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CBD-rich cannabis in Crohn's disease: RCT

Inflammatory bowel disease

PubMed · 2021

RCT: oral CBD-rich cannabis induces a clinical response and improved quality of life (no endoscopic response) in Crohn's disease.

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CBD-rich cannabis in Crohn's disease: RCT

CBD-rich cannabis in Crohn's disease | Brazcann

Introduction and clinical context

The study CBD-rich cannabis in Crohn's disease: RCT (PubMed · 2021) is part of the scientific research on the use of cannabinoids in inflammatory bowel disease.

In inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) — which includes Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis —, cannabinoids are studied for their possible effect on symptoms and quality of life. Trials with CBD-rich cannabis suggest a clinical response and symptomatic relief in some patients, although without consistently demonstrating endoscopic improvement (mucosal healing). The endocannabinoid system is present in the gastrointestinal tract and takes part in regulating inflammation and motility.

Understanding what science shows about the use of cannabinoids in inflammatory bowel disease helps patients and healthcare professionals make safer, well-founded decisions, based on evidence rather than common sense.

Methodology and findings

This clinical trial was conducted in a controlled manner, comparing the treatment with a reference group. RCT: oral CBD-rich cannabis induces a clinical response and improved quality of life (no endoscopic response) in Crohn's disease. The blinded, controlled design reduces bias and increases the reliability of the finding. Results from controlled trials like this are especially valuable for guiding therapeutic decisions.

Mechanism of action and safety

In the gastrointestinal tract, the endocannabinoid system regulates motility, secretion and inflammation, with CB1/CB2 receptors in the intestinal wall — the basis for studying cannabinoids in IBD; CBD adds an anti-inflammatory effect without psychoactivity. Regarding safety, drowsiness and dizziness are observed, with attention to drug interactions. It is important to note that symptomatic relief is not equivalent to controlling inflammation (mucosal healing). Use should be adjuvant and monitored by the gastroenterologist, without replacing the baseline therapy.

Regulation in Brazil (Anvisa)

In Brazil, access to cannabis products is regulated by Anvisa — mainly through RDC 660/2022 (patient import with a medical prescription) and the new manufacturing and import framework, RDC 1,015/2026. Any therapeutic use must start from an individualized medical assessment and prescription. This content is informative and scientific and does not replace the guidance of a healthcare professional.

This is informative content produced by Brazcann; for the full methodology and detailed results, consult the original publication (PubMed · 2021). Access to cannabis treatments must always occur through the regulated pathway, with a prescription and medical follow-up.

Frequently asked questions

Does cannabis treat Crohn's disease?

Studies report symptom relief, but without consistent endoscopic healing; use is adjuvant and monitored.

Does the gut have cannabinoid receptors?

Yes. The endocannabinoid system is present in the gastrointestinal tract and regulates inflammation and motility.

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