Can CBD from marijuana relieve pain? Government is spending $3 million to find out. – Chicago Sun-Times

The U.S. government will spend $3 million to find out whether marijuana can relieve pain — but none of the money will be used to study THC, the ingredient in the plant that gets people high.

Nine newly announced research grants are for work on CBD, the ingredient now turning up seemingly everywhere in cosmetics and foods, and hundreds of less familiar chemicals.

THC research was excluded. The federal government still considers marijuana an illegal drug, though Illinois is among more than 30 states that allow it use for a range of medical problems, some without good evidence.

The science is strongest for chronic pain, which is the most common reason people give when they enroll in state-approved medical marijuana programs.

Dr. David Shurtleff, deputy director of the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, which is funding the new research.
Dr. David Shurtleff, deputy director of the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, which is funding the new research.
LinkedIn

But little is known about which parts of marijuana are helpful and whether the intoxicating effects of THC can be avoided.

“The science is lagging behind the public use and interest,” said Dr. David Shurtleff, deputy director of the National Center for Complementary and Integrative Health, which is funding the projects. “We’re doing our best to catch up here.”

THC has been investigated extensively, Shurtleff said, and its potential for addiction and abuse make it unsuitable for treating pain.

Other federal agencies have supported marijuana research, though much of the focus has been on potential harms. Shurtleff said the grants answer the call in a 2017 National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine report that concluded a lack of marijuana research poses a public health risk.

Another impetus is the nation’s opioid addiction crisis, with its roots in overuse of prescription painkillers. The crisis has sparked new scientific interest in marijuana’s pain-easing properties.

Dr. Judith Hellman, a grant recipient from University of California San Francisco.
Dr. Judith Hellman, a grant recipient from University of California San Francisco.
UCSF

Dr. Judith Hellman, a grant recipient from University of California San Francisco, said scientists need to better understand pain and to find more ways to treat it.

“It’s very exciting to have the opportunity to do that,” Hellman said.

Her research involves the body’s ability to produce signaling molecules similar to marijuana’s ingredients. The work that she and Dr. Mark Schumacher have done involves human immune cells in the lab and tests on mice.

Human test subjects will be involved in only one of the new grant projects. University of Utah researcher Deborah Yurgelun-Todd will scan the brains of human volunteers with lower-back pain to see how CBD extract — mixed with chocolate pudding — affects pain-signaling pathways. Half of the volunteers will get pudding without CBD as a control group.

Two more human studies could be funded in a second round of grant awards.

In July, the National Institute on Drug Abuse said it would grow 4,409 pounds of marijuana this year at the University of Mississippi, which holds the sole federal contract for producing research cannabis. Those plants won’t be used in many of the new projects, which instead will use lab-made versions of the chemicals.

Researchers at the University of Illinois hope to create a library of useful compounds found in cannabis plants.

“We make them from scratch and test them one by one,” said David Sarlah, a U. of I. chemistry professor.

Marijuana contains such tiny amounts of the interesting ingredients that it’s too costly and time-consuming to isolate enough for research, according to Sarlah.

He’ll make the chemicals, and his colleague Aditi Das will run tests to see how they react with mouse immune cells.

“There are so many beneficial effects that patients report,” Das said. “We need to know the science behind it.”