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A powerful drug derived from marijuana just got a major green light on its way to FDA approval

The GW Pharma drug appears to reduce seizures in two types of epilepsy and nears FDA approval. Its active ingredient: the marijuana compound cannabidiol.

  • An experimental
  • The committee concluded that the drug, called Epidiolex, is safe and effective.
  • That vote will play a key role in the FDA's final approval decision, which is expected in June.
  • Epidiolex is made by GW Pharmaceuticals and is designed to treat two rare forms of epilepsy using cannabidiol, or CBD.

An experimental drug derived from cannabis to treat epilepsy is on the brink of becoming the first of its kind to win US government approval.

On Thursday, a panel of outside experts convened by the Food and Drug Administration voted unanimously in favor of the drug's safety and effectiveness. Their recommendation will play a key role in the FDA's approval decision for the drug, which is made by GW Pharmaceuticals.

If the FDA gives final approval — a decision is expected in June — the new drug would be sold under the name Epidiolex as a syrup. It would be the first drug whose active ingredient is cannabidiol, the compound in marijuana thought to be responsible for many of its therapeutic effects.

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Cannabidiol, or CBD, doesn't contain THC, marijuana's main psychoactive ingredient, and is not linked with euphoria or the drug's characteristic high. CBD appears to help reduce seizures, at least in two of the hardest-to-treat forms of epilepsy, known as Lennox-Gastaut syndrome and Dravet syndrome. That's according to two large clinical trials the FDA considered Tuesday ahead of the vote.

In the absence of a research-backed drug, some desperate parents of children with epilepsy have turned to CBD oils and other CBD-based products at dispensaries — but most of those are not heavily regulated.

Laura Lubbers, the chief scientific officer of a nonprofit called Cure that funds epilepsy research, told Business Insider her group saw GW's drug as a "long-awaited" treatment. That's especially true for patients who haven't responded to other drugs.

"What's different with this drug is that this is a well-studied and well-controlled product," Lubbers said.

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Because GW Pharmaceuticals was able to show that its product addresses a critical need, it was able to apply for a designation to fast-track the Food and Drug Administration's often protracted approval process.

One clinical trial of the drug looked at its effects in 225 young people with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. The researchers split the study participants into groups and gave them either a high dose of the drug, a low dose, or a placebo for 14 weeks. The results were presented at an American Academy of Neurology meeting last year, and they showed that participants in the high-dose group saw their seizure occurrence drop by 42%. Those given the low dose saw a decrease of roughly 37%. By comparison, those given the placebo saw only a 17% reduction in seizure occurrence.

The second trial, the results of which were published in May 2017 in the New England Journal of Medicine, looked at 120 children with Dravet syndrome. Half were given the drug, and half received a placebo. Forty-three percent of the participants given the drug saw their seizures reduced by half, and 5% stopped having seizures entirely. The group given the placebo saw barely any improvement.

While Epidiolex would be the first cannabidiol-based drug to land FDA approval, the agency has already given the green light to other drugs that contain a lab-made version of THC. Sold under the brand names Marinol and Syndros, the drugs are designed to treat some negative side effects of chemotherapy and AIDS, such as nausea, loss of appetite, and weight loss.

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In its public meeting on Thursday, a panel of outside scientists convened by the FDA decided that Epidiolex was safe and effective. Their vote serves as a recommendation that will be considered when the final decision on whether to approve the drug is made later this summer.

Epidiolex would be designed to treat only two types of epilepsy, so FDA approval would mean the drug would be prescribed for a small group of patients. But medical professionals could technically prescribe it "off-label" for other conditions as well. (The anesthetic ketamine, for example, may be prescribed this way for some hard-to-treat forms of depression.)

"We would expect that once this is approved as a drug it's quite likely this will be tried in other populations off-label so it has a big opportunity to affect others," Lubbers said.

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, epilepsy affects more than 4.3 million Americans. Though GW Pharma's current drug focuses only on two rare types of the condition, the company has said it is exploring treatments for various other forms of epilepsy, too.

If this initial drug gets the green light, that approval will likely galvanize new research into other marijuana-based drugs as well.

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