The post Non-Opioid Painkillers Have Struggled–Cannabis Drugs Might Be The Solution appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In this week’s edition of InnovationRx, we look at possible pain treatments from cannabis, risks of new vaccine restrictions, virtual clinical trials at the Mayo Clinic, GSK’s $30 billion U.S. manufacturing commitment, and more. To get it in your inbox, subscribe here. Despite their addictive nature, opioids continue to be a major treatment for pain due to a lack of effective alternatives. In an effort to boost new drugs, the FDA released new guidelines for non-opioid painkillers last week. But making these drugs hasn’t been easy. Vertex Pharmaceuticals received FDA approval for its non-opioid Journavx in January, then abandoned a next generation drug after a failed clinical trial earlier this summer. Acadia similarly abandoned a promising candidate after a failed trial in 2022. One possible basis for non-opioids might be cannabis. Earlier this year, researchers at Washington University at St. Louis and Stanford published a study showing that a cannabis-derived compound successfully eased pain in mice with minimal side effects. Munich-based pharmaceutical company Vertanical is perhaps the furthest along in this quest. It is developing a cannabinoid-based extract to treat chronic pain it hopes will soon become an approved medicine, first in the European Union and eventually in the United States. The drug, currently called Ver-01, packs enough low levels of cannabinoids (including THC) to relieve pain, but not so much that patients get high. Founder Clemens Fischer, a 50-year-old medical doctor and serial pharmaceutical and supplement entrepreneur, hopes it will become the first cannabis-based painkiller prescribed by physicians and covered by insurance. Fischer founded Vertanical, with his business partner Madlena Hohlefelder, in 2017, and has invested more than $250 million of his own money in it. With a cannabis cultivation site and drug manufacturing plant in Denmark, Vertanical has successfully passed phase III clinical trials in Germany and expects… The post Non-Opioid Painkillers Have Struggled–Cannabis Drugs Might Be The Solution appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. In this week’s edition of InnovationRx, we look at possible pain treatments from cannabis, risks of new vaccine restrictions, virtual clinical trials at the Mayo Clinic, GSK’s $30 billion U.S. manufacturing commitment, and more. To get it in your inbox, subscribe here. Despite their addictive nature, opioids continue to be a major treatment for pain due to a lack of effective alternatives. In an effort to boost new drugs, the FDA released new guidelines for non-opioid painkillers last week. But making these drugs hasn’t been easy. Vertex Pharmaceuticals received FDA approval for its non-opioid Journavx in January, then abandoned a next generation drug after a failed clinical trial earlier this summer. Acadia similarly abandoned a promising candidate after a failed trial in 2022. One possible basis for non-opioids might be cannabis. Earlier this year, researchers at Washington University at St. Louis and Stanford published a study showing that a cannabis-derived compound successfully eased pain in mice with minimal side effects. Munich-based pharmaceutical company Vertanical is perhaps the furthest along in this quest. It is developing a cannabinoid-based extract to treat chronic pain it hopes will soon become an approved medicine, first in the European Union and eventually in the United States. The drug, currently called Ver-01, packs enough low levels of cannabinoids (including THC) to relieve pain, but not so much that patients get high. Founder Clemens Fischer, a 50-year-old medical doctor and serial pharmaceutical and supplement entrepreneur, hopes it will become the first cannabis-based painkiller prescribed by physicians and covered by insurance. Fischer founded Vertanical, with his business partner Madlena Hohlefelder, in 2017, and has invested more than $250 million of his own money in it. With a cannabis cultivation site and drug manufacturing plant in Denmark, Vertanical has successfully passed phase III clinical trials in Germany and expects…

Non-Opioid Painkillers Have Struggled–Cannabis Drugs Might Be The Solution

2025/09/18 05:26

In this week’s edition of InnovationRx, we look at possible pain treatments from cannabis, risks of new vaccine restrictions, virtual clinical trials at the Mayo Clinic, GSK’s $30 billion U.S. manufacturing commitment, and more. To get it in your inbox, subscribe here.

Despite their addictive nature, opioids continue to be a major treatment for pain due to a lack of effective alternatives. In an effort to boost new drugs, the FDA released new guidelines for non-opioid painkillers last week. But making these drugs hasn’t been easy. Vertex Pharmaceuticals received FDA approval for its non-opioid Journavx in January, then abandoned a next generation drug after a failed clinical trial earlier this summer. Acadia similarly abandoned a promising candidate after a failed trial in 2022.

One possible basis for non-opioids might be cannabis. Earlier this year, researchers at Washington University at St. Louis and Stanford published a study showing that a cannabis-derived compound successfully eased pain in mice with minimal side effects.

Munich-based pharmaceutical company Vertanical is perhaps the furthest along in this quest. It is developing a cannabinoid-based extract to treat chronic pain it hopes will soon become an approved medicine, first in the European Union and eventually in the United States. The drug, currently called Ver-01, packs enough low levels of cannabinoids (including THC) to relieve pain, but not so much that patients get high. Founder Clemens Fischer, a 50-year-old medical doctor and serial pharmaceutical and supplement entrepreneur, hopes it will become the first cannabis-based painkiller prescribed by physicians and covered by insurance.

Fischer founded Vertanical, with his business partner Madlena Hohlefelder, in 2017, and has invested more than $250 million of his own money in it. With a cannabis cultivation site and drug manufacturing plant in Denmark, Vertanical has successfully passed phase III clinical trials in Germany and expects a decision from German and Austrian authorities later this year. So far, the data is promising: Its drug was found to be more effective than opioid painkillers with fewer side effects, including no evidence for addiction. It hopes to launch phase III trials in the U.S. in 2026. “We believe that we will be the first non-opiate chronic pain treatment worldwide,” Fischer says.


Vaccines Are A Hard Business. RFK Jr.’s CDC Is Making It Even Harder

HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.

Getty Images

The CDC’s immunization advisory committee—whose membership Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. purged in June and replaced with people more aligned with his anti-vaccine views—is slated to meet this week, starting on Thursday. On the agenda, a topic crucial to the health of the country and its pharma industry: childhood vaccinations, specifically those that protect against hepatitis B, measles and chickenpox, as well as COVID-19.

Typically meetings of this committee, known by its acronym ACIP, are straightforward and off the public’s radar, but since 1964 they’ve served a vital role in setting immunization recommendations and schedules to serve public health. States generally follow this guidance in setting vaccine mandates for schools, while insurers typically follow it in determining what shots they’ll cover. Global immunization efforts saved at least 154 million lives between 1974 and 2024, more than 100 million of them children, according to a study published in The Lancet.

Since his appointment, Kennedy has been pushing anti-vaccine policies at the federal level and this meeting could prove critical for U.S. immunization policy going forward. Already, he has announced plans to award a no-bid contract to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute to ‘investigate” long-debunked links between vaccines and autism, and appointed committee members like Retsef Levi and Robert Malone, who have been outspoken opponents of COVID vaccines, which saved an estimated 14.4 million lives the first year after they were made available, and Catherine Stein, who has argued against vaccine mandates. Sources with knowledge told Forbes that ACIP may restrict its COVID-19 vaccine recommendations to people older than 75 and those younger with a narrow set of preexisting conditions. The Washington Post reported this possibility previously.

“We should be very worried because ACIP isn’t ACIP anymore,” Dr. Paul Offit, director of the Vaccine Education Center at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia, told Forbes. “It’s essentially an arm of our Secretary of HHS who is an anti-vaccine denialist and has been for the last 20 years.”

Read more here.


BIOTECH AND PHARMA

GSK announced Tuesday that it plans to invest $30 billion in R&D and manufacturing facilities in the U.S. over the next five years. This includes $1.2 billion in advanced manufacturing and AI for next-generation biopharma factories and labs, among them a new biologics factory in Upper Merion, Pa., to produce therapies for respiratory diseases and cancer. Earlier on Tuesday, Lilly announced its plans to build a $5 billion manufacturing facility near Richmond, Va., as part of its previous commitment to spend $50 billion in U.S. capital expansion projects.

Plus: Krystal Biotech’s topical gene therapy Vyjuvek for patients with dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa, known colloquially as “butterfly skin disease,” received a label expansion from the FDA that allows infants to be treated immediately on diagnosis and to do so at home without a healthcare professional. Krystal’s stock rose 8% on Monday, to $156, on the news. Forbes previously profiled Krystal cofounder Suma Krishnan.


DIGITAL HEALTH AND AI

Researchers at the Mayo Clinic developed “virtual clinical trials” to predict how potential treatments for heart failure will work. These trials use computer models trained on data from nearly 60,000 heart failure patients to predict whether certain existing drugs might be good candidates for repurposing in heart disease. The approach was validated by comparing predictions to existing clinical trial data. The Mayo team published its peer-reviewed findings in npj Digital Medicine.

Plus: Lila Sciences raised $235 million at a valuation of $1.2 billion to bring AI to scientific research. The firm, which was founded by Flagship Pioneering in 2023, had previously raised a $200 million seed round in March.


PUBLIC HEALTH AND HOSPITALS

More than half of healthcare professionals plan to search for or switch to new jobs next year, according to a new Harris poll. Of the 1,504 healthcare workers surveyed, 84% said they feel “taken for granted” by their employers and just 37% said they were satisfied with their current jobs. The findings come as the industry faces both high levels of burnout and workforce shortages.

Plus: Investments in disease prevention and early detection could save the U.S. healthcare system as much as $2.2 trillion by 2040, according to a new report from Deloitte.


WHAT WE’RE READING

Former CDC director Susn Monarez testified on Wednesday that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. planned to change the longstanding schedule for childhood vaccines, and said she was fired for refusing to go along with the change.

The FDA released 40 letters as part of its crackdown on pharmaceutical ads. Among those targeted: Pfizer, Novartis, BMS and Lilly.

As DIY dosing takes hold in San Francisco tech circles, it seems everyone has a Chinese peptide dealer now to boost health and performance.

Trump’s former surgeon general Jerome Adams talks about why RFK Jr. has got to go.

Novo Nordisk’s weight-loss drug Wegovy helps patients stop thinking about food, according to a new study.

Judge tosses two murder charges related to acts of terrorism against Luigi Mangione, the alleged killer of UnitedHealthcare’s CEO last year.

Casey Means, the wellness influencer who is Trump’s nominee for surgeon general, disclosed that she made hundreds of thousands of dollars promoting supplements and said she’ll divest her family’s holdings in tobacco companies.

Merck and AstraZeneca scrapped planned projects in the U.K. Statements from Lily and Sanofi have raised doubts about their continued investment in the U.K., too.


MORE FROM FORBES

ForbesThe AI Billionaire You’ve Never Heard OfForbesBizarre AI Generated Anti-Trump Videos Are Getting Billions Of Views On YouTubeForbesHow Jared Kushner’s Bold Bets In The Middle East Made Him A Billionaire

Source: https://www.forbes.com/sites/innovationrx/2025/09/17/non-opioid-painkillers-have-struggledcannabis-drugs-might-be-the-solution/

Disclaimer: The articles reposted on this site are sourced from public platforms and are provided for informational purposes only. They do not necessarily reflect the views of MEXC. All rights remain with the original authors. If you believe any content infringes on third-party rights, please contact service@support.mexc.com for removal. MEXC makes no guarantees regarding the accuracy, completeness, or timeliness of the content and is not responsible for any actions taken based on the information provided. The content does not constitute financial, legal, or other professional advice, nor should it be considered a recommendation or endorsement by MEXC.

You May Also Like

EUR/USD posts modest gains near 1.1650 amid Fed rate cut bets

EUR/USD posts modest gains near 1.1650 amid Fed rate cut bets

The post EUR/USD posts modest gains near 1.1650 amid Fed rate cut bets appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com. The EUR/USD pair posts modest gains around 1.1645 during the early Asian session on Monday. The prospect of a US Federal Reserve (Fed) rate cut at its December meeting on Wednesday could weigh on the US Dollar (USD) against the Euro (EUR). Later on Monday, the German Industrial Production and Eurozone Sentix Investor Confidence reports will be published.  Markets are currently pricing in a nearly  87% probability of a 25 basis points (bps) rate reduction, which would bring the federal funds rate down to a target range of 3.75%-4.00%. Traders will closely monitor the press conference and a Summary of Economic Projections, or ‘dot-plot,’ for fresh impetus. If the US central bank delivers a “hawkish cut,” this could support the Greenback and act as a headwind for the major pair.  “We expect to see some dissents, potentially from both hawkish and dovish members,” said BNY’s head of markets macro strategy Bob Savage in a note to clients. Across the pond, the Eurozone inflation came in slightly higher than expected in November, reducing the immediate pressure for a rate cut from the European Central Bank (ECB). Economists expect the ECB to keep rates on hold at the upcoming meeting on December 18. Growing expectation that the ECB is done cutting interest rates could underpin the EUR against the Greenback in the near term.  Goldman Sachs analysts anticipate the deposit rate will stay at 2.0% throughout 2026 unless inflation significantly decreases. Meanwhile, Deutsche Bank economists see a probability of a 25 basis point (bps) rate hike by the end of 2026, citing inflationary pressure. Euro FAQs The Euro is the currency for the 20 European Union countries that belong to the Eurozone. It is the second most heavily traded currency in the world behind the US Dollar. In 2022, it accounted for 31% of all foreign exchange transactions,…
Share
BitcoinEthereumNews2025/12/08 10:03