News (Media Awareness Project) - Canada: Marijuana Mouth Spray May Soon Be Available for MS Patients |
Title: | Canada: Marijuana Mouth Spray May Soon Be Available for MS Patients |
Published On: | 2005-04-20 |
Source: | StarPhoenix, The (CN SN) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-20 12:13:39 |
MARIJUANA MOUTH SPRAY MAY SOON BE AVAILABLE FOR MS PATIENTS
OTTAWA (CNS) -- A mouth spray made from marijuana could be available
in Canada as soon as the end of the spring, making it the first
pot-based pharmaceutical for sale in the world.
Approved by Health Canada on Friday, Sativex is a spray made of
pulverized pot plants, used to treat pain symptoms in multiple
sclerosis (MS) patients.
"It's the first cannabis-derived pharmaceutical product approved
anywhere in the world," said a spokesperson for Bayer Inc., which is
distributing the tincture here.
Though Health Canada has asked for more "confirmatory studies" from
the drug's manufacturer, approval for Sativex was expedited to fill
what the agency describes as an unmet medical need. No treatments
currently exist to treat the symptoms of pain suffered by MS patients.
They take everything from over-the-counter Aspirin to morphine in what
are often futile attempts to quell their discomfort.
Sprayed into the absorbent red tissue on the inside of a patient's
mouth, Sativex is "a bit like a breath freshener" and tastes like a
"rather bitter Guinness," said Mark Rogerson, spokesperson for the
product's manufacturer, U.K.-based GW Pharmaceuticals.
Most patients start with a single spritz every four hours, about five
times a day.
Each dose releases a tincture made of tetrahydrocannabinol, the potent
principal ingredient in marijuana, and cannabidiol, its mellower
counterpart.
Together, they produce an effect that numbs pain affecting the nervous
system without numbing a patient's brain as well. "It is absolutely
not necessary to become intoxicated in order to get pain relief,"
Rogerson said.
Intoxication, or getting high, can be a major deterrent for patients
who would otherwise benefit from pot's pain-relieving properties. MS
sufferers named it as one of the main reasons for not using cannabis
in a 2003 study published in the Canadian Journal of Neurological
Studies. Canada's liberal approach to marijuana as a medicine made it
a logical marketplace for Sativex, which is still in the approval
process in the U.K.
It will only be introduced to American regulators at the end of the
year, long after approximately 25,000 MS patients in Canada are given
the treatment option by their doctors. "When we were talking to Health
Canada we found that we were talking to people who were on the same
wavelength as us," said Rogerson.
Manufacturers predict Sativex will be available, by prescription, in
drug stores by the end of June. The price for a 50-dose bottle is
still being determined by distributors, who will import the product
from England where the marijuana is grown.
OTTAWA (CNS) -- A mouth spray made from marijuana could be available
in Canada as soon as the end of the spring, making it the first
pot-based pharmaceutical for sale in the world.
Approved by Health Canada on Friday, Sativex is a spray made of
pulverized pot plants, used to treat pain symptoms in multiple
sclerosis (MS) patients.
"It's the first cannabis-derived pharmaceutical product approved
anywhere in the world," said a spokesperson for Bayer Inc., which is
distributing the tincture here.
Though Health Canada has asked for more "confirmatory studies" from
the drug's manufacturer, approval for Sativex was expedited to fill
what the agency describes as an unmet medical need. No treatments
currently exist to treat the symptoms of pain suffered by MS patients.
They take everything from over-the-counter Aspirin to morphine in what
are often futile attempts to quell their discomfort.
Sprayed into the absorbent red tissue on the inside of a patient's
mouth, Sativex is "a bit like a breath freshener" and tastes like a
"rather bitter Guinness," said Mark Rogerson, spokesperson for the
product's manufacturer, U.K.-based GW Pharmaceuticals.
Most patients start with a single spritz every four hours, about five
times a day.
Each dose releases a tincture made of tetrahydrocannabinol, the potent
principal ingredient in marijuana, and cannabidiol, its mellower
counterpart.
Together, they produce an effect that numbs pain affecting the nervous
system without numbing a patient's brain as well. "It is absolutely
not necessary to become intoxicated in order to get pain relief,"
Rogerson said.
Intoxication, or getting high, can be a major deterrent for patients
who would otherwise benefit from pot's pain-relieving properties. MS
sufferers named it as one of the main reasons for not using cannabis
in a 2003 study published in the Canadian Journal of Neurological
Studies. Canada's liberal approach to marijuana as a medicine made it
a logical marketplace for Sativex, which is still in the approval
process in the U.K.
It will only be introduced to American regulators at the end of the
year, long after approximately 25,000 MS patients in Canada are given
the treatment option by their doctors. "When we were talking to Health
Canada we found that we were talking to people who were on the same
wavelength as us," said Rogerson.
Manufacturers predict Sativex will be available, by prescription, in
drug stores by the end of June. The price for a 50-dose bottle is
still being determined by distributors, who will import the product
from England where the marijuana is grown.
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