Cannabidiol exerts anti-inflammatory effects but maintains T effector memory cell differentiation: A Single-Cell Study in Humans
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Cannabidiol is widely available and often used for pain management. Individuals with kidney disease or renal allografts have limited analgesia options. We conducted a Phase 1 human study to compare the peripheral immune cell distribution before (pre-cannabidiol) and after exposure to cannabidiol at steady state (post-cannabidiol). This ex vivo study included specimens from 23 participants who received oral cannabidiol (up to 5 mg/kg twice daily) for 11 days. Lymphocytes were isolated and stimulated with anti-CD3/CD28 antibodies, with or without tacrolimus. Pharmacodynamic responses were assessed via CellTiter-Glo® proliferation, scRNA-seq, cytokine assays, and flow cytometry. Steady-state plasma concentrations of CBD were quantified via tandem mass spectrometry. We identified an increased proportion of T effector memory (TEM) cells post-cannabidiol (22% increase, P-value of 3.2 x 10 -32 ), which correlated with CBD plasma concentrations ( Pearson Corr= 0.77, P-value < 0.01 ). Post-cannabidiol cytokine assays revealed elevated proinflammatory IL-6 protein levels and anti-inflammatory IL-10 levels ( adjusted P-values < 0.0001 ). Cannabidiol reduced overall T and B lymphocyte proliferation with additive immunosuppressive effects to tacrolimus. In flow cytometry, the proportion of TEM and TEMRA increased post-cannabidiol with tacrolimus ( P-values < 0.05 ). Cannabidiol exhibits mixed immunomodulatory effects with pro- and anti-inflammatory signals. Understanding the clinical safety of cannabidiol use is important given the paucity of pain control options available for immunocompromised transplant populations.