`Endocannabinoid System: Phase 3 Cannabis Trial for Back Pain`

Clinical Takeaway

In this phase 3 randomized controlled trial, 820 adults with chronic low back pain received either VER-01, a full-spectrum cannabis extract, or placebo over 12 weeks, with extensions up to approximately one year. The trial was designed to generate high-quality evidence on both efficacy and safety in a condition where existing medications frequently fall short. Results from this large, well-structured study will help clarify whether full-spectrum cannabis preparations represent a viable clinical option for patients with chronic low back pain who have not responded adequately to conventional treatments.

#1 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

Why This Matters
This phase 3 trial addresses a critical clinical gap by evaluating a full-spectrum cannabis extract as a potential alternative to opioids and NSAIDs for chronic low back pain, a condition affecting over 500 million people globally with inadequate current treatment options. The rigorous double-blind, placebo-controlled design with 820 participants provides robust evidence needed to establish whether cannabis-derived therapeutics can offer efficacy and safety advantages over existing pharmacologic approaches for CLBP management.

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

Clinical Perspective

๐Ÿ’Š This phase 3 trial demonstrates that full-spectrum cannabis extract VER-01 shows meaningful efficacy for chronic low back pain in a reasonably sized population, addressing a genuine clinical need given the limitations of conventional analgesics. However, practitioners should note several important caveats: the study population likely represents a selected group willing to enroll in cannabis research, the 12-week primary phase may not capture longer-term efficacy or tolerance patterns (particularly given the 6-month open-label extension), and full-spectrum extracts contain variable cannabinoid and terpene profiles that complicate standardization and reproducibility across different products. The safety profile and comparison to standard-of-care interventions like physical therapy or multimodal approaches remain key questions for clinical decision-making. For appropriate patients with CLBP who have failed or cannot tolerate conventional treatments, this evidence provides support for considering standardized full-spectrum cannabis extracts as part of an integrated pain management plan, though clinicians should counsel patients on the still-evol

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