ChemoTHC: THC for Antinausea Treatment in Chemotherapy

Description Format Details Source

Description

Comparison of two treatments for nausea in chemotherapy

Format

A data frame with 2 observations on the following 4 variables.

Drug Prochlorperazine or THC
Effective Count of effective cases
NotEffective Count of noneffective cases
Patients Number of patients in the treatment

Details

An article in the New England Journal of Medicine described a study on the effectiveness of medications for combatting nausea in patients undergoing chemotherapy treatments for cancer. In the experiment, 157 patients were divided at random into two groups. One group of 78 patients was given a standard antinausea drug called prochlorperazine, while the other group of 79 patients received THC (the active ingredient in marijuana). Both medications were delivered orally and no patients were told which of the two drugs they were taking. The response measured was whether or not the patient experienced relief from nausea when undergoing chemotherapy. Dataset is a 2 x 2 table of counts.

Source

Sallan SE, Cronin C, Zelen M, Zinberg NE (1980), "Antiemetics in patients receiving chemotherapy for cancer: a randomized comparison of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol and prochlorperazine," New England Journal of Medicine, 302(3) p.135-138.


Stat2Data documentation built on May 2, 2019, 7:25 a.m.