Systematic review of systematic reviews for medical cannabinoids: Pain, nausea and vomiting, spasticity, and harms.

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Categoría Síntesis amplia / Revisión panorámica de revisiones sistemáticas
RevistaCanadian Family Physician
Año 2018
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OBJECTIVE:

To determine the effects of medical cannabinoids on pain, spasticity, and nausea and vomiting, and to identify adverse events.

DATA SOURCES:

MEDLINE, the Cochrane Database, and the references of included studies were searched.

STUDY SELECTION:

Systematic reviews with 2 or more randomized controlled trials (RCTs) that focused on medical cannabinoids for pain, spasticity, or nausea and vomiting were included. For adverse events, any meta-analysis for the conditions listed or of adverse events of cannabinoids was included.

SYNTHESIS:

From 1085 articles, 31 relevant systematic reviews were identified including 23 for pain, 5 for spasticity, 6 for nausea and vomiting, and 12 for adverse events. Meta-analysis of 15 RCTs found more patients taking cannabinoids attained at least a 30% pain reduction: risk ratio (RR) of 1.37 (95% CI 1.14 to 1.64), number needed to treat (NNT) of 11. Sensitivity analysis found study size and duration affected findings (subgroup differences,

CONCLUSION:

There is reasonable evidence that cannabinoids improve nausea and vomiting after chemotherapy. They might improve spasticity (primarily in multiple sclerosis). There is some uncertainty about whether cannabinoids improve pain, but if they do, it is neuropathic pain and the benefit is likely small. Adverse effects are very common, meaning benefits would need to be considerable to warrant trials of therapy.
Epistemonikos ID: 639458731a8636e03f457f1c527bc1608817350b
First added on: Mar 02, 2018