Department of Family and Community Medicine, St. Michael's Hospital, Unity Health Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Temerty Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
J Med Internet Res. 2023 Jun 29;25:e45550. doi: 10.2196/45550.
Since the legalization of medical cannabis in Canada in 2013, prescription of cannabis for medical purposes has become commonplace and a multibillion dollar industry has formed. Much of the media coverage surrounding medical cannabis has been positive in nature, leading to Canadians potentially underestimating the adverse effects of medical cannabis use. In recent years, there has been a large increase in clinic websites advertising the use of medical cannabis for health indications. However, little is known about the quality of the evidence used by these clinic websites to describe the effectiveness of cannabis used for medical purposes.
We aimed to identify the indications for medical cannabis reported by cannabis clinics in Ontario, Canada, and the evidence these clinics cited to support cannabis prescription.
We conducted a cross-sectional web search to identify all cannabis clinic websites within Ontario, Canada, that had physician involvement and identified their primary purpose as cannabis prescription. Two reviewers independently searched these websites to identify all medical indications for which cannabis was promoted and reviewed and critically appraised all studies cited using the Oxford Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine Levels of Evidence rubric.
A total of 29 clinics were identified, promoting cannabis for 20 different medical indications including migraines, insomnia, and fibromyalgia. There were 235 unique studies cited on these websites to support the effectiveness of cannabis for these indications. A high proportion (36/235, 15.3%) of the studies were identified to be at the lowest level of evidence (level 5). Only 4 clinic websites included any mention of harms associated with cannabis.
Cannabis clinic websites generally promote cannabis use as medically effective but cite low-quality evidence to support these claims and rarely discuss harms. The recommendation of cannabis as a general therapeutic for many indications unsupported by high-quality evidence is potentially misleading for medical practitioners and patients. This disparity should be carefully evaluated in context of the specific medical indication and an individualized patient risk assessment. Our work illustrates the need to increase the quality of research performed on the medical effects of cannabis.
自 2013 年加拿大将医用大麻合法化以来,医用大麻的处方已变得很常见,并且已形成一个价值数十亿美元的产业。围绕医用大麻的媒体报道大多是积极的,这导致加拿大人可能低估了医用大麻使用的不良影响。近年来,宣传医用大麻用于健康指标的诊所网站数量大幅增加。然而,对于这些诊所网站用来描述医用大麻使用效果的证据质量,人们知之甚少。
我们旨在确定加拿大安大略省的大麻诊所报告的医用大麻适应证,并确定这些诊所引用的支持大麻处方的证据。
我们进行了一项横断面网络搜索,以确定所有在加拿大安大略省有医生参与并将其主要目的定为大麻处方的大麻诊所网站。两名审查员独立搜索这些网站,以确定所有宣传大麻的医疗适应证,并使用牛津循证医学中心证据等级量表对所有引用的研究进行审查和批判性评估。
共确定了 29 家诊所,宣传大麻用于 20 种不同的医学适应证,包括偏头痛、失眠和纤维肌痛。这些网站共引用了 235 篇独特的研究来支持大麻对这些适应证的有效性。高比例(36/235,15.3%)的研究被确定为证据水平最低(5 级)。只有 4 个诊所网站提到了与大麻相关的危害。
大麻诊所网站通常宣传大麻的药用功效,但引用低质量的证据来支持这些说法,很少讨论危害。推荐大麻作为许多适应证的一般治疗方法,而这些适应证缺乏高质量的证据支持,这可能会对医疗从业者和患者产生误导。在具体的医学适应证和个体化患者风险评估的背景下,应该仔细评估这种差异。我们的工作说明了需要提高医用大麻医疗效果研究的质量。