California warns of pot’s cancer risk

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Gabriel Cruz, 20, exhales smoke April 20 on Hippie Hill in Golden Gate Park in San Francisco. (AP file photo)
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SAN FRANCISCO – It might take Californians a puff or two to get their heads around an apparent contradiction recently enshrined in state law.

The marijuana smoke that doctors can recommend to ease cancer patients’ suffering soon must come with a warning saying it causes the disease.

State environmental regulators last month voted to place marijuana smoke on its list of hundreds of substances known to cause cancer.

The decision could lead to warning signs in medical marijuana dispensaries and labels on packaged pot.

A voter-approved measure made medical marijuana legal in California in 1996.

Medical marijuana advocates argued that researchers long have known that the smoke contains cancer-causing compounds.

“This does not mean in any way that those carcinogens that appear in smoked marijuana, smoked cannabis, have any kind of causal relationship to cancer,” said Kris Hermes, spokesman for Americans for Safe Access, a pro-medical marijuana group.

Regulators disagree. Scientists with the state’s Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment reviewed 27 studies of the links between marijuana and cancer in humans.

Although not all the studies showed a link, regulators found that “marijuana smoke was clearly shown, through scientifically valid testing according to generally accepted principles, to cause cancer,” according to an agency statement.

Dr. Thomas Mack, a University of Southern California epidemiologist and chairman of the committee, said the decision to list marijuana smoke as a cancer-causing substance should not surprise anyone.

“If you take a piece of vegetable material, a leaf, and burn it, you’re going to get the type of compounds that cause cancer,” Mack said.

Marijuana smoke and tobacco smoke share 33 of the same cancer-causing compounds, according to agency scientists.

Even so, the existing evidence is merely “suggestive” of a link between marijuana and cancer in humans, Mack said. Only in tests that subjected animals to ultrahigh doses of marijuana was the connection between the drug and cancer totally clear, he said.

To counter the conclusion that smoking marijuana carries major health risks, advocates were quick to jump on the flaws in studies reviewed by the committee.

For instance, regulators reviewed three studies that found connections between marijuana and lung cancer. Of those, two were conducted in North Africa, where smokers regularly mix marijuana with tobacco, a problem the committee acknowledged.

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