Status and phase
Conditions
Treatments
About
Over the last two years, the United States has witnessed enormous change concerning the acceptance of marijuana. The number of persons with MS (PwMS) using cannabis to treat their symptoms is expected to rise, and it is important to provide clinicians and PwMS with evidence based information on the safety and effectiveness of marijuana. In addition, scientists need to identify the effects of medical marijuana as the compound action of different cannabinoids, specifically tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabidiol (CBD). The ratio of CBD to THC may have an important impact on the effects of the marijuana, which in turn may have important implications for the medical benefits. The overarching goal of this study is to advance a better understanding of the potential positive and negative effects associated with different strains of marijuana, using an interventional design. The investigators will examine three strains that differ markedly on THC potency (A. THC <1%, CBD > 10%; B. THC >10%, CBD < 1%; C. THC 510%, CBD 510%) to determine whether the level of THC is associated with differences in motor and cognitive functions in PwMS. One hundred PwMS will be recruited for this project and followed for 3 months following designation to one of three strains of marijuana with different ratios of CBD to THC or a placebo marijuana (THC 0%, CBD 0%). It is hypothesized that the strains with a high CBD to THC ratios will demonstrate the most benefits on measures of motor and cognitive function.
Full description
Prospective participants will be recruited from the Integrative Neurophysiology Laboratory's (INPL) participant database, the clinical practice of Dr. William Shaffer, Banner Health, Greeley Colorado, through advertisements in the Colorado and Wyoming Chapter of the National MS Society newsletters, and via the Rocky Mountain MS Newsletter. All experimental procedures will be performed in the INPL (Director: Thorsten Rudroff, PhD, FACSM).
Interested individuals will perform an initial screening via an online questionnaire, hosted by Qualtrics, which has a contract with the College of Health and Human Sciences.
Contact information for the prospective participants will be accessible only to the research staff according to HIPAA regulations. After completion of the online screening form, INPL personnel will contact eligible participants via phone and establish 100 total participants. After participants have been identified, INPL staff will schedule the participants' first visit. Eligibility requirements for this study are: medically diagnosed with MS, 21-74 years of age, and moderate disability (Patient Determined Disease Steps score 2-6). The investigators will recruit people with MS who are planning to use medical marijuana for the first time for the treatment of their symptoms. All participants must have a medical (red) card for medical marijuana use to treat their MS symptoms (such as neuropathic pain and spasticity), or currently be in the process of applying for a red card and be able to provide the prescription from their doctor. Marijuana and placebo cigarettes will be ordered from the NIDA (National Institute on Drug Abuse) Drug Supply Program and stored at a designated room in the Department of Health and Exercise Science (HES) at Colorado State University (CSU).
The experimental protocol for this study consists of one testing session that will be performed four times:
Once before the assignment of marijuana product and then once a month during this 3 month longitudinal study. All experiments will be conducted by research personnel (outcome assessors) who are blinded to product assignment. Prior to each session the clinical trial administrator (CTA) will perform an urine analysis assessment for Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) to confirm compliance.
Upon arrival to the Integrative Neurophysiology Lab (INPL) at CSU the investigators will explain the protocol procedures and receive signed informed consent from the participants. All eligible participants will be randomized to a coded treatment group by the CTA. After the urine analysis assessment, they will be given one of the four coded cannabis products. All participants will be asked to smoke one single 1- gram marijuana or placebo cigarette per day (Hart et al. 2010). Because these are newly marijuana users, they will be informed about the practical and legal limitations, including barriers to travelling with the medication.
Participants will be asked to return to the lab biweekly for their next set of dosages of coded intervention, as coded and dispensed by the CTA. By providing the participants with additional intervention doses intervention compliance can be determined at the biweekly visits by the CTA. Participants will also be given a log to track their cannabis product use. It is expected that the testing session (once / month) will last between 2-3 hours.
MONTHLY ASSESSMENTS:
PRE-POST ASSESSMENTS:
A Dual-Energy X-Ray Absorptiometry scan will be performed to assess body composition before and during the last month of the 3-month intervention for a total of 2 scans. Furthermore, participants will be asked to wear an ActiGraph accelerometer for 7 days to measure physical activity before and during the last month of the intervention. During non-wear times, participants will be asked to write any activities performed in a log.
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
0 participants in 4 patient groups, including a placebo group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal