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A marijuana plant. A marijuana plant.

A marijuana plant.

Ciara O'Rourke
By Ciara O'Rourke October 30, 2018

No, the National Cancer Institute has not named marijuana a cancer cure

Canada didn’t pay off the country’s federal debt one day after marijuana legalization, but could cannabis wipe out disease?

"Cancer institute finally admits marijuana kills cancer," trumpets the headline of an article that has been shared about 161,000 times on Facebook. The article goes on to say that in August 2015, the National Cancer Institute released a report on its website that stated "marijuana kills cancer."

This story was flagged as part of Facebook’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Facebook.) It was published on ehealthmagz.com but it’s unclear what the website is actually called. The website’s browser tab says "Health Magazine," but at the bottom of the page, an "about us" section describes the site as, simply, "Newspaper."

"Newspaper is your news, entertainment, music fashion website," it says. "We provide you with the latest breaking news and videos straight from the entertainment industry."

An email we sent to the contract address on the website—[email protected]—bounced back. Though the website credits the article to "Stoners Cookbook," the link leads to a broken web page. But, the story also links to a page about cannabis and cannabinoids on the website for the National Center Institute, which is part of the National Institutes of Health.

In an email, a spokesperson for the National Cancer Institute directed PolitiFact to the same web page about cannabis and cannabinoids. However, according to a statement from the institute, "this page is not a report or study." It’s a summary that has been on the institute’s website for about 13 years and that is maintained and updated "by an editorially independent board of private-sector and public-sector experts."

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The information in the summary reflects a review of biomedical literature, according to the statement; it doesn’t represent a policy statement from the institute or the National Institutes of Health.

The cannabis page was updated in August 2015, like the story says, and in August 2018.

But nowhere on the site does it say "marijuana kills cancer." Here’s some information it does include:

  • Cannabinoids activate specific receptors throughout the body to produce pharmacologic effects.
  • Some cannabinoids are approved drugs to treat cancer-related side effects, and they may have benefits in the treatment of cancer-related side effects.
  • One study using rodents suggested that cannabinoids may ward against the development of certain types of tumors. In another study, "cannabinoids appear to kill tumor cells." "Other studies have shown the antitumor effect of cannabinoids… in preclinical models of breast cancer."

However, "no ongoing clinical trials of cannabis as a treatment for cancer in humans were identified" in a search of studies, according a National Cancer Institute web page.

So while cannabis has been shown to kill cancer cells in labs, and it may benefit the side effects of cancer treatments, like chemotherapies, it’s not an FDA-approved cancer treatment, there isn’t enough evidence for doctors to recommend it as a treatment for cancer-related symptoms and the National Cancer Institute has not admitted that marijuana kills cancer.

We rate this statement False.

 

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No, the National Cancer Institute has not named marijuana a cancer cure

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