SUMMIT European Cannabis Insights Summit 2026 — Exclusive industry intelligence Register Now
EVENT Cannabis Europa London 2026 — Europe's cannabis industry unites Get Tickets

Recent Searches

    Clinical Study

    The Efficacy of Medical Marijuana in the Treatment of Cancer-Related Pain.

    Abstract

    The opioid epidemic has spurred investigations for nonopioid options, yet limited research persists on medical marijuana's (MMJ) efficacy in managing cancer-related symptoms. We sought to characterize MMJ's role on symptomatic relief and opioid consumption in the oncologic population. Retrospective chart review of MMJ-certified oncology patients was performed. Divided patients into MMJ use [MMJ(+)] versus no use [MMJ(-)], and Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS)-reported pain cohorts: "mild-moderate" versus "severe." Medical records were reviewed for ESAS, to measure physical and emotional symptoms, and opiate consumption, converted into morphine milligram equivalents (MME). Minimal clinically important differences were determined. Wilcoxon signed-rank tests determined statistical significance between MMJ-certification and most recent palliative care visit. Identified 232 patients [95/232 MMJ(-); 137/232 MMJ(+)]. Pain, physical and total ESAS significantly improved for total MMJ(-) and MMJ(+); however, only MMJ(+) significantly improved emotional ESAS. MMJ(-) opioid consumption increased by 23% (97.5-120 mg/day MME,  = 0.004), while it remained constant (45-45 mg/day MME,  = 0.522) in MMJ(+). Physical and total ESAS improved in mild-moderate-MMJ(-) and MMJ(+). Pain and emotional symptoms worsened in MMJ(-); while MMJ(+)'s pain remained unchanged and emotional symptoms improved. MMJ(-) opioid consumption increased by 29% (90-126 mg/day MME,  = 0.012); while MMJ(+)'s decreased by 33% (45-30 mg/day MME,  = 0.935). Pain, physical, emotional, and total ESAS scores improved in severe-MMJ(-) and MMJ(+); opioid consumption reduced by 22% in MMJ(-) (135-106 mg/day MME,  = 0.124) and 33% in MMJ(+) (90-60 mg/day MME,  = 0.421). MMJ(+) improved oncology patients' ESAS scores despite opioid dose reductions and should be considered a viable adjuvant therapy for palliative management.

    Citation

    Free Weekly Briefing

    Cannabis news, every Monday morning.

    Industry intelligence for cannabis operators, regulators, clinicians, and investors — sent every Monday.