A middle-age man in Canada with oral cancer found that medical cannabis oil may
have helped to slightly reduce the size of a wound that his cancer
caused on his cheek, according to a new report of his case.
The cannabis oil treatment also
reduced the man's pain after the cancer created a hole in his right
cheek, according to the report published in the January issue of the
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management. Studies have suggested that
marijuana may work to treat cancer patients' pain.
Much more research is needed to know whether medical cannabis oil may
have a wound-healing effect. But the man's case "really validates what
has been known for thousands of years about the utility of cannabinoids in
so many different areas," said Dr. Vincent Maida, an associate
professor in the Division of Palliative Care at the University of
Toronto, who treated the man.
The 44-year-old man went to see Maida at a palliative-care clinic in
Toronto in the spring of 2016 for the treatment of pain caused by a
malignant wound in his right cheek. The man had been diagnosed with oral cancer three
years earlier, and despite having the tumor surgically removed as well
as undergoing radiation and chemotherapy for his condition, the cancer
returned. The man had chosen, two years before his visit to Maida's
clinic, to forgo any further treatments for his cancer, according to the
report. (Palliative care generally involves only treatments to reduce
pain.)
The man had tried taking opioid medications,
but was still having severe pain in his cheek. In addition, he was
experiencing side effects from those medicines, such as drowsiness and
constipation, the man told Maida. He asked Maida to prescribe medical
marijuana to treat his pain.
The doctor prescribed vaporized medical marijuana for
the man, which the man then used for the next few months. The marijuana
seemed to help alleviate the pain significantly, and allowed the man
to reduce the doses of opioids he
was taking. However, the wound in his cheek grew and the cancer
eventually eroded through his cheek, creating a hole, which prevented
the man from continuing to use vaporized marijuana.
The man then asked Maida for a prescription for medical cannabis oil, which he could apply directly to his wound. The man used the oil four times daily for about a month.
He found that his wound stopped growing, and shrank by a small amount,
about 5 percent, over the next month. The man said he experienced pain
relief starting about 10 to 15 minutes after he applied the oil to the
wound, which lasted for about 2 hours after application.
However, about a month after the man started using the oil, he was
admitted to a hospital because his overall condition had deteriorated.
He died from cancer three weeks later, according to the report.
The new report showing that the cannabis oil seemed to work for treating
the man's wound "is really interesting," said Dr. Anita Gupta, the vice
chair of the Division of Pain Medicine at Drexel College of Medicine in
Philadelphia, who was not involved in the report.
So far, no actual studies have looked at using cannabis oil for wound
treatment in people. One study, done on human intestine cells growing in
lab dishes, suggested that cannabinoids may enhance the closure of wounds.
Though it is not clear why cannabis oil may have had a wound-healing effect in this case, one possible reason might be that the oil reduced inflammation, Gupta said.
However, she noted that more research is needed to examine whether
cannabis oil may have any robust benefit in large numbers of patients
with significant wounds.
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