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News (Media Awareness Project) - US MA: Marijuana Product May Aid In Traumas
Title:US MA: Marijuana Product May Aid In Traumas
Published On:1998-10-07
Source:Boston Globe (MA)
Fetched On:2008-09-06 23:34:18
MARIJUANA PRODUCT MAY AID IN TRAUMAS

Test fuels hope for head injury victims

A drug modeled after a chemical found in marijuana could offer hope to
hundreds of thousands of victims of severe head trauma, reducing the death
rate and letting more people resume a normal life, according to a study
being released today at an international conference in Seattle. The findings
are drawing substantial interest, in part because head injuries are the
leading cause of death among young people in the United States, and there
are few if any treatments. And if these early results are substantiated, the
new drug, called dexanabinol, would be the most medically useful treatment
derived from the cannabis plant.

''It's hugely exciting,'' said Dr. Brian Andrews, who chairs the neurotrauma
program of the American Association of Neurological Surgeons, which is
meeting in Seattle and will hear today a presentation on the new drug.
Dexanabinol, he added, appears to be just the sort of treatment ''that we
have been looking for for years and years.'' Dr. William Beaver, professor
emeritus of pharmacology at Georgetown University School of Medicine, is
even more upbeat: ''This kind of treatment, if it works, would have
tremendous impact on the treatment of neural injury and it could, of course,
also be of value in something like strokes.'' The new drug also would be,
''beyond any doubt,'' the most medically significant use ever made of
marijuana, said Beaver, who chaired a panel assembled last year by the
National Institutes of Health to review possible medical uses of marijuana.

Scientists have been searching for 40 years for medicinal uses of the more
than 400 chemicals in the marijuana plant, which is used to treat nausea and
severe weight loss.

Dexanabinol is one in a series of compounds made in the laboratory and
modeled after chemicals found in marijuana.

Dexanabinol's founder, Professor Raphael Mechoulam of Hebrew University in
Jerusalem, sought to capture the neuroactive properties of the marijuana
chemical, but not the psychoactive ones that induce a ''high.'' Mechoulam
licensed dexanabinol to Pharmos Corp., an Israeli-based pharmaceutical firm,
which has run two stages of clinic trials.

The first showed the drug was safe. The second, results of which are being
released today, showed it could be remarkably effective.

The mortality rate among the 30 head trauma patients who took the drug was
10 percent, compared to 13.5 percent with 37 patients getting a placebo.

The incidence of low blood pressure, which can worsen a patient's condition,
also was significantly reduced in the treated group (13 percent) versus
placebos (38 percent). And, even more encouraging, the drug accelerated
recovery and let 50 percent more patients resume a normal life six months
after their injury.

How does dexanabinol work? The original trauma not only kills brain cells
that were directly hit, but it also generates the release of chemicals that
can kill or dangerously inflame surrounding cells.

Dexanabinol, which is given within six hours of the injury, protects the
brain in three different ways, explains Anat Biegon, Pharmos' vice president
for research and development. The drug mops up some of the dangerous
chemicals, forms a protective barrier around at-risk brain cells, and limits
intracranial inflammation.

Pharmos, which has just 45 employees, is looking for a bigger partner to
help it launch a last phase of clinical trials involving as many as 900
patients worldwide.

Those tests, which could begin next year, would take about two years,
predicted Pharmos chairman Haim Aviv. ''There are about 370,000 eligible
patients with head trauma in the US, worldwide there are 700,000 to 800,000,
and currently there is not a single drug there for them,'' Aviv added. ''We
estimate there are 10,000 lives that could be saved by this drug ... and it
could mean 37,000 more patients who could go back to a normal life.'' Dr.
Christopher Ogilvy, director of cerebrovascular surgery at Massachusetts
General Hospital, cautioned that ''a lot of chemical compounds used to treat
head injury initially looked encouraging, but with rigorous testing they
proved to be only marginally beneficial.''

Checked-by: Don Beck
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