Paul Armentano: Cannabis Shown To Halt Cancer Growth, So Why Aren’t We Studying It In Humans?
|
Tweet this story! Support our efforts for a sustainable world.
|
|

This article was originally published on NORML.org, and is part of the organization’s most recent media advisory. To sign up for NORML’s weekly advisory, click here.
The administration of THC reduces the tumor growth of metastatic breast cancer and “might constitute a new therapeutic tool for the treatment” of cancerous tumors, according to preclinical data published online in the journal Molecular Cancer.
Investigators from Complutense University in Madrid assessed the anti-tumor potential of THC and JWH-133, a non-psychotropic CB2 receptor-selective agonist, in the treatment of ErbB2-positive breast tumors – a highly aggressive form of breast cancer that is typically unresponsive to standard therapies.
Researchers reported, “[B]oth Delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol … and JWH-133 …reduce tumor growth [and] tumor number [in mice]. … [T]hese results provide a strong preclinical evidence for the use of cannabinoid-based therapies for the management of ErbB2-positive breast cancer.”
In 2007, investigators at the California Pacific Medical Center Research Institute reported that the administration of the nonpsychoactive cannabinoid CBD limited breast cancer metastasis in a manner that was superior to comparable synthesized agents.
Previous preclinical studies assessing the anticancer properties of cannabinoids have shown that they inhibit the proliferation of a wide range of cancers, including brain cancer, prostate cancer, oral cancers, lung cancer, skin cancer, pancreatic cancer, biliary tract cancers, and lymphoma.
Full text of the study, “Cannabinoids reduce ErbB2-driven breast cancer progression through Akt inhibition,” is available online here.
Paul Armentano is one of the authors of Marijuana is Safer, So Why are we Driving People to Drink, available in our bookstore.

















September 25th, 2010 at 3:17 pm
[…] Paul Armentano: Cannabis Shown To Halt Cancer Growth, So Why Aren’t We Studying It In Humans? (chelseagreen.com) […]