TY - JOUR
T1 - Cannabis for the Treatment of Chronic Pain in the Era of an Opioid Epidemic
T2 - A Symposium-Based Review of Sociomedical Science
AU - Maher, Dermot P.
AU - Carr, Daniel B.
AU - Hill, Kevin
AU - McGeeney, Brian
AU - Weed, Valerie
AU - Jackson, William C.
AU - Dibenedetto, David J.
AU - Moriarty, Edward M.
AU - Kulich, Ronald J.
N1 - Funding Information:
Funding sources: Kevin Hill is supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse K99/R00 DA029115. Dermot P. Maher receives funding from National Institutes of Health (NIH) 5T32GM075774-10.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 American Academy of Pain Medicine. All rights reserved.
PY - 2019/11/1
Y1 - 2019/11/1
N2 - Objective: This manuscript reviews medical literature published pertaining to the management of chronic pain with medical marijuana therapy (MMJ), with an emphasis on the social, medical, and legal aspects of therapy. Design: Narrative review of peer-reviewed literature. Methods: The 3rd Symposium on Controlled Substances and Their Alternatives for the Treatment of Pain was held in Boston on February 27, 2016, with a focus on MMJ for the treatment of chronic pain. Invited speakers had diverse backgrounds, including pain management, addiction psychiatry, neurology, and legal authorities. The purpose of this conference and this subsequent narrative review is to provide a medical, legal, and logistical framework for physicians and other health care providers to refer to when considering the initiation of medical marijuana therapy. Results: The invited speakers each covered a unique aspect of MMJ therapy for the treatment of chronic pain. These presentations highlighted the current data for and against the use of MMJ as a pain therapy. Optimal patient selection and screening, in addition to policy developments, were discussed. Conclusions: Increasing interest in MMJ for chronic pain underscores a need for primary care and pain physicians to better understand the indications and evidence for its use free from cultural bias. Given a lack of full conclusive clinical utility, continued research is needed to better understand how to best utilize MMJ therapy for the treatment of chronic pain. Policy initiatives, such as enumerated indications, should follow medical science in order to prevent another abused substance epidemic.
AB - Objective: This manuscript reviews medical literature published pertaining to the management of chronic pain with medical marijuana therapy (MMJ), with an emphasis on the social, medical, and legal aspects of therapy. Design: Narrative review of peer-reviewed literature. Methods: The 3rd Symposium on Controlled Substances and Their Alternatives for the Treatment of Pain was held in Boston on February 27, 2016, with a focus on MMJ for the treatment of chronic pain. Invited speakers had diverse backgrounds, including pain management, addiction psychiatry, neurology, and legal authorities. The purpose of this conference and this subsequent narrative review is to provide a medical, legal, and logistical framework for physicians and other health care providers to refer to when considering the initiation of medical marijuana therapy. Results: The invited speakers each covered a unique aspect of MMJ therapy for the treatment of chronic pain. These presentations highlighted the current data for and against the use of MMJ as a pain therapy. Optimal patient selection and screening, in addition to policy developments, were discussed. Conclusions: Increasing interest in MMJ for chronic pain underscores a need for primary care and pain physicians to better understand the indications and evidence for its use free from cultural bias. Given a lack of full conclusive clinical utility, continued research is needed to better understand how to best utilize MMJ therapy for the treatment of chronic pain. Policy initiatives, such as enumerated indications, should follow medical science in order to prevent another abused substance epidemic.
KW - Alternative Therapies
KW - Cannabis
KW - Chronic Pain
KW - Narcotics
KW - Policy
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U2 - 10.1093/pm/pnx143
DO - 10.1093/pm/pnx143
M3 - Review article
C2 - 29016917
AN - SCOPUS:85078272800
SN - 1526-2375
VL - 20
SP - 2311
EP - 2323
JO - Pain Medicine (United States)
JF - Pain Medicine (United States)
IS - 11
ER -