CBD and Liver Enzymes: FDA-Funded RCT Findings Explained

CBD and Liver Enzymes: FDA-Funded RCT Findings Explained



By Dr. Benjamin Caplan, MD  |  Board-Certified Family Physician, CMO at CED Clinic  |  Evidence Watch

Clinical Insight | CED Clinic

An FDA-funded randomized trial found that roughly 1 in 18 healthy adults taking CBD at consumer-range doses developed clinically significant liver enzyme elevations, though all changes reversed within two weeks of stopping. The findings represent a genuine safety signal that warrants clinical attention, but not alarm, and must be interpreted in the context of the specific dose, formulation, and short study duration.

FDA-Funded Trial Finds CBD Elevated Liver Enzymes in Some Healthy Adults

A new randomized clinical trial published in JAMA Internal Medicine reports that consumer-range doses of pharmaceutical-grade CBD caused reversible liver enzyme elevations in a small but clinically notable proportion of healthy adults, with no serious adverse events and no detectable endocrine disruption over four weeks of use.

CED Clinical Relevance
#72
High Relevance
An FDA-funded controlled trial documenting hepatotoxicity at consumer-range CBD doses is directly relevant to clinical counseling and regulatory conversations, though this article is a secondary summary requiring primary source verification.
CBD Safety
Hepatotoxicity
Consumer Cannabis Products
Randomized Clinical Trial
Why This Matters

CBD is one of the most widely consumed unregulated supplements in the United States, frequently marketed as safe and natural with little emphasis on potential organ-level risk. This FDA-funded randomized trial represents the first rigorous controlled evidence that consumer-range doses of pure CBD can induce clinically significant liver enzyme elevations in otherwise healthy adults. For clinicians who field daily questions about CBD use, and for regulators weighing labeling and dose guidance decisions, this safety signal from a well-designed trial marks a turning point in how the risk conversation about CBD should be framed.

Study at a Glance
Study Type Trade journal news summary of a randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial
Population Healthy adults ages 18 to 55 (n=201)
Intervention / Focus Oral CBD solution (Epidiolex) at 2.5 mg/kg twice daily for four weeks
Comparator Placebo (n=50)
Primary Outcomes Liver enzyme levels (ALT, AST), endocrine hormone levels (testosterone, inhibin B, thyroid hormones)
Sample Size 201 participants (151 CBD, 50 placebo)
Journal Cannabis Science and Technology (summarizing JAMA Internal Medicine)
Year 2025
DOI / PMID Original RCT: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2025.2366
Funding Source US Food and Drug Administration (as reported)
Clinical Summary

CBD has become one of the most widely used consumer supplements in North America, yet rigorous safety data at doses consumers actually take have been scarce. Most prior hepatotoxicity signals emerged from high-dose therapeutic trials in epilepsy, often involving co-administration of valproate or other hepatotoxic medications. The Florian et al. randomized clinical trial, funded by the FDA and published in JAMA Internal Medicine, was designed specifically to test whether consumer-range dosing of pharmaceutical-grade CBD (Epidiolex at 2.5 mg/kg twice daily) would produce liver enzyme changes or endocrine disruption in healthy adults without comorbidities or concomitant medications.

The key hepatic finding, as reported in this trade journal summary, was that 8 of 151 CBD recipients (5.6%) experienced liver enzyme elevations exceeding three times the upper limit of normal, compared to 0 of 50 placebo recipients. Seven participants met criteria for possible drug-induced liver injury and were withdrawn from the study. All enzyme elevations resolved within one to two weeks of stopping CBD, and no serious adverse events were reported. Notably, no significant changes in testosterone, inhibin B, thyrotropin, triiodothyronine, or free thyroxine were observed. The researchers emphasized that further investigation is needed for long-term effects, lower consumer doses, and more diverse populations. This article provides no independent data and should be read alongside the primary publication.

Dr. Caplan’s Analysis
A physician’s reading of the evidence

Reversible but Real: Consumer-Range CBD Doses Trigger Liver Enzyme Elevations in Healthy Adults

Nearly one in eighteen healthy adults developed clinically significant liver enzyme elevations after four weeks of taking CBD at doses within the consumer range. Not patients on high-dose epilepsy therapy, but healthy volunteers using doses you might buy at a pharmacy counter. That is the headline finding from the Florian et al. trial, and it is worth sitting with before reacting. What this paper actually tested was whether pharmaceutical-grade CBD, administered in a controlled setting at a specific weight-based dose, would stress the liver or alter endocrine hormones in people with no reason to be vulnerable. What it genuinely contributes is a clean, controlled demonstration that CBD itself, not contaminants or co-medications, can cause measurable hepatic injury at consumer-relevant doses. That is new and that is important. Previous hepatotoxicity signals were tangled up with valproate coadministration, high therapeutic doses, or unregulated product variability. This trial cuts through that noise. But the critical methodological issue is one of ecological validity. Testing pharmaceutical-grade CBD is like testing the safety of drinking water by using laboratory-purified water at volumes people might actually drink. It isolates the compound beautifully, but it does not tell us what happens when people take consumer products that may contain pesticides, heavy metals, or other cannabinoids with their own hepatic footprints. The 5.6% rate is specific to Epidiolex at 5 mg/kg per day, not to the gummy you bought at a gas station.

What troubles me more is what we still do not know. The four-week duration is far too short to tell us anything about cumulative risk. Finding that a bruise heals in two weeks does not tell you whether repeated hits in the same spot over years causes lasting damage. The eosinophilia signal mentioned in the researchers’ conclusion is tantalizing and underexplored; if there is an immune-mediated mechanism driving these elevations, that would change our entire risk prediction framework. We also have no dose-response data from this trial: most consumers take doses well below 5 mg/kg per day, and the hepatic signal at 25 or 50 milligrams daily remains a complete unknown. The restriction to adults aged 18 to 55 means we are extrapolating to the fastest-growing demographic of CBD consumers, older adults, without any data. To a patient, I would say this study suggests that using CBD at higher doses can stress your liver, but the changes appear to reverse quickly when you stop. It is worth telling your doctor if you are using CBD so liver function can be monitored when appropriate. To a colleague, I would note that the 5.6% transaminase elevation rate in healthy adults without comedications is higher than most of us would have guessed, and the eosinophilia co-signal deserves serious mechanistic follow-up.

To a policymaker, this trial provides the strongest controlled evidence to date that consumer-range CBD doses can cause reversible hepatotoxicity, supporting a case for dose ceiling guidance on consumer labels and investment in longer-duration studies. But the most important lesson here is one of proportion. A finding that is statistically notable in a four-week controlled trial of healthy adults is the beginning of a safety conversation, not the end of one. Context, dose, duration, and population always determine whether a signal becomes a clinical mandate.

Clinical Perspective

This trial sits at an inflection point in the CBD safety literature. For years, clinicians have had to rely on adverse event reports from high-dose epilepsy trials, case reports, and preclinical models to counsel patients about hepatic risk. The Florian et al. RCT is the first well-controlled study to demonstrate liver enzyme elevations at consumer-range doses in a healthy population, and its FDA funding lends institutional weight to the findings. It does not, however, establish a dose-response curve, define the mechanism, or characterize risk in older adults or patients with hepatic comorbidities. It opens a chapter rather than closing one.

From a pharmacological standpoint, CBD is a known inhibitor of several cytochrome P450 enzymes, which raises concerns about drug interactions in patients taking other hepatically metabolized medications. The eosinophilia signal observed alongside transaminase elevations hints at a possible immune-mediated component, which would have distinct implications for predicting who is at risk. Clinicians should consider asking patients about CBD use during medication reconciliation, particularly those on hepatotoxic agents or those with baseline liver enzyme abnormalities. For patients using CBD regularly at doses above 50 milligrams daily, periodic liver function testing is a reasonable and low-burden precautionary step while longer-term data accumulate.

What Kind of Evidence Is This?

This article is a trade journal news summary published in Cannabis Science and Technology, not the original research. The underlying study is a randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trial, which occupies a high position in the evidence hierarchy. However, readers must recognize that all findings reported here are filtered through a secondary journalistic lens that omits statistical details, confidence intervals, and full methodological description. The single most important inference constraint is that no clinical or policy conclusions should be drawn from this summary without consulting the primary Florian et al. publication in JAMA Internal Medicine.

How This Fits With the Broader Literature

Prior evidence of CBD hepatotoxicity has come primarily from high-dose therapeutic trials in drug-resistant epilepsy, where patients receiving Epidiolex at 10 to 20 mg/kg per day alongside valproate showed elevated liver enzymes at rates as high as 15 to 20 percent. The Florian et al. trial extends this concern to a much lower dose range and a healthier population, effectively closing the gap between the epilepsy treatment literature and the consumer wellness market. The FDA’s 2019 safety update on CBD products flagged hepatic risk as an area of concern, and this trial provides the first controlled data to substantiate that concern at consumer-relevant doses. A 2023 systematic review of CBD adverse events similarly identified liver enzyme elevation as the most consistently reported laboratory abnormality, though most included studies used higher doses and clinical populations.

Could Different Analyses Have Changed the Result?

The most consequential analytic choice, as far as can be assessed from this summary, involves the three-times-the-upper-limit-of-normal threshold for defining clinically significant liver enzyme elevation. Had a more conservative threshold (five times ULN, commonly used in drug safety assessments) been applied, the reported rate would likely have been lower and possibly more comparable to background noise. Conversely, if the analysis had included participants with any transaminase elevation above normal rather than only those exceeding three times ULN, the signal might have appeared broader and more graded. The asymmetric 3:1 randomization ratio means the placebo estimate (0 of 50) is less precise than it might appear, and a single placebo-side event would have substantially changed the narrative. These analytic nuances cannot be fully evaluated without the primary publication’s statistical tables.

Common Misreadings

The most likely overinterpretation is concluding that CBD causes liver damage in roughly 6 percent of all people who take it. That figure applies specifically to healthy adults taking 5 mg/kg per day of pharmaceutical-grade Epidiolex for four weeks. Most consumers use far lower doses, and consumer products differ substantially in purity, formulation, and bioavailability. The 94.4 percent of CBD recipients who did not develop significant elevations, combined with full reversibility of all observed changes, argues against framing this as a widespread hepatotoxicity crisis. Equally, dismissing the finding because effects were reversible would be premature; short-term reversibility in a four-week trial says nothing about what happens with months or years of repeated use.

Bottom Line

This trade journal summary accurately conveys a clinically meaningful finding from an FDA-funded randomized trial: consumer-range CBD doses can cause reversible liver enzyme elevations in a small but non-trivial proportion of healthy adults. It does not establish a population-level risk estimate for typical CBD consumers, identify a mechanism, or characterize long-term outcomes. For clinical practice now, the most reasonable response is increased vigilance, routine inquiry about CBD use, and periodic liver function monitoring for patients using higher doses, while awaiting longer-duration and dose-response studies.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does this study mean CBD is dangerous for my liver?

Not necessarily. The study found that about 1 in 18 healthy adults developed elevated liver enzymes at a specific dose of pharmaceutical-grade CBD, and all changes reversed within two weeks of stopping. This suggests CBD can stress the liver in some people under certain conditions, but it does not mean everyone who uses CBD is at risk. If you use CBD regularly, it is worth discussing with your doctor and considering occasional liver function testing.

Is the dose in the study the same as what I buy at the store?

The dose tested was 2.5 mg/kg twice daily, which works out to roughly 350 mg per day for a 150-pound adult. Many consumer CBD products are used at considerably lower doses, such as 25 to 100 mg per day. Whether lower doses carry any hepatic risk remains unknown, and consumer products differ from the pharmaceutical-grade Epidiolex used in this trial in terms of purity and formulation.

Should I stop taking CBD based on this study?

This study does not provide a reason for all CBD users to stop immediately. It does provide a reason to be more thoughtful about dosing, to tell your healthcare provider about your CBD use, and to consider liver function monitoring if you are using higher doses or have pre-existing liver concerns. As always, medical decisions should be individualized with your physician.

Did the study find that CBD affects hormones?

No. The trial measured testosterone, inhibin B, and several thyroid hormones and found no significant changes in either the CBD or placebo groups over four weeks. However, four weeks is a relatively short window for detecting subtle endocrine effects, so this question is not fully settled by this study alone.

References

  1. Florian J, Salcedo P, Burkhart K, Shah A, Cheka LMS, Keshishi D, et al. Cannabidiol and Liver Enzyme Level Elevations in Healthy Adults: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA Internal Medicine. 2025. DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2025.2366.
  2. McEvoy E. Clinical Trial Tests Effects of CBD on Liver Enzyme Levels. Cannabis Science and Technology. 2025.






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