by CHRIS MOORE
The researchers of a new study used CBD to help deliver chemotherapy drugs directly to malignant cells, ultimately reducing the amount of chemotherapy needed.
The study explored using CBD in combination with doxorubicin, a common chemotherapy drug that can slow or stop the growth of cancer cells. Researchers used CBD to activate a protein called TRPV2, which can open a canal inside liver cancer cell membranes. This canal allows the doxorubicin to directly enter the cancer cells, while staying clear of healthy cells.
The study demonstrated that “doxorubicin-mediated cell death is significantly more potent, requiring an order of magnitude lower dose, when co-applied with CBD.”
In other words, low doses of doxorubicin — which would normally be ineffective at killing cancer cells — became effective when combined with CBD. This CBD-facilitated effect “will minimize the off-target effect of doxorubicin and therefore will substantially reduce adverse side effects,” the authors explained.
“It’s too early to make concrete predictions, but we are hopeful this discovery will lead the way towards a new, more targeted delivery method for chemotherapy treatment, one that will drastically reduce patients’ pain,” said Binshtok to Israel21c.
While some members of the medical community remain skeptical of claims that cannabis can fight cancer, this study adds to the growing body of research showing that these claims are no myth.
This summer, another Israeli study found that whole-plant cannabis effectively inhibited the growth of specific kinds of cancer cells. Weeks later, another study found that cannabis flavonoids can also kill pancreatic cancer cells.