked marijuana ever 
since he worked with sickle-cell anemia patients in Kingston, Jamaica. He 
initially planned on becoming a country physician but experience on the 
Caribbean island tweaked his interest in alternative and herbal remedies.

Patients with sickle-cell anemia suffer from recurrent, excruciating pain 
and require high doses of analgesia, including morphine and codeine, "all 
the strongest drugs," said Ware, who earned his medical degree at the 
University of West Indies.

"I began to look around and see what Jamaicans were using," he said. The 
answer was cannabis, the traditional folk medicine. Ware notes his interest 
comes naturally, given that the side of his family that comes from Guyana 
includes a long line of shamans.

"Is there some way in which cannabis can be conceived of as a medicine?" he 
wondered. "Part of my medical training had always been that there are very 
few diseases that we as doctors can cure. We try to relieve symptoms and to 
comfort."

A large body of literature on cannabis and pain in animal models emerged in 
the 1990s, but hardly any on humans. Wanting to fill that research vacuum, 
Ware went to the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine for a 
masters program. His thesis involved designing a clinical trial to measure 
the effects of marijuana on disease.

"I felt passionate about herbal medicines in general and cannabis therapy 
in particular," said Ware. "A research question has to burn inside you 
before you get excited enough to go though all of the crap you have to get 
it done."

He just couldn't ignore patients' reports: "They say this stuff works. I 
have to listen to that. If it helps them, maybe it can help others."

Patients around the world have been telling doctors the same thing.

"But anecdotes aren't enough. We need scientific evidence that it's not 
some placebo effect," Ware said.

D D D

Along with pain specialist Gary Bennett, psychologist Ann Gamsa, 
epidemiologists Stan Shapiro and Jean-Paul Collet, Ware hopes to prove that 
marijuana deserves a spot on pharmaceutical shelves next to other 
medicines. Cannabis is already used to modulate pain, nausea and appetite 
in some HIV/AIDS patients.

The body also produces its own cannabenoids, which are cannabis-like 
opiates, said Ware, leaning forward to explain about receptors that are 
present in the brain, brain stem, the spinal cord and the molecules that 
bind to them. It functions similarly to the body's endorphins, known for 
producing the classic runner's high.

"And perhaps pain is a disruption in that pathway. Smoking dope is a way of 
acting on that pathway," he said.

It's been tested before as derivatives or isolated extracts, in patches, 
pills and other preparations, so why is this study so important?

"It's the first time we've been able to study it in the way it's being used 
in its environment," Ware said. "The study is designed to mirror, as much 
as possible, real-life conditions."

Patients suffering from acute, chronic pain caused by nerve damage will be 
recruited from the McGill Pain Centre. The 32 recruits will get four sorts 
of marijuana, one type per week, to be smoked in a pipe.

"As odd as it may sound, looks like we're going to have to apply for a 
medical device license to use a pipe for cannabis," Ware said with a smile.

Patients will get the first dose of the week at the clinic.

"We'll follow them for an hour. We'll have a fridge stocked with goodies. 
And then we'll send them home with enough cannabis to last for the 
remaining five days," he said.

Subjects will get exemptions, or perhaps a letter identifying them as 
participants in a clinical trial. Details are still being worked out. The 
pot will be packaged to look like prescription drugs.

Coincidentally, Ware's study got the go-ahead just as Canada is on the 
verge of relaxing its laws on pot for medical purposes. Nearly 300 
Canadians have exemptions to smoke marijuana for health reasons.

New rules are expected to go into effect Tuesday. Those with exemptions 
will now be able to designate their own marijuana producers or to grow it 
themselves. It's not known how many have applied for a permit under the new 
regulations.

Meanwhile, the government's own producer, Prairie Plant Systems of Flin 
Flon, Manitoba, is expected to provide grass for research purposes as of 
December.

But Ware, who didn't know whether Canadian stock would be ready for his 
project, already contracted marijuana from a U.S. grower.

D D D

Marijuana remains an illegal substance. Ware won't tackle the legalization 
debate. It's a simple plant, he says, let's get over the stigma.

"Now is the time for the trial of cannabis to come out of the courtroom and 
into the clinic. Time to put some hard data behind the almost miraculous 
tales of what cannabis has been able to do," said Ware, who was refused 
Canadian funding for similar study proposals twice before.

Jamaica also rejected the study, perhaps in fear of recrimination from U.S. 
National Institutes of Health which provides funding for medical research 
in Jamaica.

"The biggest challenge is trying to talk about studying smoked cannabis as 
a drug and being taken seriously," Ware said, his bookshelf loaded with 
literature on marijuana use.

Ware wouldn't be here if it weren't for federal Health Minister Allan 
Rock's announcement two years ago that he was "prepared" to fund studies on 
the medicinal uses of cannabis.

Rock delivered with the Canadian Medical Marijuana Program. But the money 
came through only recently.

Throwing his jacket back on, Ware said he is most grateful for the opportunity.

It's more than a vindication of his efforts. It also means he has work in 
Montreal for years to come, an important detail for a man married to a 
Montrealer, former CBC TV reporter Sue Smith.

Ware sought a position at McGill because the university is in his wife's 
home town. The couple have two children and are awaiting a third.

"Montrealers seem very attached to their city," said Ware, throwing his arm 
around his wife's shoulders.

With top funding in place, cannabis has become Ware's life work.

The pilot study is to supply data for the design of a larger clinical trial.

"Watch this space. We've got results coming down. This is just the beginning."

- - For more information, go to http://www.lindesmith.org/medicalmarijuana/
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MAP posted-by: Beth