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Endocannabinoid System Clinical Research: Cannabis DKJ127 Trial

Clinical Takeaway

Clinical Takeaway This phase 3 trial demonstrated that VER-01, a full-spectrum cannabis extract, provided meaningful pain reduction in chronic low back pain patients over 12 weeks compared to placebo, with sustained benefits observed in extended treatment periods. The findings support cannabis-derived therapeutics as a potential alternative for patients with inadequate response to conventional pain management. Safety data from the extended treatment phases will inform real-world clinical decision-making regarding long-term tolerability and appropriate patient selection.

Endocannabinoid System Clinical Research: Cannabis DKJ127 Trial

#2 Full-spectrum extract from Cannabis sativa DKJ127 for chronic low back pain: a phase 3 randomized placebo-controlled trial.

Citation: Karst Matthias et al.. Full-spectrum extract from Cannabis sativa DKJ127 for chronic low back pain: a phase 3 randomized placebo-controlled trial.. Nature medicine. 2025. PMID: 41023483.

Study type: Journal Article, Randomized Controlled Trial, Clinical Trial, Phase III, Multicenter Study  |  Topic area: Pain  |  CED Score: 14

Design: 5 Journal: 4 N: 2 Recency: 2 Pop: 2 Human: 1 Risk: -2

Quality Gate Alerts:
  • Preclinical only

Methodological Considerations:

  • Open-label design โ€” placebo effect not excluded

Abstract: Chronic low back pain (CLBP) affects over half a billion people worldwide. Current pharmacologic treatments offer limited efficacy and carry substantial risks, warranting the development of safe and effective alternatives. This multicenter, randomized, placebo-controlled phase 3 trial evaluated the efficacy and safety of VER-01 in CLBP. It enrolled 820 adults with CLBP (VER-01, nโ€‰=โ€‰394; placebo, nโ€‰=โ€‰426) and included a double-blind 12-week treatment phase (phase A), a 6-month open-label extension (phase B), followed by either a 6-month continuation (phase C) or randomized withdrawal (phase D). The primary endpoint of phase A was a change in mean numeric rating scale (NRS) pain intensity, with a change in total neuropathic pain symptom inventory (NPSI) score as a key secondary endpoint in participants with a neuropathic pain component (PainDETECTโ€‰>โ€‰18). The primary endpoint for phase D was time to treatment failure. The study met its primary endpoint in phase A, with a mean pain reduction of -1.9 NRS points in the VER-01 group (mean difference (MD) versus placeboโ€‰=โ€‰-0.6, 95% confidence interval (CI)โ€‰=โ€‰-0.9 to -0.3; Pโ€‰<โ€‰0.001). Pain further decreased to -2.9 NRS points in phase B, with effects sustained through phase C. The study also met its key secondary endpoint of phase A, with a mean NPSI decrease of -14.4 (standard error, 3.3) points from baseline in the VER-01 arm (MD versus placeboโ€‰=โ€‰-7.3, 95% CIโ€‰=โ€‰-13.2 to -1.3; Pโ€‰=โ€‰0.017). Although phase D did not meet its primary endpoint (hazard ratioโ€‰=โ€‰0.75, 95% CIโ€‰=โ€‰0.44-1.27; Pโ€‰=โ€‰0.288), pain increased significantly more with placebo upon withdrawal (MDโ€‰=โ€‰0.5, 95% CIโ€‰=โ€‰0.0-1.0; Pโ€‰=โ€‰0.034). In phase A, the incidence of adverse events-mostly mild to moderate and transient-was higher with VER-01 than with placebo (83.3% versus 67.3%; Pโ€‰<โ€‰0.001). VER-01 was well-tolerated, with no signs of dependence or withdrawal. VER-01 shows potential as a new, safe and effective treatment for CLBP. ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT04

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