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The Future of Marijuana Research

Colorado's CannaVan and a Harvard brain study lead the way


spinner image University of Colorado at Boulder professors Kent Hutchison and Angela Bryan stand in front of a white cargo van known as the CannaVan
Kent Hutchison and Angela Bryan, professors with the University of Colorado, Boulder, stand at a "CannaVan" at the Center for Innovation and Creativity in Boulder, Colorado, on June 21, 2019.
Matt Nager

For all the uncertainties imposed by federal and state laws, scientists are finding ingenious ways to study medical cannabis. Over the next five years, scores of studies should begin to turn out serious and conclusive data to help guide its use and prescription.

At the University of Colorado, Boulder, for example, the “CannaVan” — a mobile lab in a white cargo van — is literally driving through obstacles. “It's illegal for us to bring products from a dispensary into our lab. And the marijuana sanctioned for legal research by the National Institute on Drug Abuse doesn't come in forms people actually use, like vape oils and edibles and concentrates,” explains Kent Hutchison, a professor of psychology and neuroscience at the university. “So we're bringing the lab to the people."

Research on wheels

On one drizzly June afternoon, the CannaVan swung into a university parking lot after a research run. In the distance, clouds hung above Boulder's scenic mountain peaks like smoke. “Participants sign up for research studies and agree to use a cannabis product of the type we're studying,” explains Angela Bryan, a professor of psychology and neuroscience. “We do not buy or see or touch the cannabis used by study subjects. The participants take baseline tests with no cannabis in their system here at the university. When the study begins, they use their cannabis at home. We drive to their house and they come on board for testing, once before they have used the cannabis and again after using it.”

Each CannaVan visit to a participant can take four to five hours, plus travel time. The van is helping to facilitate several studies; among them are the effects of various cannabis products on anxiety, pain, inflammation, sleep, health and mood. One project even investigates “dabbing,” inhaling super-potent cannabis resins and waxes.

spinner image A person wearing a blue medical glove is holding a blood plasma sample
Plasma samples for cannabinoid analysis taken in the CannaVan.
Matt Nager

Soon, Bryan hopes to study cannabis and metabolism, including its effects on the body's response to insulin.

In a previous study, not involving the van, she found that adults — including those over age 60 — who use cannabis exercise more often and enjoy it more. “The stereotype of the stoner snacking on the sofa may not be reality,” she says. “There's also some evidence cannabis users weigh less than nonusers. We want to learn more about that."

CannaVan study participants include pain patients, cancer patients, veterans, older adults and opiate users hoping to cut back. From start to finish, a study may take five years. “That's how long good research takes,” Bryan says. “But as the cannabis boom grows, I feel like we're the cart chasing the horse — and the horse is going faster and faster.”

Brain imaging

At Harvard University, Staci Gruber, an associate professor of psychiatry in the medical school, directs a program called MIND (Marijuana Investigations for Neuroscientific Discovery). Here, researchers use brain imaging and tests of thinking and memory to measure medical marijuana's effects on brain structure and function.

Participants must be fairly new to medical cannabis, use it at home and get checked at the lab about six times over two years.

The cannabis products participants use are analyzed by a private outside lab to give researchers clues to the marijuana forms and potencies associated with different effects over time.

"It's an observational study, not an intervention study,” Gruber says. “But it's important. Almost everything we know about marijuana comes from studies of recreational users who often started in their teens or early 20s, while their brain was still developing. They are different from today's medical marijuana users."

One surprise to emerge from MIND: In older adults, mental focus sharpened somewhat after three months of medical marijuana use; there was also more activation in their cingulate cortex, a brain area involved with paying attention, avoiding distractions and problem-solving. “We're seeing exciting changes in neuroimaging that may reflect normalization of brain function,” Gruber says. “Cognitive skills improve. It could be because people feel less pain, are sleeping better and are using fewer medications like opiates and benzodiazepines that can affect thinking and memory. Or it could be a direct effect of cannabis. We don't know yet.”

Gruber's lab is now developing a customized cannabis product for a future clinical trial, made from government weed. “It would be better if we could study the products people really use, but it's not like they have tinctures or capsules ready for us to play with,” she says. “So we're formulating a product from a muddy, tarry paste that's available from the government program. You have to think outside the box.”

It's worth the effort, she says. Right now, researchers are not only doing clever end runs around outmoded federal policies, they're also trying to answer questions raised by state-level medical marijuana policies that don't always have much evidence behind them (such as including glaucoma on a list of qualifying conditions, when marijuana has been shown to lack the consistent effect needed to treat the condition effectively). “Science helps set government policy. In the case of cannabis, [state] policy has outpaced science. Now we're trying to understand the good, the bad and the truth.”

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