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Cannabis Use in Palliative Care: History, Legality, and Implications for Practice

This resource explores the history, legal framework, and practical implications of using cannabis in palliative care. It discusses the physiological and cognitive effects, routes of administration, dosing, and possible side effects. Written by Peter A. Radice, MD, FACP, FAAHPM.

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Cannabis Use in Palliative Care: History, Legality, and Implications for Practice

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  1. National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization’sPalliative Care Resource SeriesCannabis Use in Palliative Care: History, Legality and Implications for PracticeWritten by: Peter A. Radice, MD, FACP, FAAHPM

  2. Objectives • Discuss the history, background, state and federal laws and regulations around the use of marijuana • Understand the Endocannabinoid System (ECS) • Identify the physiological and cognitive effects of cannabis • Describe the routes of administration and dosing of cannabis • List the side effects and contraindications for its use

  3. History of Marijuana • 2737 BC – first recorded medicinal use in Chinese Pharmacopoeia • 1400 BC to AD – trade moves product through India, Mediterranean countries, Europe – numerous medicinal uses reported • Major crop in colonial North America, hemp was grown as a fiber

  4. History of Marijuana • Introduced to North America in 1600’s by Puritans – Hemp for ropes, sails, clothing. Cannabis a common ingredient in medicines, sold openly in pharmacies. • 1937 – Marijuana Tax Act – transfer of cannabis illegal throughout US except for medicinal and industrial use, expensive excise tax and detailed logs required. • The “gateway theory” of marijuana use still prevails.

  5. History of Marijuana • 1970’s – The Controlled Substance Act of 1970 classified marijuana as a Schedule I drug. • 1981-1993 – Zero tolerance climate of Reagan and Bush Administrations; war on drugs. • 1990’s – Marijuana smoking on upward trend. • 1996 –California becomes first state to legalize marijuana for medicinal purposes.

  6. Cannabis • Complex alkaloid mixture of more than 400 compounds derived from the Cannabis sativa plant. • 60 different compounds described with activity on the cannabinergic system. • Most abundant cannabinoids are: • Delta-9 tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) (most psychoactive) • Cannabidiol (CBD) • Cannabinol (CBN)

  7. Endocannabinoid System • Endogenous agents • CB1-present throughout CNS • Hippocampus • Cortex • Olfactory areas • Basal ganglia • Cerebellum • Spinal cord • CB2 – located peripherally, linked with autoimmune system • Spleen • Macrophages

  8. Cannabis-Based Pharmaceutical Drugs • Sativex– THC/CBD –Nasal Spray – Neuropathy/Spasticity • Marinol – Synthetic THC – Capsule – Cancer/AIDS • Nabilone – Synthetic – Capsule – Cancer/AIDS • Dexanabinol – Synthetic – Capsule – Traumatic Brain Injury • Ajulemic– Synthetic – Capsule – Pain in MS • Cannabino – Synthetic – Solution – HTN/Inflammation • HU 331 – Synthetic – Solution – Antineoplastic, weight loss, neurodegenerative • RED – Not yet approved

  9. Physiological and Cognitive Side Effects Dependent on many factors: • Dose • Ratio of various cannabinoids used • Route of administration • Timing • Health status of patient • Age of the patient • Co-administration of other drugs • Prior recreational use

  10. Physiological and Cognitive Side Effects • Acute cognitive and psychomotor changes • Impaired and non-cohesive reasoning • Decreased concentration on tasks requiring motor skills • Appetite stimulant • Anti-emetic properties

  11. Physiological and Cognitive Side Effects • 20%-100% increase in heart rate immediately after smoking • THC/CBD alter hypothalamic/pituitary function • Lowers intraocular pressure

  12. Physiological and Cognitive Side Effects • Studies suggest cannabis intoxication can increase the odds ratio of motor vehicle accidents. • Meta-analysis of long term users consistent with negative neuro-cognitive testing. • Inconclusive about permanent changes in the brain.

  13. Administration and Dosing of Cannabis Products • Smoking or vaporization • Liquid or oil for vaporization, oromucosal, sublingual, tube administration • Patch • Capsules for oral use • Edible products • Rectal suppositories • Ointments, creams, lotions

  14. Administration and Dosing of Cannabis • Route of administration determines pharmacokinetics and effects of the cannabinoids. • Smoking or vaporizing reaches lung alveoli and bloodstream. Psychoactive effects occur in 90 seconds, max at 15-30 minutes and taper off 2-3 hours. • Water pipe removes gas toxins.

  15. Administration and Dosing of Cannabis • Vaporization causes more rapid delivery, higher concentrations, less risk of byproducts inhaled. • Oral – psychoactive effects at 90 minutes, max of 2-3 hours, lasting 4-12 hours. • Drawbacks – delayed onset of action, variable gut availability, first pass metabolism, difficulty with vomiting and anorexic patients, regulating difficulty.

  16. Administration and Dosing of Cannabis • Significant variation of cannabis types • Limited pharmacological data and lack of uniformity of studies in humans • Tolerance and adverse effects are variable • Personal variation in metabolism

  17. Administration and Dosing of Cannabis • Physiological changes in ECS • Different physiological responses in differing medical conditions • Drug-drug interactions

  18. Contraindications • Absolute • Any patient with psychotic illness • THC is associated with aggravating or precipitating psychotic episodes • THC is a vasodilator, increasing cardiac demand

  19. Contraindications • Relative • Primary liver, renal and pulmonary diseases or a past history of seizures or drug abuse • Close monitoring of symptoms • Patients with COPD and asthma, avoid smoking • Special precautions in pediatric and elderly patients • Minimize drug interactions • Cannabis reinforces sedative effects of other sedative-hypnotics, benzodiazepines and alcohol

  20. Summary • Recent trend in state legislatures is to pass rules and regulations to allow medicinal marijuana - trend continues. • Use in PC is evident in patients with cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, inflammatory diseases, end-of-life angst, uncontrolled seizures and HIV cachexia. • Further study is needed.

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