New study finds CBD slows growth of brain cancer cells in petri dish

Cannabidiol (CBD) has earned a reputation as something of a cure-all, supposedly capable of treating everything from anxiety to acne.

While many of those claims are anecdotal — or made by companies hoping to sell consumers on CBD-infused everything — a recently published study suggests that the compound might deserve legitimate consideration as part of new cancer treatment. But it’s a long road from Petri dishes to cancer therapy, and CBD has barely started.

Need for new cancer treatment: Glioblastoma is an aggressive type of cancer that forms in either the brain or spinal cord. Approximately 75% of people diagnosed with it die within a year, and fewer than 7% live longer than five years. Those survival rates haven’t improved significantly in recent years, which makes the need for new cancer treatment for glioblastoma patients an urgent matter, according to Chase Gross, one of the Colorado State University researchers behind the CBD study. In collaboration with researchers from the University of California Davis, the CSU team decided to see what effect CBD might have on glioblastoma.

To that end, they introduced both pure CBD and CBD extract, which contains trace amounts of other cannabis compounds, to human and canine glioblastoma cell cultures. They found that both the pure CBD and the extract was toxic to the cancer cells, disrupting their ability to function and slowing their growth. But don’t expect CBD-infused gummy bears to cure any cancer in the real world.

The in vitro result doesn’t mean much, on its own, because lots of things kill cancer cells — and healthy cells — in a Petri dish. Research would still need to show that the concentrations of CBD that kill cancer cells are safe for healthy cells and that they could even be delivered to a brain tumor — something that ingested CBD definitely could not do on its own.

The researchers don’t expect CBD alone to serve as a new cancer treatment as the concentrations of the compound needed to produce the desired effects “may not be pharmacologically attainable.” Still, CBD has already proven that its medical benefits aren’t all hype — see: the FDA-approved epilepsy drug Epidiolex — and now, it seems the compound could play an important role in cancer treatment, too.

Cannabidiol (CBD) has earned a reputation as something of a cure-all, supposedly capable of treating everything from anxiety to acne. While many of those claims are anecdotal — or made by companies hoping to sell consumers on CBD-infused everything — a recently published study suggests that the compound might deserve legitimate consideration as part of new cancer treatment.