Cannabis and impact on immunotherapy s... - Melanoma Caregivers

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Cannabis and impact on immunotherapy study published

missyrand profile image
missyrandAmbassador
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There are not many studies looking at cannabis use plus immunotherapy impact, but here is one published this year:

ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/m/pubmed/3...

Study limitations:

Small number of patients studied

Mostly male patients

Looked at mostly patients with non-small cell lung cancer, but did include patients with metastatic melanoma

Abstract Summary:

Cannabis Impacts Tumor Response Rate to Nivolumab in Patients with Advanced Malignancies.

Taha T, et al. Oncologist. 2019.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: There has been a significant increase in the use of immunotherapy and cannabis recently, two modalities that have immunomodulatory effects and may have possible interaction. We evaluated the influence of cannabis use during immunotherapy treatment on response rate (RR), progression-free survival (PFS), and overall survival (OS).

SUBJECTS, MATERIALS, AND METHODS: In this retrospective, observational study, data were collected from the files of patients treated with nivolumab in the years 2015-2016 at our hospital, and cannabis from six cannabis-supplying companies. Included were 140 patients (89 nivolumab alone, 51 nivolumab plus cannabis) with advanced melanoma, non-small cell lung cancer, and renal clear cell carcinoma. The groups were homogenous regarding demographic and disease characteristics. A comparison between the two arms was made.

RESULTS: In a multivariate model, cannabis was the only significant factor that reduced RR to immunotherapy (37.5% RR in nivolumab alone compared with 15.9% in the nivolumab-cannabis group (p = .016, odds ratio = 3.13, 95% confidence interval 1.24-8.1). Cannabis use was not a significant factor for PFS or OS. Factors affecting PFS and OS were smoking (adjusted hazard ratio [HR] = 2.41 and 2.41, respectively (and brain metastases (adjusted HR = 2.04 and 2.83, respectively). Low performance status (adjusted HR = 2.83) affected OS alone. Tetrahydrocannabinol and cannabidiol percentages did not affect RR in any group (p = .393 and .116, respectively).

CONCLUSION: In this retrospective analysis, the use of cannabis during immunotherapy treatment decreased RR, without affecting PFS or OS and without relation to cannabis composition. Considering the limitations of the study, further prospective clinical study is needed to investigate possible interaction.

IMPLICATIONS FOR PRACTICE: Although the data are retrospective and a relation to cannabis composition was not detected, this information can be critical for cannabis users and indicates that caution is required when starting immunotherapy.

Peace,

Missy

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3 Replies

So basically this is saying that cannabis reduced the response rate to immunotherapy?

missyrand profile image
missyrandAmbassador in reply to

Yes. Cannabis reduced the response rate to immunotherapy in this small study, but it no impact on overall survival or progression free survival for the duration of the study.

missy

strawberryjam profile image
strawberryjam in reply to missyrand

So it reduced the response rate but had no impact on overall survival or progression. I guess I don’t really understand these results!

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