Marijuana and Immunity
By Leo E. Hollister, M.D.
Journal of Psychoactive Drugs,
April-June 1992, Vol. 24, pp. 159-163
Marijuana and Immunity
By Leo E. Hollister, M.D.
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Few areas of scientific research have been as controversial as the effect of
marijuana on immune defenses. The effects of marijuana on health in general have
been marked by polarities of belief or interpretation of evidence often due to
the
prejudices of investigators. In addition, evidence of altered immune
functions is
derived mainly from in vitro tests or ex vivo experiments, which
employed doses
of cannabinoids far in excess of those that prevail during social
use of marijuana.
Finally, the clinical significance of the experimental
observations is difficult to assess.
The present review will attempt to objectively assess the evidence. Other
recent reviews of the subject have also appeared, with varying degrees of
intensity of coverage (Hollister 1986; Maykut
1985; Munson & Fehr 1983; Rosenkrantz
1976). For purposes of a more systematic discussion, immunity will be
considered as several separate topics: (1) cell-mediated immunity, (2) humoral
mechanisms, (3) cellular defenses, and (4) immunogenicity of marijuana or
cannabinoids.
CELL-MEDIATED IMMUNITY
Lymphocyte Transformation
Lymphocytes exposed to several mitogens divide rapidly, increase protein and
nucleic acid synthesis, and show morphological changes resembling blasts. This
test of the ability of T-lymphocytes to transform themselves measures one
potential aspect of cell-mediated immunity. A direct way to measure the
activation of lymphocytes is to measure the rate of incorporation of nucleic
acid, such as 3H-thymidine, into the cells following addition of the mitogen to
the culture. All studies are conducted in vitro.
An early study (Nahas et al. 1976) measured
3H-thymidine uptake in normal human lymphocytes stimulated by both
phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and allogenic cell mixed lymphocyte culture (MLC). The
incorporation of 3H-thymidine was equally inhibited by 10-5M to 10-4M
concentrations of D9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), D8-tetrahydrocannabinol
(D8-THC), their corresponding 11-OH metabolites, a variety of other inactive
cannabinoids, and olivetol. THC in similar concentrations also depressed
3H-uridine uptake, indicating an effect of protein and RNA synthesis as well.
These concentrations were 10 to 20 times greater than those reported earlier by
the same group (Nahas et al. 1974) as having similar
effects. In this study, cell-mediated immunity was evaluated in 51 young,
chronic marijuana smokers whose lymphocytes were stimulated in vitro by PHA and
MLC. As compared with normal controls, 3H-thymidine uptake was reduced.
Klein and colleagues (1985) added the predominantly
T-cell mitogens, PHA and concanavalin A (Con A), and the B-cell mitogen, E. coli
lipopolysaccharide (LPS), to mice spleen cells treated with varying
concentrations of THC and its active metabolite 11-OH-THC. Both T-cell
lymphocyte and B-cell lymphocyte proliferation in response to mitogens were
suppressed by THC, but considerably less by 11-OH-THC. Proliferation of both
types of lymphocytes was completely inhibited by concentrations of THC (10ug/ml)
that were not directly lytic to the cells. Lower concentrations of THC were
found to inhibit B-cell lymphocytes than those required for T-lymphocytes,
suggesting that humoral immunity was more impaired than cell-mediated immunity
in this system.
By no means have all studies of cell-mediated immunity in marijuana smokers
or in vitro exposure of T-cells to cannabinoids-often conducted in exactly the
same way-shown evidence of immunosuppression. Indeed, the inconsistency of study
findings has led to the present state of ambiguity.
White, Brin and Janicki (1975) obtained peripheral blood
lymphocytes from 12 healthy long-term marijuana smokers. The blastogenic
response to PHA and pokeweed mitogen were measured in vitro by 3H-thymidine
uptake. The responses of lymphocytes from the marijuana smokers were not
significantly different from those who did not smoke the drug.
Lau and colleagues (1976) observed eight chronic smokers
of marijuana in a hospital setting over a 30-day period. Each subject received a
placebo during the first six days, followed by THC in oral doses up to 210
mg/day for the next 18 days, then a placebo for the last six days. The response
of their lymphocytes to PHA stimulation, as measured by 3H-thymidine uptake, was
no different in either of the three periods.
Rachelfsky and Opedz (1977) stimulated normal human
lymphocytes with PHA and with MLC, and 3H-thymidine uptake was measured. The
uptake of thymidine was unchanged in lymphocytes exposed to 1.9 x 10-4M or 12.0
x 10-4M concentrations of THC. Higher concentrations of THC precipitated in the
medium. Changes were comparable in cells exposed to THC and in those not so
exposed.
Kaklamani and colleagues (1978) obtained peripheral
lymphocytes from 12 chronic users of marijuana and 15 nonusing control subjects.
Lymphocytes from the experienced marijuana users were obtained before and after
smoking hashish. Incorporation of 14C-thymidine, after PHA stimulation and
formation of rosettes of sheep erythrocytes, was no different between the normal
controls and the marijuana users either before or after the latter had smoked
hashish.
Whatever immunosuppressive effects marijuana may have, they are not dependent
on psychoactive components. A variety of cannabinoids, which have no apparent
central nervous system activity, share an apparent immunosuppressive action (Smith
et al. 1978).
T-Lymphocyte Rosette Formation
Another commonly used measure of cell-mediated immunity is the ability of
T-lymphocytes to form in vitro rosettes of sheep erythrocytes surrounding T
cells. A dose-related decrease in rosette formation was found in sensitized T
cells exposed in vitro to various concentrations of THC in this medium (Cushman,
Khurana & Hashim 1976). Cushman and
Khurana (1977) tested 10 subjects during a four-week cycle of marijuana
smoking, so that the subjects were exposed chronically rather than acutely, and
the results showed a decrease in early T-cell formation, but no change in either
late T-cell or B-cell rosettes. When Gupta, Grieco and Cushman
(1974) compared 23 chronic marijuana smokers with 23 nonsmokers, T-cell
rosettes were decreased in the users as compared with nonusers, but associated
with B-lymphocytes were not different, suggesting a selective effect on
cell-mediated immunity.
Petersen, Graham and Lemberger (1976) tested three
subjects who smoked "street" marijuana for rosette formation and
blastogenesis. Two of three showed decreased rosette formation and impaired
blastogenesis following stimulation of their lymphocytes with PHA. In another
trial, rosette formation was measured in six persons three to six hours after
they smoked a marijuana cigarette containing 10mg of THC. Rosette formation was
impaired in five of the subjects, and became normal 24 hours later in all but
one subject. Thus, it appeared that the effects of marijuana on T-lymphocytes
are variable and reversible, suggesting that factors other than exposure to
marijuana itself may be involved.
Mice immunized with sheep erythrocytes were treated with intraperitoneal
doses of 10, 25, and 40mg/kg/day of THC for seven to eight days. Both
plaque-forming and rosette-forming cells were decreased by the 25mg/kg/day dose
(Lefkowitz et al. 1978). Monkeys were exposed to three
levels of marijuana smoke over a six-month period. Plasma immunoglobulins (IgG
and IgM) were decreased in those monkeys exposed to medium and high
concentrations of smoke. In vitro tests by Dual and Heath (1975)
of the response of lymphocytes to Con A were decreased. Thus, both humoral and
cell-mediated immunity appeared to be affected. However, the authors asserted
that it is impossible to assess the in vivo implications from tests of this
sort.
Cushman and Khurana (1977) tested 10
subjects during a four-week cycle of marijuana smoking, so that the subjects
were exposed chronically rather than acutely. the results showed a decrease in
early T-cell rosette formation, but no change in either late T-cell or B-cell
rosettes.
These studies also indicated that T-lymphocyte function, as measured by
rosette formation, was decreased when the cells are exposed to cannabinoids
either in vitro or ex vivo. However, these impairments were rapidly reversible.
Other Measurements of Cell-mediated Immunity
A number of other measurements of cell-mediated immunity have pointed in the
same direction. Although both impaired allograft rejection and decreased
hemagglutinin titers were found in animals treated with cannabinoids, the effect
on allograft rejection as a measure of cell-mediated immunity was greater (Munson
et al 1976). Susceptibility to infection with herpes simplex virus type 2
applied directly to the vagina was increased in mice that had received doses of
100mg/kg/day of THC (Mishkin & Cabral 1985). A
similar increased susceptibility was found in guinea pigs treated with doses of
4.0 and 10mg/kg/day (Cabral et al. 1986).
Morohan and colleagues assessed the LD50 dose of
Listeria monocytogenes in mice treated with THC in doses of 38, 75 and 150mg/kg.
The LD50 was decreased 10-, 17- and 657-fold by each dose, respectively. The
marijuana extract was less active. A similar challenge with herpes simplex type
2 virus showed a 96-fold decrease following administration of marijuana extract.
These situations are not at all comparable to human exposure.
The vast majority of people can be made sensitive to dinitrochlorobenzene (DNCB),
a powerful skin sensitizer. DNCB is often used with "recall" antigens
(eg. tuberculin and mumps) to test patients for anergy. Sensitivity to DNCB was
found in all 34 chronic marijuana smokers who were tested as compared with 96
percent of 279 healthy nonsmokers. On the other hand, 384 patients with cancer,
whose cell-mediated immunity is sometimes decreased, showed a positive reaction
in only 70 percent of those tested (Silverstein &
Lessin 1974). Such evidence raises questions about the clinical significance
of experiments that have shown evidence of cell-mediated immunity from
cannabinoids.
It has been hypothesized that the membrane-disordering effects of THC may
affect the binding of antigens to cellular receptors, accounting for a decrease
in cell-mediated immunity. On the other hand, the combination of increased
membrane disorder and inhibition of acyltransferase activity in B cells and T
cells could impair the transfer of cellular constituents (Baczynsky
& Zimmerman 1983b). Regardless of whether the action is a nonspecific
one at the cell membrane or at a more primary site, impaired immunity remains
precisely that. However, a cell membrane site of action could explain the
apparent transitory nature of the observed alterations in cell-mediated
immunity, as well as the requirement for much larger concentrations of
cannabinoids than those usually encountered during social use of marijuana.
Summary of Effects of Cell-mediated Immunity
In summary, the effects of cannabinoids on cell-mediated immunity are
contradictory. Such evidence as has been obtained to support such an effort has
usually involved doses and concentrations that are orders of magnitude greater
than those obtained when marijuana is used by human subjects. Clinically, one
might assume that sustained impairment of cell-mediated immunity might lead to
an increased prevalence of opportunistic infections, or an increased prevalence
of malignancy, as seen in the current epidemic of acquired immune deficiency
syndrome (AIDS). No such clinical evidence has been discovered or has any direct
epidemiological data incriminated marijuana use with the acquisition of human
immunodeficiency virus infection or the clinical development of AIDS. Even
though some degree of impairment of immune responses were to occur, the
remaining immune function may be adequate, especially in the young persons who
are major users of cannabis.
HUMORAL IMMUNITY
Transformation of B-Lymphocytes
Transformation of B cells stimulated by the mitogen PLPS was inhibited more
than were T cells stimulated by PHA following the same doses of THC in mice (Klein
et al. 1985). This evidence of diminished B-cell reactivity following the
administration of THC was confirmed in another study (Munson
et al. 1976) that showed a dose dependent suppression from doses of 50, 100,
and 200 mg/kg of THC in mice. These doses are enormous, of course.
Antibody Formation
A frequently used measure of humoral immunity is the ability of splenic
lymphocytes from mice that are immunized against sheep erythrocytes to form
plaques when exposed to in vitro to sheep erythrocytes. Levy and
Heppner (1981) found that both THC and haloperidol produced dose-dependent
reductions in hemolytic plaque-forming cell (PFC) numbers at the time of peak
reactivity (day 4) in control mice. Treatment with THC and haloperidol only
delayed the time of peak PFC formation by 24 to 48 hours (doses were high enough
to produce signs of gross behavioral toxicity). Neither THC nor other
cannabinoids had any effect on the titer of serum hemagglutinating antibody
measured seven days after immunization.
Baczynsky and Zimmerman (1983a) immunized mice
with sheep erythrocytes on Day 1 (primary immune response) and on Days 1 and 28
(secondary immune response) and measured hemagglutinin titers. Mice treated with
10 mg or 15 mg of THC during the primary immunization period exhibited a
suppression of the primary humoral immune response. These doses also suppressed
the secondary immune response, even when given during the period of primary
immunization. Mice treated with THC during the secondary immunization period
showed no measurable response. Other cannabinoids had no effect.
Immature mice immunized with sheep erythrocytes also showed suppression of
the immune response when treated with THC in doses of 1.0, 5.0, and 10.0 mg/kg.
Splenic weight was reduced and PFC as well as hemagglutinin titers were lower
than controls. The suppression was specific for THC and was not observed with
cannabidiol or cannabinol, even at doses of 25 mg/kg (Zimmerman
et al. 1977). Some evidence of tolerance or hyporesponsiveness to this
humoral antibody suppression by THC was found when mice were treated with THC
for five days prior to immunization as well as afterward (Loveless,
Harris & Munson 1981-82).
Rosenkrantz, Miller and Esber (1975) immunized rats with a
single intraperitoneal dose of sheep erythrocytes during, before and after
administration of THC in order to determine its effect on the inductive and
productive phases of the primary immune response. following a dose of 10 mg/kg,
THC decreased the primary immune response 33 to 40 percent; the inductive phase
was decreased by 48 to 78 percent by all doses of THC and the productive phase
was decreased by 26 to 59 percent by the higher doses.
The same group (Luthra et al. 1980) tested the primary
immune response of rats to intraperitoneal administration of sheep erythrocytes
after five to 26 days following pretreatment with THC in order to determine if
tolerance developed to the immunosuppressant effects. As measured by splenic
antibody-forming cells and hemagglutinin/hemolysin titers, no evidence of
tolerance was found.
Summary of Effects of Humoral Immunity
In summary, humoral immunity, as tested by a number of in vitro procedures,
seems also to be impaired by cannabinoids, but this effect was most evident for
THC. The clinical significance of such changes is questionable due to the great
concentrations of cannabinoids used and the lack of any epidemiological evidence
of increased bacterial infections in chronic users of marijuana.
CELLULAR DEFENSES
Leukocytes and Lymphocytes
When 10 subjects were followed through a four-week cycle of marijuana
smoking, no change was observed in either peripheral leukocyte or absolute
lymphocyte counts (Cushman & Khurana 1977).
Leukocytes from five chronic marijuana smokers were compared with those from
five nonusers of the drug for their ability to migrate after exposure to THC or
marijuana extract. Both treatments inhibited leukocyte migration without killing
the cells, both in cells from users and nonusers of marijuana. The prevailing
THC concentration needed to accomplish this was 2.0ug/ml, a couple of orders of
magnitude greater than any THC plasma concentrations usually found clinically (Schwartzfarb,
Needle & Chavez-Chase 1974).
Natural Killer-cell Activity
Natural killer-cell activity in rats was decreased by subchronic treatment
(25 days) with THC, but not after acute treatment (one day). this effect was not
found in rats treated simultaneously with naloxone, suggesting possible
involvement with the opiate system (Patel et al 1985). when
injected into mice, both THC and its active metabolite 11-OH-THC suppressed
splenic natural killer-cell activity in vitro. The tissue concentrations of the
cannabinoids were reported as being 5.0-10.0 ug/ml, about two orders of
magnitude greater than those that might be experienced during the social use of
marijuana (Klein, Newton & Friedman 1987).
Macrophages
Macrophages work closely with T-cells as part of the immunological defense
system. On glass surfaces, macrophage cultures normally show spreading, which is
an indication of their mobility. the addition of THC to the medium inhibited the
degree of spreading. It also inhibited the phagocytosis of yeast particles (Lopez-Cepero
et al 1986). However, another experiment (Munson et al.
1976) using intact mice that were treated with a single dose or multiple
doses of THC could not demonstrate impairment in reticuloendothelial activity,
as measured by the intravascular clearance of colloidal carbon.
Summary of Effects on Cellular Defenses
It is somewhat surprising that newer techniques of cell sorting, which permit
determination of absolute counts of T- and B-lymphocytes as well as subsets of
T-lymphocytes, have not been utilized. the evidence from the in vitro studies is
weakened by the high concentrations of drug that were used. Clinically, evidence
for impairment of cellular defenses has not been forthcoming.
IMMUNOGENICITY OF CANNABINOIDS
Laboratory Studies
It has been hypothesized that THC, a relatively simple chemical, can act as a
hapten and become an immunogen. If such were the case, tolerance to THC might be
explained on an immunological basis as well as the rare reports of allergic
reactions. Azathioprine, an immunosuppressant, had a modest effect in mitigating
the hypotensive effects of THC in spontaneously hypertensive rats. Spleen cells
from mice treated with THC showed slightly more blast transformation in culture
than untreated spleen cells, either with or without THC being added to the
culture medium. However, the degree of blast transformation was far less than
that produced by PHA. This somewhat weak evidence for an immunogenic action of
THC came from a laboratory that later stressed the immunosuppressant effects of
marijuana (Nahas, Zugary & Schwartz 1973).
Watson, Murphy & Turner (1983) employed a technique
used to test compounds for their potential for producing allergic contact
dermatitis and that also maximizes the degree of skin sensitization of guinea
pigs. Sensitivity was greatly increased by THC and cannabinol, but less so with
other cannabinoids.
Clinical Studies
In a clinical study conducted in the southwestern United States (Freeman
1983), skin tests were applied to 90 patients with various forms of atopy.
The test was positive for 63 patients for marijuana pollen as compared to only
18 who reacted to tobacco leaf. However, it is unlikely that marijuana pollen
contains many cannabinoids, but rather contains proteins that many be
sensitizing.
A series of 28 marijuana smokers showed precipitins for Aspergillus antigens:
13 were positive as compared to one of 10 controls. Lymphocytes showed
significant blastogenesis in three of those subjects who tested positive. Seven
of these 23 subjects reported bronchospasm following the smoking of marijuana,
and one patient had evidence of systemic aspergillosis (Kagen
et al. 1983). As it is well known that marijuana contains contaminants,
including molds and fungi, it is not surprising that these should cause allergic
reactions in some users. The study does not indicate that cannabinoids
themselves are immunogens.
Skin testing with cannabinoids seems to be useless for determining the rare
patient with sensitivity to marijuana. A variety of intradermal tests with
various cannabinoids and common allergens was applied to 63 marijuana users by Lewis
and Slavin (1975). Two users, who were clearly atopic with a past history of
bronchial asthma, also reported experiencing asthma after some exposures to
marijuana. A third subject with a history of allergic rhinitis also experienced
similar symptoms following marijuana use. All three of these subjects had
negative skin tests to cannabinoids. On the other hand, seven subjects who
tested positive for hemp and one who tested positive to D8-THC had no clinical
manifestation of marijuana sensitivity.
A 29-year-old woman (known to be allergic to ragweed) experienced symptoms of
ananaphylactoid reaction that lasted 20 to 30 minutes immediately after smoking
marijuana. Skin tests with THC showed a 2+ reaction, and with cannabidiol a 1+
reaction (Liskow, Liss & Parker 1971). The weakly
positive skin tests do not necessarily indicate that the reaction was due
specifically to cannabinoids.
Summary of Immunogenicity
While it is possible that a few persons may become truly allergic to
cannabinoids, it is far more likely that allergic reactions, which have been
exceedingly rare following the use of marijuana, are due to contaminants.
Marijuana is grown in the field and harvested along with everything else (eg.,
bacteria, fungi, molds, parasites, worms, chemicals) that may be found in such
field plants. That such impure material, when smoked and inhaled into the lungs,
causes so little trouble is really a marvel.
SUMMARY AND CONCLUSIONS
Despite the fairly large literature that developed during the past 15 years
or so, the effect of cannabinoids on the immune system is still unsettled. The
evidence has been contradictory and is more supportive of some degree of
immunosuppression only when one considers in vitro studies. These have been
seriously flawed by the very high concentrations of drug used to produce
immunosuppression and by the lack of comparisons with other membrane-active
drugs. The closer that experimental studies have been to actual clinical
situations, the less compelling has been the evidence.
Although the topic was of great interest during the 1970s, as indicated by
the preponderance of references from that period, interest has waned during the
present decade. This waning of interest suggests that perhaps most investigators
feel that this line of inquiry will not be rewarding. The AIDS epidemic has also
diverted the attention of the immunologists to the far more serious problem of
the truly devastating effects a retrovirus can have on a portion of the immune
system.
The relationship between the use of social drugs and the development of
clinical manifestations of AIDS has been of some interest, however. Persons
infected with the virus but not diagnosed as AIDS have been told to avoid the
use of marijuana and/or alcohol. This advice may be reasonable as a general
health measure, but direct evidence that heeding this warning will prevent the
ultimate damage to the immune system is totally lacking.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The author wishes to thank Matthew Edlund, M.D., who provided useful critical
comments during the preparation of this article.
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