Loading... Please wait...Posted by Raymond Cushing - May 30th, 2000 on 17th May 2017
In 1974 researchers learned that THC, the active chemical in marijuana, shrank or destroyed brain tumors in test mice. But the DEA quickly shut down the study and destroyed its results, which were never replicated -- until now.

The term medical marijuana took on dramatic new meaning in February,
2000 when researchers in Madrid announced they had destroyed incurable
brain tumors in rats by injecting them with THC, the active ingredient
in cannabis.
The Madrid study marks only the second time that THC
has been administered to tumor-bearing animals; the first was a
Virginia investigation 26 years ago. In both studies, the THC shrank or
destroyed tumors in a majority of the test subjects.
Most
Americans don't know anything about the Madrid discovery. Virtually no
major U.S. newspapers carried the story, which ran only once on the AP
and UPI news wires, on Feb. 29, 2000.
The ominous part is that
this isn't the first time scientists have discovered that THC shrinks
tumors. In 1974 researchers at the Medical College of Virginia, who had
been funded by the National Institute of Health to find evidence that
marijuana damages the immune system, found instead that THC slowed the
growth of three kinds of cancer in mice -- lung and breast cancer, and a
virus-induced leukemia.
The DEA quickly shut down the Virginia
study and all further cannabis/tumor research, according to Jack Herer,
who reports on the events in his book, "The Emperor Wears No Clothes."
In 1976 President Gerald Ford put an end to all public cannabis research
and granted exclusive research rights to major pharmaceutical
companies, who set out -- unsuccessfully -- to develop synthetic forms
of THC that would deliver all the medical benefits without the "high."
The
Madrid researchers reported in the March issue of "Nature Medicine"
that they injected the brains of 45 rats with cancer cells, producing
tumors whose presence they confirmed through magnetic resonance imaging
(MRI). On the 12th day they injected 15 of the rats with THC and 15 with
Win-55,212-2 a synthetic compound similar to THC. "All the rats left
untreated uniformly died 12-18 days after glioma (brain cancer) cell
inoculation ... Cannabinoid (THC)-treated rats survived significantly
longer than control rats. THC administration was ineffective in three
rats, which died by days 16-18. Nine of the THC-treated rats surpassed
the time of death of untreated rats, and survived up to 19-35 days.
Moreover, the tumor was completely eradicated in three of the treated
rats." The rats treated with Win-55,212-2 showed similar results.
The
Spanish researchers, led by Dr. Manuel Guzman of Complutense
University, also irrigated healthy rats' brains with large doses of THC
for seven days, to test for harmful biochemical or neurological effects.
They found none.
"Careful MRI analysis of all those tumor-free
rats showed no sign of damage related to necrosis, edema, infection or
trauma ... We also examined other potential side effects of cannabinoid
administration. In both tumor-free and tumor-bearing rats, cannabinoid
administration induced no substantial change in behavioral parameters
such as motor coordination or physical activity. Food and water intake
as well as body weight gain were unaffected during and after cannabinoid
delivery. Likewise, the general hematological profiles of
cannabinoid-treated rats were normal. Thus, neither biochemical
parameters nor markers of tissue damage changed substantially during the
7-day delivery period or for at least 2 months after cannabinoid
treatment ended."
Guzman's investigation is the only time since
the 1974 Virginia study that THC has been administered to live
tumor-bearing animals. (The Spanish researchers cite a 1998 study in
which cannabinoids inhibited breast cancer cell proliferation, but that
was a "petri dish" experiment that didn't involve live subjects.)
In
an email interview for this story, the Madrid researcher said he had
heard of the Virginia study, but had never been able to locate
literature on it. Hence, the Nature Medicine article characterizes the
new study as the first on tumor-laden animals and doesn't cite the 1974
Virginia investigation.
"I am aware of the existence of that
research. In fact I have attempted many times to obtain the journal
article on the original investigation by these people, but it has proven
impossible." Guzman said.
In 1983 the Reagan/Bush Administration
tried to persuade American universities and researchers to destroy all
1966-76 cannabis research work, including compendiums in libraries,
reports Jack Herer, who states, "We know that large amounts of
information have since disappeared."
Guzman provided the title of
the work -- "Antineoplastic activity of cannabinoids," an article in a
1975 Journal of the National Cancer Institute -- and this writer
obtained a copy at the University of California medical school library
in Davis and faxed it to Madrid.
The summary of the Virginia
study begins, "Lewis lung adenocarcinoma growth was retarded by the oral
administration of tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) and cannabinol (CBN)" --
two types of cannabinoids, a family of active components in marijuana.
"Mice treated for 20 consecutive days with THC and CBN had reduced
primary tumor size."
The 1975 journal article doesn't mention
breast cancer tumors, which featured in the only newspaper story ever to
appear about the 1974 study -- in the Local section of the Washington
Post on August 18, 1974. Under the headline, "Cancer Curb Is Studied,"
it read in part:
"The active chemical agent in marijuana curbs
the growth of three kinds of cancer in mice and may also suppress the
immunity reaction that causes rejection of organ transplants, a Medical
College of Virginia team has discovered." The researchers "found that
THC slowed the growth of lung cancers, breast cancers and a
virus-induced leukemia in laboratory mice, and prolonged their lives by
as much as 36 percent."
Guzman, writing from Madrid, was eloquent
in his response after this writer faxed him the clipping from the
Washington Post of a quarter century ago. In translation, he wrote:
"It
is extremely interesting to me, the hope that the project seemed to
awaken at that moment, and the sad evolution of events during the years
following the discovery, until now we once again draw back the veil
over the anti-tumoral power of THC, twenty-five years later.
Unfortunately, the world bumps along between such moments of hope and
long periods of intellectual castration."
News coverage of the
Madrid discovery has been virtually nonexistent in this country. The
news broke quietly on Feb. 29, 2000 with a story that ran once on the
UPI wire about the Nature Medicine article. This writer stumbled on it
through a link that appeared briefly on the Drudge Report web page. The
New York Times, Washington Post and Los Angeles Times all ignored the
story, even though its newsworthiness is indisputable: a benign
substance occurring in nature destroys deadly brain tumors.
Raymond
Cushing is a journalist, musician and filmmaker. This article was named
by Project Censored as a "Top Censored Story of 2000."