Clinical Trials Logo

Clinical Trial Summary

Background:

- Marijuana (cannabis) is an illegal drug. Researchers want to study people s reactions, attention, and behavior after they take marijuana in different ways. They want to learn better ways to detect drugs in a person s body They also want to know how long marijuana can be found in blood, urine, saliva, and breath.

Objectives:

- To learn how people respond to delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC, a marijuana component) and how their bodies handle it after it is given in different ways.

Eligibility:

- Adults age 18 50 who use marijuana.

Design:

- Participants are screened under another NIDA protocol.

- This study involves up to 6 visits to NIDA.

- At the first visit, participants will practice the tasks and tests they will do at their dosing sessions. They will learn how to give breath and saliva samples.

- Dosing sessions 1 4 will last 3 5 days each. All participants will be admitted to a research clinic the night before these sessions. Some participants can stay at the clinic and some must go home between sessions.

- At each session, participants will eat a brownie with placebo or marijuana. Then they will smoke a placebo or marijuana cigarette. Some will inhale placebo or marijuana after it is vaporized.

- Throughout the sessions:

- Participants will give urine, saliva, and breath samples. Their blood will be taken with a tube in a vein and finger pricks. Their vital signs will be checked.

- Participants will answer questionnaires and take thinking tests. They will also take tests that assess eye movement, balance, and time estimation.

- Participants may have a 5th dosing session. They will eat a marijuana brownie and have the above tests and samples.


Clinical Trial Description

Objectives

Cannabinoids are most commonly administered via smoking. Oral consumption in medications, teas, oils, or food also is widely utilized. Additionally, cannabis vaporization followed by inhalation for medical and illicit administration is common. Differences in cannabis pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics between these three administration routes and in occasional and frequent cannabis smokers are not thoroughly characterized. This study evaluates cannabis pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics in occasional and frequent smokers after smoked, vaporized, and oral cannabis administration.

<TAB>

Study Population

Up to 80 healthy cannabis smokers, aged 18-50, without a history of adverse reactions to cannabis will be recruited. For dosing sessions 1-4, ten occasional smokers (smoking frequency greater than or equal to 2 times/month but <3 times/week) and ten frequent smokers (smoking frequency generally greater than or equal to 5times/week) are required. For the optional 5th session, 8-20 participants (regardless of smoking history) are required.

<TAB>

Study Design

Occasional and frequent cannabis smokers are recruited to participate. Prior to dosing sessions, there is a training visit for all study procedures. Sessions 1-4 are 3 and 4 days each for occasional and frequent cannabis smokers, respectively, and the study design is double blind, double dummy, randomized, crossover, and placebo-controlled. In each session, participants will consume a placebo or active oral (baked in a brownie) cannabis (6.9% 9-tetrahydrocannabinol [THC]) dose followed by either placebo or active smoked or vaporized cannabis. Only one active dose will be administered in each dosing session. Whole blood, oral fluid, urine, dried blood spots, and breath are collected throughout all sessions. Due to the large THC body burden stored in the tissues, we will collect biological specimens for a longer period in frequent cannabis smokers than for occasional cannabis smokers. An optional 5th dosing session will be offered in which participants receive a single oral cannabis dose for pharmacokinetic monitoring. The placebo cannabis plant material has a low THC concentration. As we are expecting that the active brownie dose might result in low THC oral fluid contamination, it is necessary to have an active brownie THC dose that is not followed by placebo vaporizer or smoked cannabis. Occasional smokers may stay or be discharged between sessions, including between the 4th and optional 5th dosing session, but dosing must not exceed self-reported intake frequency. Frequent smokers must be discharged for at least 72 h between dosing sessions 1-4, and must stay on the unit at the end of session 4 for session 5 if they choose to participate. The difference between requirements for occasional and frequent smokers to participate in the optional 5th dose is due to the potential confound of low THC concentrations in frequent smokers that might not permit the detection of low THC concentrations after consumption of a low oral THC dose. Occasional cannabis smokers will reside on the closed research unit for approximately 72 h for dosing sessions 1-4, and for approximately 66 h for dosing session 5. Frequent cannabis smokers will reside on the closed research unit for approximately 90 h for dosing sessions 1-3 (and 4 if not participating in optional session 5). If a frequent smoker chooses to participate in dosing session 5, they will remain on the unit for approximately 162 h for sessions 4 and 5. Participants will complete a battery of subjective, objective, and neurocognitive tests before and after dosing. Subjective effects are assessed with visual analog scales. Objective measurements include physiological measurements, expired carbon monoxide, reddening of the conjunctivae and tests measuring psychomotor skills and cognitive functions.

<TAB>

Outcome Parameters

Primary outcome measures include subjective and objective assessments, performance on neurocognitive tasks, and cannabinoid concentrations in whole blood, oral fluid, urine, dried blood spots, and breath. Correlations between cannabinoid concentrations in whole blood, dried blood spots, oral fluid, and breath will be investigated, the Oral Fluid Working Group for the Partnership for Clean Competition oral fluid screening algorithm will be evaluated, and the pharmacokinetic profiles of alternative cannabinoids will be characterized. Secondary investigations include comparing cannabinoid stability in dried blood spots and whole blood, evaluating the World Anti-Doping Agency urine 11-nor-9-carboxy-THC decision limit, characterizing the performance of the Alere DDS2 on-site oral fluid screening device, and evaluating effects of acute cannabis administration on leptin and other appetitive peptides.<TAB> ;


Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


NCT number NCT02177513
Study type Interventional
Source National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC)
Contact
Status Completed
Phase Phase 1
Start date June 14, 2014
Completion date April 27, 2016

See also
  Status Clinical Trial Phase
Completed NCT03253926 - Effect of Lorcaserin on Cannabis Withdrawal and Self-administration Phase 1/Phase 2
Completed NCT04060602 - Personalized Feedback Intervention to Reduce Risky Cannabis Use. N/A
Completed NCT01212081 - Assessment of Cannabis Craving in Schizophrenia Using Virtual Reality
Recruiting NCT04988490 - Quantification of Cannabinoids and Comparison to Post-Surgical Pain Medication Requirements and Surgical Outcomes
Recruiting NCT05188404 - Aging and Marijuana: Benefits, Effects, and Risks
Completed NCT03662737 - VRT as a Biomarker of Cerebellar Dysfunction in Chronic Cannabis Use
Not yet recruiting NCT05999383 - Understanding the Clinical Pharmacology of Marijuana-Tobacco Co-administration Phase 2
Terminated NCT04436055 - Intergenerational Effects of Paternal Periconceptional Cannabis and Other Drug Use (EPIC)
Active, not recruiting NCT04374773 - Effects of Pregnancy-associated Hormones on THC Metabolism in Women Phase 4
Completed NCT04316741 - Brief Intervention Combined With Health Coaching Via Social Media for Cannabis Use N/A
Recruiting NCT05396638 - Characterization of Endocannabinoid and Endogenous Opioid Levels in Adolescents With Cannabis Use Disorder N/A
Recruiting NCT05309226 - Cannabis Use in Pregnancy and Downstream Effects on Maternal and Infant Health
Recruiting NCT03859089 - Cannabis for Opioid Substitution Trial
Recruiting NCT05849636 - Alerta Cannabis: Evaluation of Web-based Tailored Intervention N/A
Enrolling by invitation NCT05521321 - Feasibility and Acceptability of the Cannabis Awareness and Prevention Toolkit N/A
Recruiting NCT05119244 - Environment and Lung Cancer N/A
Recruiting NCT04841655 - Tobacco Cessation Among Smokers Under Alcohol and/or Cannabis Treatment
Terminated NCT04100590 - Eye Tracking as a Biomarker of Cannabis Effects Phase 2
Completed NCT05167097 - Mindsets and the Effectiveness of a Brief Intervention - Replication N/A
Recruiting NCT04114903 - Exploring the Anti-inflammatory Properties of Cannabis and Their Relevance to Insulin Sensitivity