Para Descargar PDF debe Abrir sesión.
Several beneficial effects have been proposed for cannabinoids in different clinical conditions, including epilepsy. However, their clinical role is controversial. Searching in Epistemonikos database, which is maintained by screening multiple databases, we identified five systematic reviews including four randomized trials addressing the question of this article. We extracted data and generated a summary of findings following the GRADE approach. We concluded it is not clear whether cannabinoids reduce the frequency of seizures in epilepsy because the certainty of the evidence is very low, and they probably increase adverse effects.
Epilepsy is a condition that disturbs the normal functioning of the brain and it is characterized by stereotyped and recurrent seizures. Although antiepileptic drugs usually achieve disease control, about 30% of patients have persistent seizures. Both tetrahydrocannabinol and cannabidiol have anticonvulsant properties by activating the CB1 and/or CB2 receptors of endocannabidiol system. However, their actual clinical role is not clear.
We used Epistemonikos database, which is maintained by screening multiple information sources, to identify systematic reviews and their included primary studies. With this information, we generated a structured summary using a pre-established format, which includes key messages, a summary of the body of evidence (presented as an evidence matrix in Epistemonikos), meta-analysis of the total of studies, a summary of findings table following the GRADE approach and a table of other considerations for decision-making.
|
Key messages
|
|
What is the evidence. |
We found five systematic reviews [1],[2],[3],[4],[5] including six primary studies [6],[7],[8],[9],[10],[11], of which four [6],[7],[8],[9] correspond to randomized controlled trials.This table and the summary in general are based on the latter. |
|
What types of patients were included |
All trials [6],[7],[8],[9] included patients with epilepsy, however only one trial [9] specified the type of epilepsy (secondarily generalized). |
|
What types of interventions were included |
All trials [6],[7],[8],[9] compared oral cannabidiol in different doses and different periods against placebo. |
|
What types of outcomes |
The systematic reviews identified [1],[2],[3],[4],[5] grouped outcomes in the following way: |
The information about the effects of cannabinoids for control of epilepsy is based on four randomized trials including 48 patients [6],[7],[8],[9]. All of the trials reported both the frequency of seizures and adverse effects associated with its use, but none of the systematic reviews was able to conduct a meta-analysis with their data. The information on adverse effects was supplemented with a systematic review evaluating the adverse effects of cannabinoids in different populations, and includes 29 studies reporting this outcome [12]. The summary of findings is as follows:


|
To whom this evidence does and does not apply |
|
| About the outcomes included in this summary |
|
| Balance between benefits and risks, and certainty of the evidence |
|
| What would patients and their doctors think about this intervention |
|
| Resource considerations |
|
|
Differences between this summary and other sources |
|
| Could this evidence change in the future? |
|
Using automated and collaborative means, we compiled all the relevant evidence for the question of interest and we present it as a matrix of evidence.

Siga el enlace para acceder a la versión interactiva: Cannabinoids for epilepsy
The upper portion of the matrix of evidence will display a warning of “new evidence” if new systematic reviews are published after the publication of this summary. Even though the project considers the periodical update of these summaries, users are invited to comment in Medwave or to contact the authors through email if they find new evidence and the summary should be updated earlier. After creating an account in Epistemonikos, users will be able to save the matrixes and to receive automated notifications any time new evidence potentially relevant for the question appears.
The details about the methods used to produce these summaries are described here http://dx.doi.org/10.5867/medwave.2014.06.5997.
Epistemonikos foundation is a non-for-profit organization aiming to bring information closer to health decision-makers with technology. Its main development is Epistemonikos database (www.epistemonikos.org).
These summaries follow a rigorous process of internal peer review.
Conflicts of interest
The authors do not have relevant interests to declare.
Esta obra de Medwave está bajo una licencia Creative Commons Atribución-NoComercial 3.0 Unported. Esta licencia permite el uso, distribución y reproducción del artículo en cualquier medio, siempre y cuando se otorgue el crédito correspondiente al autor del artículo y al medio en que se publica, en este caso, Medwave.
Several beneficial effects have been proposed for cannabinoids in different clinical conditions, including epilepsy. However, their clinical role is controversial. Searching in Epistemonikos database, which is maintained by screening multiple databases, we identified five systematic reviews including four randomized trials addressing the question of this article. We extracted data and generated a summary of findings following the GRADE approach. We concluded it is not clear whether cannabinoids reduce the frequency of seizures in epilepsy because the certainty of the evidence is very low, and they probably increase adverse effects.
Autores:
Javier Peña[1,2], Gabriel Rada[2,3,4,5,6]
Citación: Peña J, Rada G. Are cannabinoids effective for epilepsy?. Medwave 2017; 17(Suppl1):e6821 doi: 10.5867/medwave.2017.6821
Fecha de publicación: 13/1/2017
Nos complace que usted tenga interés en comentar uno de nuestros artículos. Su comentario será publicado inmediatamente. No obstante, Medwave se reserva el derecho a eliminarlo posteriormente si la dirección editorial considera que su comentario es: ofensivo en algún sentido, irrelevante, trivial, contiene errores de lenguaje, contiene arengas políticas, obedece a fines comerciales, contiene datos de alguna persona en particular, o sugiere cambios en el manejo de pacientes que no hayan sido publicados previamente en alguna revista con revisión por pares.
Aún no hay comentarios en este artículo.
Para comentar debe iniciar sesión
Medwave publica las vistas HTML y descargas PDF por artículo, junto con otras métricas de redes sociales.
Gloss D, Vickrey B. Cannabinoids for epilepsy. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2014 Mar 5;(3):CD009270 | CrossRef | PubMed |
Koppel BS, Brust JC, Fife T, Bronstein J, Youssof S, Gronseth G, et al. Systematic review: efficacy and safety of medical marijuana in selected neurologic disorders: report of the Guideline Development Subcommittee of the American Academy of Neurology. Neurology. 2014 Apr 29;82(17):1556-63 | CrossRef | PubMed |
Ben Amar M. Cannabinoids in medicine: A review of their therapeutic potential. J Ethnopharmacol. 2006 Apr 21;105(1-2):1-25 | PubMed |
Bagshaw SM, Hagen NA. Medical efficacy of cannabinoids and marijuana: a comprehensive review of the literature. J Palliat Care. 2002 Summer;18(2):111-22 | PubMed |
Zhornitsky S, Potvin S. Cannabidiol in humans-the quest for therapeutic targets. Pharmaceuticals (Basel). 2012 May 21;5(5):529-52 | CrossRef | PubMed |
Trembly, B, Sherman, M. Double-blind clinical study of cannabidiol as a secondary anticonvulsant. Marijuana '90 International Conference on Cannabis and Cannabinoids. Kolympari, Crete. International Association for Cannabinoid Medicines. 1990;:Section 2, Pág. 5 | Link |
Ames FR, Cridland S. Anticonvulsant effect of cannabidiol. S Afr Med J. 1986 Jan 4;69(1):14 | PubMed |
Mechoulam R, Carlini EA. Toward drugs derived from cannabis. Naturwissenschaften. 1978 Apr;65(4):174-9 | PubMed |
Cunha JM, Carlini EA, Pereira AE, Ramos OL, Pimentel C, Gagliardi R, et al. Chronic administration of cannabidiol to healthy volunteers and epileptic patients. Pharmacology. 1980;21(3):175-85 | PubMed |
Consroe PF, Wood GC, Buchsbaum H. Anticonvulsant nature of marihuana smoking. JAMA. 1975 Oct 20;234(3):306-7 | PubMed |
Ellison JM, Gelwan E, Ogletree J. Complex partial seizure symptoms affected by marijuana abuse. J Clin Psychiatry. 1990 Oct;51(10):439-40 | PubMed |
Whiting PF, Wolff RF, Deshpande S, Di Nisio M, Duffy S, Hernandez AV, Keurentjes JC, Lang S, et al. Cannabinoids for Medical Use: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis. JAMA. 2015 Jun 23-30;313(24):2456-73 | CrossRef | PubMed |
AES Position on medical marijuana (Updated March 21, 2016.). Accedido el 15 de octubre 2016 | Link |