Skuteczność i bezpieczeństwo produktów na bazie kannabisu w leczeniu epilepsji opornej na leki - badania rzeczywiste

PubMed➕ 09.07.2026Clin Ther

Effectiveness and Safety of Cannabis-Based Products for Refractory Epilepsy From Real-World Evidence

W skrócie

Badanie pokazało, że preparaty z kannabisu pomagają ponad 70% pacjentów z trudną do leczenia epilepsją zmniejszyć liczbę napadów o co najmniej połowę, szczególnie tym, którzy stosowali je przez dłużej niż rok. Najczęstsze działania niepożądane to zaburzenia snu, zmiany nastroju i problemy żołądkowe, ale ogólnie profil bezpieczeństwa oceniono jako akceptowalny. Przerwanie leczenia z powodu trudności w dostępie do produktów znacznie zmniejszało jego skuteczność.

Oryginalny abstract (angielski)

PURPOSE: Cannabis-based products have emerged as a potential therapeutic option for refractory epilepsy; however, real-world evidence remains limited, particularly within public health systems. This study evaluated the effectiveness and safety of cannabis-based products among patients with refractory epilepsy treated through Brazil's public health system and explored factors associated with perceived treatment effectiveness. METHODS: A cross-sectional analytical study was conducted within the "Canabidiol-SUS Project." Patients registered in secondary care between 2017 and 2022 were interviewed by telephone. Effectiveness was defined as a self-reported ≥50% reduction in seizure frequency. Safety was assessed through self-reported adverse events. Logistic regression was used to identify factors associated with perceived effectiveness. FINDINGS: Ninety-one patients were included (mean age, 19.5 years; 58.2% male). Overall, 70.3% reported a ≥50% reduction in seizure frequency, with a higher proportion among current users (94.7%) than former users (57.1%). More than half of participants (51.6%) reported adverse events, most commonly sleep disturbances (28.6%), mood alterations (24.2%), and gastrointestinal symptoms (19.8%). Treatment duration >12 months was positively associated with perceived effectiveness (odds ratio [OR] = 23.79), whereas treatment discontinuation due to access barriers was negatively associated with effectiveness (OR = 0.074). IMPLICATIONS: Patients receiving cannabis-based products frequently reported substantial seizure reduction and an acceptable safety profile in this real-world public health setting. However, interpretation should consider the cross-sectional design, self-reported outcomes, and heterogeneity of products. The association between treatment discontinuation and lower effectiveness highlights the potential impact of access barriers on treatment continuity and patient outcomes.

Metadane publikacji

Journal
Clin Ther
Data publikacji
08.07.2026
PMID
42420065
DOI
10.1016/j.clinthera.2026.06.006
Autorzy
Lula MD, Portela R, Mota DM, Álvares-Teodoro J, Silva ML, Guerra-Júnior AA, Ruas CM
Słowa kluczowe
Cannabis, Effectiveness, Public health, Refractory epilepsy, Safety
Źródło
PubMed