Cannabidiol as potential anticancer drug

British Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
2012
Paola Massi, Marta Solinas, Valentina Cinquina, & Daniela Parolaro

Over the past years, several lines of evidence support an antitumourigenic effect of cannabinoids including D9 -tetrahydrocannabinol (D9 -THC), synthetic agonists, endocannabinoids and endocannabinoid transport or degradation inhibitors. Indeed, cannabinoids possess anti-proliferative and pro-apoptotic effects and they are known to interfere with tumour neovascularization, cancer cell migration, adhesion, invasion and metastasization. However, the clinical use of D9 -THC and additional cannabinoid agonists is often limited by their unwanted psychoactive side effects, and for this reason interest in non-psychoactive cannabinoid compounds with structural affinity for D9 -THC, such as cannabidiol (CBD), has substantially increased in recent years. The present review will focus on the efficacy of CBD in the modulation of different steps of tumourigenesis in several types of cancer and highlights the importance of exploring CBD/CBD analogues as alternative therapeutic agents.

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