Migraine is not “just a headache.” It is the second leading cause of years lived with disability worldwide, affecting more than one billion people globally and an estimated 39 million Americans. Despite the availability of acute migraine medications, many patients struggle to find options that are effective, tolerable, and sustainable over time. High discontinuation rates and incomplete symptom relief remain persistent challenges.
A newly published randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial brings long-awaited clinical clarity to a topic patients have been asking about for years: Can cannabis, specifically THC-containing cannabis, effectively treat acute migraine attacks?
Why This Study Matters
Cannabis has long been one of the most commonly reported medicinal tools for migraine. In surveys of medical cannabis patients, more than one-third report using cannabis for headache or migraine relief, with inhalation being the most common route of administration. Yet until now, no randomized controlled trial (RCT) had rigorously evaluated cannabis flower for the acute treatment of migraine.
This study, conducted at the University of California, San Diego and registered with ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04360044), fills a critical evidence gap by directly comparing vaporized cannabis formulations with placebo in adults experiencing migraine attacks.
Study Design at a Glance
Researchers enrolled adults aged 21–65 who met diagnostic criteria for migraine and experienced between 2 and 23 migraine days per month. Participants were carefully screened to exclude confounding factors such as active substance use disorder, severe psychiatric illness, or pulmonary disease.
The trial used a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover design, meaning each participant treated multiple migraine attacks with different study drugs over time. Four vaporized cannabis flower formulations were tested:
- THC-dominant (≈6% THC)
- CBD-dominant (≈11% CBD)
- THC + CBD (≈6% THC + 11% CBD)
- Placebo cannabis (<0.025% THC)
All products were provided by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA) Drug Supply Program and were devoid of terpenes, allowing researchers to isolate the effects of THC and CBD themselves.
The primary endpoint was pain relief at 2 hours post-vaporization, with secondary endpoints including pain freedom and most bothersome symptom (MBS) freedom at the same time point.
Key Findings: THC Made the Difference
Across multiple analyses, including intention-to-treat, modified intention-to-treat, and sensitivity analyses, THC-containing formulations consistently outperformed placebo.
- 2-hour pain relief
- THC-dominant: ~69%
- THC + CBD: ~67%
- CBD-dominant: ~53% (not statistically significant)
- Placebo: ~47%
Both THC-dominant and THC + CBD formulations achieved statistically significant improvements in pain relief compared to placebo. In contrast, CBD-dominant cannabis alone did not.
For secondary outcomes, the THC + CBD combination stood out:
- Pain freedom at 2 hours: 35% vs. 16% with placebo
- Freedom from most bothersome symptom: 60% vs. 34% with placebo
These results suggest that THC plays a central therapeutic role in acute migraine relief, and that combining THC with CBD may enhance broader symptom control.
Understanding the Mechanism
Preclinical research helps explain why THC may be effective for migraine. Cannabinoids have been shown to interact with migraine-related pathways by:
- Inhibiting calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) release
- Reducing CGRP-induced nitric oxide signaling
- Modulating trigeminovascular neuron activity
- Inhibiting cortical spreading depression, a key event in migraine aura
This clinical trial translates those mechanistic insights into real-world patient outcomes.
Addressing a Persistent Myth: “THC Is Just for Getting High”
One of the most damaging misconceptions in public discourse is that THC has no medicinal value and exists solely for intoxication. This study directly challenges that narrative.
At carefully selected doses, delivered via a controlled and rapid-acting route, THC demonstrated measurable, clinically meaningful benefits for migraine relief without the need for high potency or recreational use patterns. Like many therapeutic compounds, dose, formulation, and context matter.
For patients living with debilitating migraines, dismissing THC outright ignores both emerging science and lived experience.
What This Means for Patients and Providers
While no cannabis-based therapies are currently FDA-approved for migraine, this study provides high-quality evidence that vaporized THC-containing cannabis may be a viable acute option for some patients – particularly those who have not found relief with conventional treatments.
Importantly, the authors emphasize the need for continued research to refine dosing, understand long-term safety, and determine which patients are most likely to benefit.
The Bottom Line
This landmark randomized controlled trial marks a turning point in migraine research and cannabinoid science. It validates what many patients have reported for years and underscores the importance of moving beyond stigma toward evidence-based conversations about cannabis.
When used responsibly, intentionally, and under informed guidance, THC is not merely a molecule for intoxication, rather it is a compound with real therapeutic potential for conditions that significantly impair quality of life, including migraine.



