Patients with
fibromyalgia treated with a synthetic form of marijuana, nabilone,
showed significant reductions in pain and anxiety in a
first-of-its-kind study, published in The Journal of Pain.
Fibromyalgia syndrome has no cure, is difficult to diagnose, and
effective pain management strategies are a must to help patients cope
with the disease. An estimated 12 million Americans have fibromyalgia,
which is characterized by widespread muscle and joint pain and myriad
other symptoms. The condition is far more prevalent in women and the
incidence increases with age, reaching 7 percent among women 65 years
and older.
Forty subjects were selected for the nabilone trial, conducted by
researchers at the University of Manitoba Rehabilitation Hospital. They
were divided into nabilone and placebo groups and were treated for four
weeks. The authors noted this was the first randomized,
controlled-access trial to evaluate nabilone for pain reduction and
quality-of-life improvement in fibromyalgia patients. Nabilone is one
of two oral marijuana-based compounds, known as cannabinoids, available
in Canada and is approved for treatment of nausea and vomiting during
chemotherapy.
Results of the Manitoba study showed the nabilone group had
significant reductions in pain and anxiety, measured by comparisons
with baseline scores on the visual analogue scale for pain, the
Fibromyalgia Impact Questionnaire (FIQ) and the FIQ anxiety score. From
the data, the study concluded nabilone has significant benefits for
pain relief and functional improvement in fibromyalgia patients.
Although the improvement was significant, none of the nabilone-treated
subjects had complete relief of their fibromyalgia symptoms.
The drug was well tolerated by treated patients, which the authors
characterized as reassuring since fibromyalgia patients are sensitive
to most medications and have difficulty tolerating side effects. The
downside, however, is cost. In Canada, nabilone would cost about $4,000
for a year's supply.
The authors believe their findings warrant consideration of nabilone
as an adjunct to current medical management of fibromyalgia.
http://www.ampainsoc.org/
http://www.news-medical.net