Abstract
Background: Patients with cancer employ medicinal cannabis for poly-symptom management and as cancer-directed therapy. Little is known about their perspectives on the medicinal cannabis “high.”
Methods: Qualitative interviews across eight states with medicinal cannabis users with physician-verified cancer diagnoses (n = 24).
Results: Every participant referenced and 15 spoke in depth about the medicinal cannabis “high.” Antitheticals characterized it: sleepiness versus heightened attention; calm versus “agitation.” The intensity of the “high” served as a proxy metric by which participant’s judged medicinal cannabis’ cancer-directed therapy and symptom management efficacies. Overall, however, study participants viewed the “high” as a barrier to medicinal cannabis use and worked to avoid experiencing for prolonged periods.
Conclusions: The “high” is central to the manner with which patients with cancer experience medicinal cannabis. Clinicians should be aware that patients may struggle to fine-tune medicinal cannabis dosing in the setting of the “high,” and this challenge should be included in clinical discussions regarding oncological medicinal cannabis use.
Keywords: cancer, cannabis, complementary and alternative medicine, marijuana, oncology, symptom management