Abstract 1899P
Background
Cancer survivors will be more the 22 million by 2030, which makes quality of life as important as antitumoral therapy. Cannabinoids are a new class of drugs for the palliation of cancer-associated symptoms. Although popular among patients, cannabinoids still lack clear indications, given the immense variability of the products, study designs and recent discoveries. Our aim is to investigate the safety and efficacy of cannabinoids for symptom control in advanced cancer patients.
Methods
The study protocol was registered on PROSPERO (CRD42023479375), and a systematic search was conducted using three main databases (PubMed, Embase, and CENTRAL). Interventional and observational articles, where cancer patients were administered any type of cannabinoid for symptom control, including pain, constipation, nausea and insomnia, were eligible for analysis. The change from baseline (two-arm studies) or mean difference from baseline (one-arm studies) in symptom intensity was assessed, for which weighted means and pooled proportions were calculated with a 95% confidence interval (CI) and a random-effects model.
Results
After title-abstract and full-text selection, 96 articles were found to be eligible. Symptom improvement was rated using different scales (0-lowest, highest score-worst). Cannabinoids modestly improve pain compared to baseline, mean change of -0.57 (-0.85;-0.3 95% CI). When subgrouping the data based on the THC and CBD content, THC-based drugs were the best, decreasing pain with 1.27 points (-2.12;-0.43 95%CI), which is clinically and statistically significant. Cannabinoids modestly improve sleep quality, mean change from baseline -0.14 (-0.85;0.58 95% CI) and nausea, mean difference from baseline -0.06 (-0.42;0.29 95%CI), however not clinically significant. Further, cannabinoids don’t improve constipation, mean change from baseline 0.05 (-0.65;0.75 95% CI).
Conclusions
Cannabinoids could be beneficial for advanced cancer patients, but the effects may vary significantly depending on the type of cannabinoid, dosage, and form of administration. These preliminary results need to be followed by further analysis, so proper indication/contraindication of the drugs can be suggested.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Has not received any funding.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
1717TiP - CARE1 pragmatic clinical trial: First line randomised study platform to optimize treatment in patients with metastatic renal cell carcinoma
Presenter: Laurence Albiges
Session: Poster session 12
1822P - Incidence of cachexia and health resource use (HRU) in patients with breast, colorectal, lung, pancreatic, and prostate cancers
Presenter: Imran Ali
Session: Poster session 12
1823P - Significance of skeletal muscle measurement in cancer-associated cachexia screening
Presenter: Lynn Gottmann
Session: Poster session 12
1824P - Sarcopenia in advanced non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC): Clinical impact and its biological correlates
Presenter: Filippo Dall'Olio
Session: Poster session 12
1826P - Risk factors and incidence of osteoporosis in patients with breast cancer according to gender
Presenter: Chang Ik Yoon
Session: Poster session 12
1827P - Bone health and body composition in prostate cancer: An italian consensus about prevention and management strategies
Presenter: Maria Concetta Cursano
Session: Poster session 12
1828P - A cross-sectional study investigating the current diagnostic & therapeutical approaches to bone metastases (BoM) in patients (pts) with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)
Presenter: Sara Pilotto
Session: Poster session 12
1829P - Nutritional status assessment for patients with common cancer in a cancer hospital of southwest China
Presenter: Huiqing Yu
Session: Poster session 12
Resources:
Abstract
1830P - Comprehensive prognostic effects of inflammatory and nutritional markers to predict survival in women with breast cancer
Presenter: Susanna Hutajulu
Session: Poster session 12
1831P - Obesity and weight variations before treatment, seem to influence weight loss that happens during first-line metastatic lung adenocarcinoma
Presenter: Anthony Tarabay
Session: Poster session 12