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NEWS : 15.01.10 - Victorian doctors want approval to use marijuana for MS sufferers

kingpin007

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Victorian doctors want approval to use marijuana for MS sufferers

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* By Peter Mickelburough
* From: Herald Sun
* January 15, 2010 12:00AM

DOCTORS want approval to use marijuana to help treat Victorian patients suffering multiple sclerosis.

If successful it would be the first time permission has been given for the drug's legal use in prescription medicine in Australia.

The push to trial a liquid marijuana-based mouth spray to ease the symptoms and pain of MS sufferers is being led by a doctor from the Royal Melbourne Hospital's neurology department.

The doctor is expected to lodge a formal request with the hospital's ethics committee when it next meets.

He wants to be able to prescribe Sativex, a drug developed in the UK by GW Pharmaceuticals, a company established specifically to develop cannabis-based prescription medicines.

According to the company's website there is no evidence that patients obtain a high such as those experienced by marijuana smokers.

The most common side-effects of Sativex are sleepiness, nausea, and dizziness.

The drug is widely used in the UK, Canada and Spain, and is being tested in the US.

It is claimed Sativex helps alleviate pain and other debilitating symptoms associated with advanced MS, including tremors and loss of movement control and bladder control.

It is also being prescribed to cancer patients in some countries for pain relief and has been tested on patients suffering rheumatoid arthritis and neuropathic pain.

It is understood the doctor from the Royal Melbourne contacted Victoria's Health Department late last year seeking advice on making an application to use the drug to treat MS patients.

"The prescribing medical practitioner is currently going through the process of applying for approval from the hospital's Human Research Ethics Committee," she said.

"For approval to be given for the prescription of this medicine in this trial, both state and Commonwealth approval is required

"However the state can give its approval prior to the drug receiving Commonwealth consent and TGA approval."

The process requires doctors to provide their qualifications as well as patients' details, including diagnosis and intended dosage of the medicine.

A Royal Melbourne Hospital spokesman said it would not be unexpected for a doctor to seek permission to use a drug that has been successful in other countries.

The Herald Sun also reveals the Therapeutic Goods Administration recently approved four applications by a Victorian doctor to use the same drug to treat a rare neurological condition.

The "special access scheme" enables unregistered drugs to be used in very limited circumstances for a specific patient with their consent.

"There are no others applications current and Sativex is not registered in Australia," a TGA spokesman said.

MS Australia's Dr Bill Carroll said any drug that gave sufferers relief was worth a try.

"We are looking forward to the results of rigorous testing that must take place in order to determine whether this drug will be effective in helping people living with this disease," he said.

MS sufferer Robert Pask said he was encouraged by the possibility of any new drugs that could help manage his disease.

"I'll be waiting to see the results of the trials to determine whether this drug may help relieve pain, which is one of my most debilitating symptoms," he said.

Sativex uses cannabinoids and other pharmacologically active components taken from cannabis plants grown in secure glasshouses at a secret location in the UK.

The cannabis-based substances are classified as Schedule 9 under the Victorian drugs and poisons schedule.

By law, medical practitioners must apply to the Secretary of the Health Department for a permit to administer them.

http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/na...ltiple-sclerosis/story-e6frf7l6-1225819634616
 
I have seen this spray .. its made in england in a warehouse that grows 1 tonne of the chronic a year and they process it getting pure honey thc from it then thats then turned into a spray and you just spray it in your mouth once or twice a day ..

no more pain ... you feel like a million bux ... and if your sick then they should be forcing this onto you as it's better than morphine ...and it can be used everyday until you die ...

the stuff its a mixture of THC and CBD and together does wonders ...


medical first ... then us stoners later ... we can wait ... :)
 
Sativex

Sativex is an oromucosal (mouth) spray developed by the UK company GW Pharmaceuticals for multiple sclerosis patients, who can use it to alleviate neuropathic pain, spasticity, overactive bladder, and other symptoms. Sativex is also being prescribed to alleviate pain due to cancer and has been researched in various models of peripheral and central neuropathic pain. Sativex is distinct from all other pharmaceutically produced cannabinoids currently available because it is derived from botanical material, rather than a solely synthetic process. Sativex is a pharmaceutical product standardised in composition, formulation, and dose. Its principal active cannabinoid components are the cannabinoids: tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD). The product is formulated as an oromucosal spray which is administered by spraying into the mouth. Each spray of Sativex delivers a fixed dose of 2.7mg THC and 2.5mg CBD.

Approved by Health Canada under a licence with conditions (NOC/c) for prescription use[1] in April 2005, Sativex is the world's first pharmaceutical prescription medicine derived from the cannabis plant. The product is approved in Canada as adjunctive treatment for the symptomatic relief of neuropathic pain in multiple sclerosis,[1] and more recently for pain due to cancer.

Sativex is available in a number of countries as an unlicensed medicine, which enables doctors to prescribe the product to individual patients who they consider may benefit. Most unlicensed prescriptions are currently written in the UK but the product has been exported from the UK to a total of 21 countries to date. It is also available in Catalonia, Spain, for 600 patients suffering from multiple sclerosis and a number of other conditions under a compassionate access programme (130 of the patients will be people with multiple sclerosis, a further 130 will be patients with neuropathic pain arising from a range of medical conditions, 40 will be suffering from anorexia and malnutrition caused by AIDS, and the remaining 300 will be cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy and suffering from nausea and vomiting).

In February 2007, GW and Otsuka Pharmaceutical announced an exclusive agreement for Otsuka to develop and market Sativex in the United States. Sativex has received permission from the US regulatory authority, the FDA, to enter directly into late stage Phase III trials in the US. The first large scale US trial, Spray Trial, for cancer patients is underway and due to complete at the end of 2009. The 336-patient, double-blind, randomized, placebo-controlled study is evaluating the effect of Sativex in relieving average daily pain, reducing the use of breakthrough opioid medications, improving the quality of sleep and relevant aspects of quality of life among other outcome measures.

In December 2005, GW and the Spanish pharmaceutical company Almirall announced an exclusive agreement for Almirall to market Sativex in Europe (excluding the UK). In the UK and Canada, Bayer HealthCare have been appointed as exclusive distributors.

In clinical trials, Sativex has generally been well tolerated.

Compare dronabinol (marketed as Marinol), a synthetic version of THC (that does not contain cannabidiol).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sativex
 
Morphine which carries horribly addictive properties, shocking withdrawal symptoms and risk of overdose.
 
If anyone watched the doco called "cannibis : the evil weed" ..... or something like that you would have seen the UK team and their workshop how they grow all the weed and then use every part of the plant to make the spray
 
Hopefully Victoria will make medical cannabis legal like in California. Google cannabis dispensary and see all the strains available as well as the hundreds of locations...
 
If anyone watched the doco called "cannibis : the evil weed" ..... or something like that you would have seen the UK team and their workshop how they grow all the weed and then use every part of the plant to make the spray

Was just about to post about that! Would highly recommend this doco to everyone. Very interesting to see a medical grade marijuana plantation and how the spray is made.

It would be fantastic if this did go ahead, although I doubt it will. A hell of a lot of people would benefit from this so fingers crossed that people put their ignorance to a side and don't cry devil's medicine.
 
Was just about to post about that! Would highly recommend this doco to everyone. Very interesting to see a medical grade marijuana plantation and how the spray is made.

It would be fantastic if this did go ahead, although I doubt it will. A hell of a lot of people would benefit from this so fingers crossed that people put their ignorance to a side and don't cry devil's medicine.

Yeah. I remember watching this documentary. Lets just face it though, in today's Liberal Australia there is no chance of legalization or even prescription usage.
 
Hopefully they get approval, its pretty draconian that nowhere in Australia allows medical MJ yet. You would think that Australians would have a more open minded attitude towards it than Americans, but a good number of states over there allow medical MJ.

Seriously who gives a fuck what drugs MS sufferers (or anyone for that matter :p) wants to put in their bodies if they feel it helps. They have a debilitating illness and I don't think its fair for anyone to be able to tell them they can't use a substance they find helpful because its "too harmful". Especially when your talking about weed, because the potential harms of marijuana are minimal compared to hard opiates.
 
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