By Dr. Benjamin Caplan, MD | Board-Certified Family Physician, CMO at CED Clinic | Evidence Watch
A 2017 US patent application describes a liposomal formulation designed to deliver cannabis extract through a vibrating mesh nebulizer without heat. While the concept addresses a genuine gap in cannabinoid delivery, the document contains no clinical, pharmacokinetic, or safety data. Every performance claim is extrapolated from device specifications or unrelated literature, not from testing of the actual cannabis formulations described.
A Patent Application Proposes Nebulizing Cannabis Extract Without Heat, But Offers No Clinical Evidence
This 2017 US patent application introduces a liposomal formulation concept for vibrating mesh nebulizer delivery of cannabis extract, asserting advantages including 80% pulmonary deposition and five-minute onset, but these figures are drawn entirely from generic aerosol science and device specifications rather than from any experimental measurement of the described cannabis formulations themselves.
#22
Low Clinical Relevance
This patent application contains no experimental or clinical data and cannot inform current clinical practice; its value is limited to identifying a plausible formulation concept for future research.
Inhalation Pharmacology
Patent Analysis
Nebulizer Technology
Patients using inhaled cannabis face an uncomfortable tradeoff: combustion delivers rapid onset but exposes the lungs to tars and carcinogens, while vaporization reduces harm but still relies on heat and offers inconsistent dosing. A heat-free, precisely metered inhalation system could fundamentally change the therapeutic profile of inhaled cannabis. This patent application is one of the earliest formal disclosures of a formulation strategy targeting that exact problem, making it important to understand what it actually demonstrates and where its claims outrun the available evidence.
| Document Type | US Patent Application (US 2017/0281701 A1) |
| Population | No human or animal subjects; oil-based substances including cannabis extracts |
| Intervention / Focus | Liposomal water-based formulations using surfactants, co-surfactants, emulsifiers, and electrolytes for VMN nebulization of cannabis extract |
| Comparator | Narrative comparison to smoking, vaporization, oral, oromucosal, rectal, and topical routes |
| Primary Outcomes | Formulation concept description; no measured endpoints |
| Sample Size | Four formulation variants described; no experimental dataset |
| Journal | United States Patent Application Publication |
| Year | 2017 (filed April 4, 2017; provisional April 5, 2016) |
| DOI / PMID | Not applicable (Patent Application No. 15/479,251) |
| Funding Source | Not disclosed; inventor is sole applicant and assignee |
Current cannabis inhalation methods present a persistent clinical dilemma. Smoking offers rapid onset but subjects the lungs to combustion byproducts. Vaporization reduces some of these harms but still applies heat, introduces propylene glycol or glycerol vehicles, and provides limited dose precision. Oral formulations like dronabinol suffer from slow onset and low bioavailability (10 to 20%) due to extensive first-pass hepatic metabolism. This 2017 US patent application proposes a different approach: formulating cannabis oil extract into a liposomal, water-based micro-emulsion using hydroxylated soy lecithin, surfactants, ethanol, and electrolytes, enabling the suspension to pass through the fine mesh of a vibrating mesh nebulizer and generate respirable aerosol particles without applying heat.
Four formulation variants are described, each combining cannabis extract with various combinations of lecithin, Acconon, sodium lauryl sulfate, gellan gum, and aqueous solvents, processed via sonication. The inventor claims the resulting aerosol particles would have a mass median aerodynamic diameter of approximately 2.1 micrometers, enabling roughly 80% pulmonary deposition with onset of effect within five minutes. However, these performance figures are derived from device specifications using saline surrogates and from general aerosol deposition models, not from any testing of the described cannabis formulations. The only formulation-specific empirical observation is an anecdotal note that one preparation appeared stable after seven months, reported without defined assay methodology, storage conditions, or degradation criteria. The inventor acknowledges no human or animal testing. Independent experimental validation of particle size distribution, pulmonary deposition, pharmacokinetics, excipient safety, and clinical efficacy remains entirely unperformed.
Cannabis by Vibrating Mesh Nebulizer: Promising Concept, Zero Clinical Evidence
Imagine inhaling a precisely metered dose of cannabis medicine with no smoke, no heat, no smell, absorbed within minutes, delivered by a device the size of a large pen. That vision is exactly what a 2017 US patent application describes. The problem is that vision and evidence are two very different things. As a physician who spends much of his clinical practice helping patients navigate cannabinoid therapies, I find the concept genuinely appealing. A clean, precise, rapid-onset inhalation system would address real and persistent frustrations I see daily. But reading this document with a scientist’s eye rather than a hopeful clinician’s, I have to separate what the patent actually contributes from what it merely asserts.
What the patent gets right is important and worth crediting before any criticism. The pharmacokinetic rationale is sound. Pulmonary delivery does bypass first-pass hepatic metabolism, which genuinely limits the bioavailability of oral cannabinoids. Aerosol particle size does determine deposition depth in the respiratory tract, and particles around 2 micrometers do reach the alveoli. Eliminating combustion does remove a meaningful source of tars, polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, and other respiratory irritants. The identification of a specific technical barrier, that cannabis oil is too viscous and hydrophobic to pass through vibrating mesh nebulizer apertures, is a legitimate formulation problem, and the proposed liposomal emulsification strategy is consistent with decades of work in inhaled drug delivery. These are real contributions at the concept level.
The central methodological problem, however, is the conflation of device performance with formulation performance. The 80% pulmonary deposition figure and the 2.1-micrometer particle size are drawn from the eMist nebulizer’s specifications when tested with saline, not from any measurement involving the cannabis extract formulations described in the patent. This is the critical distinction. Think of it this way: claiming that a car will travel 400 miles on a tank because the engine has a certain theoretical efficiency rating, without ever filling the tank with the intended fuel and driving it. Saline is a simple, low-viscosity aqueous solution. A liposomal cannabis oil emulsion containing lecithin, ethanol, surfactants, and plant-derived particulates is an entirely different substance. Its viscosity, surface tension, and particulate profile may alter droplet formation, mesh passage, and aerodynamic behavior in ways that saline testing simply cannot predict.
This matters for real-world interpretation because the numbers, if taken at face value, are clinically transformative. An inhalation system delivering 80% of active cannabinoid to the lungs with five-minute onset would outperform every existing delivery method. If those figures were actually measured from these formulations, we would be looking at a genuinely revolutionary technology. But they were not measured. They were borrowed. And the gap between an extrapolated performance claim and a demonstrated one is where patients get hurt, where dosing miscalculations occur, and where premature enthusiasm replaces the careful validation that protects people. The same logical concern applies to the document’s lone stability claim: one preparation “appeared stable” after seven months, a note offered in a figure caption with no description of storage temperature, assay method, or what “stable” meant. This is equivalent to saying a new vaccine is stable because one vial in the back of someone’s refrigerator still looked clear after seven months, without measuring whether the active ingredient remained potent.
Alternative explanations the patent does not address compound the uncertainty. Sodium lauryl sulfate, included as a surfactant, is a known mucosal irritant. Its safety profile when delivered as a chronically inhaled aerosol directly to alveolar tissue is essentially unstudied. Sonication, used to form the liposomal emulsion, may degrade heat-sensitive terpenes or minor cannabinoids whose preservation is precisely one of the claimed advantages of avoiding heat. Whether liposomal encapsulation alters the release kinetics or pharmacodynamic profile of cannabinoids at the alveolar surface is simply unknown. In the broader evidence landscape, no peer-reviewed study of VMN-delivered cannabis extract appears to exist. The closest validated comparator remains nabiximols (Sativex), an oromucosal spray with robust clinical trial data, and vaporization studies like those of Abrams and colleagues, which at least measured plasma THC levels in real people.
If a patient asked me about this technology, I would tell them it represents an interesting idea for a future cannabis inhaler, but it has never been tested in people, and we have no evidence about its safety, its actual dose delivery, or its reliability. I would discourage any attempt to replicate it at home. To a colleague, I would say the liposomal VMN concept is pharmacologically coherent and merits investment in proper cascade impactor testing, pulmonary toxicology work, and a Phase 1 pharmacokinetic study. To a policymaker, I would say this patent reflects early-stage innovation that should not inform formulary decisions or regulatory standards until validated clinical data exist. A technically coherent invention concept and a clinically validated therapy are separated by a chasm of experimental work. In medicine, plausibility is the beginning of scientific inquiry, not its conclusion.
This patent application sits at the very earliest stage of the research arc for VMN-based cannabis delivery. It is a concept disclosure, positioned below even preclinical studies in the evidence hierarchy. No peer-reviewed publication has evaluated vibrating mesh nebulizer delivery of cannabis extract formulations, meaning there is no validating or contradicting evidence base against which to measure these claims. The concept addresses an authentic gap in cannabinoid therapeutics: the absence of a heat-free, precisely dosed, rapid-onset pulmonary delivery system with pharmaceutical-grade consistency.
From a safety standpoint, clinicians should note that the formulations include sodium lauryl sulfate and ethanol, both of which carry potential pulmonary toxicity concerns when delivered as inhaled aerosol to alveolar tissue over repeated exposures. The pulmonary safety profile of these excipients in this context is unstudied. Liposomal encapsulation may also alter cannabinoid release kinetics in ways that affect therapeutic response unpredictably. Until in vitro aerosol characterization, formal pulmonary toxicology, and at minimum a Phase 1 pharmacokinetic trial have been completed, clinicians should not reference this patent as evidence supporting nebulized cannabis delivery and should counsel patients that no validated product based on this approach currently exists.
This is a US patent application, a legal intellectual property instrument, not a peer-reviewed scientific publication. It occupies a position below the lowest tier of the clinical evidence hierarchy, as it contains no experimental data, no controlled observations, and no independent validation. Patent applications undergo examination for novelty and non-obviousness by the USPTO, not for scientific accuracy or clinical validity. The single most important inference constraint is that no performance, safety, or efficacy claim in this document should be treated as a scientific finding.
The patent’s pharmacokinetic rationale is consistent with established cannabinoid pharmacology as reviewed by Huestis (2007) and Grotenhermen (2003), and the advantages of vaporization over combustion are supported by Abrams and colleagues (2007) and Hazekamp and colleagues (2006). Liposomal aerosol formulations for inhaled drug delivery have precedent in oncology (US Patents 7,341,739 and 6,346,233). However, the specific application of liposomal emulsification to cannabis extract for VMN delivery appears to be novel and lacks any published experimental confirmation. The patent extends existing principles into an untested domain, making it a hypothesis-generating contribution rather than a confirmatory one.
The most consequential analytic choice in this document is the reliance on device-level aerosol performance data (particle size, deposition efficiency) obtained with saline surrogates, applied directly to the cannabis formulations without verification. Had the inventor conducted cascade impactor testing with the actual liposomal cannabis preparations, the particle size distribution and deposition predictions could differ materially, because the viscosity, surface tension, and particulate content of the cannabis emulsion are substantially different from saline. Similarly, formal ICH-guideline stability testing with defined assay endpoints could reveal formulation instability that the anecdotal seven-month observation would miss. A Phase 1 pharmacokinetic comparison to vaporized or smoked cannabis would either validate or invalidate the claimed bioavailability advantages. Any of these steps could materially alter the document’s conclusions.
The most likely overinterpretation is treating the approximately 80% pulmonary deposition figure and the five-minute onset time as measured properties of the cannabis formulations described in the patent. They are not. These figures come from generic aerosol particle-size deposition models and from device specifications tested with saline, not from any experiment involving the inventor’s cannabis preparations. A related misreading involves equating the existence of a patent application with scientific validation. Patent examination evaluates novelty and utility in a legal framework, not scientific correctness, and the filing of an application does not mean the invention works as described. Readers should also avoid assuming that excipients included in the formulations, such as sodium lauryl sulfate, are safe for chronic pulmonary administration simply because they appear in other pharmaceutical or food-grade contexts.
This patent application contributes a technically plausible formulation concept for delivering cannabis extract via vibrating mesh nebulizer, grounded in legitimate aerosol and liposomal drug delivery science. It does not establish safety, efficacy, pharmacokinetics, actual particle size, or pulmonary deposition for any of its described formulations. It contains no experimental data. For current clinical practice, it is not actionable. Its value lies in identifying a promising research direction that requires rigorous independent experimental validation before it can inform patient care.
Does this patent mean there is a cannabis nebulizer available for patients?
No. This is a patent application describing a formulation concept. No product based on this technology has been tested in humans, approved by any regulatory authority, or made commercially available. The document outlines an idea, not a finished product.
Is inhaling cannabis through a nebulizer safer than smoking or vaping?
In theory, eliminating combustion and heat could reduce exposure to harmful byproducts. However, the specific formulations described in this patent include excipients like sodium lauryl sulfate whose safety when inhaled directly into the lungs has not been studied. Without safety testing, we cannot say this approach is safer than existing methods.
Can I build or try this at home using a nebulizer I already have?
This is strongly discouraged. The formulations have not been tested for safety or efficacy. Nebulizing untested substances into the lungs carries serious risks including respiratory irritation, chemical injury, or infection. Always consult a physician before using any inhalation device for purposes outside its approved indications.
What would need to happen before this technology could be used in clinical practice?
At minimum, researchers would need to conduct in vitro aerosol characterization of the actual formulations, pulmonary toxicology studies on the excipient combination, Phase 1 pharmacokinetic studies in human volunteers, formal stability testing, and comparative bioavailability trials against existing inhalation methods. This is years of work before any clinical application could responsibly be considered.
References
- Huestis MA. Human cannabinoid pharmacokinetics. Chem Biodivers. 2007;4:770-1804.
- Grotenhermen F. Pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of cannabinoids. Clin Pharmacokinet. 2003;42:327-360.
- Abrams DI, Vizoso HP, Shade SB, Jay C, et al. Vaporization as a smokeless cannabis delivery system: a pilot study. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 2007;82:572-578.
- Hazekamp A, Ruhaak R, Zuurman L, van Gerven J, et al. Evaluation of a vaporizing device (Volcano) for the pulmonary administration of tetrahydrocannabinol. J Pharm Sci. 2006;95:1308-

