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Understanding Harlequin’s Unusual Cannabinoid Ratio
- Typically presents a CBD:THC ratio of approximately 5:2, with some batches reaching 5:1
- Total THC content usually below 9%; CBD content between 8–16%
- Sativa-dominant hybrid descended from Colombian Gold, Thai, Swiss Sativa, and Nepali indica
- The high CBD-to-THC ratio substantially reduces psychoactive effect whilst preserving therapeutic cannabinoid activity
Harlequin represents a different paradigm in medical cannabis prescribing. Whereas most prescribed strains in the UK feature significant THC content, Harlequin’s elevated CBD profile allows clinicians to introduce cannabis-based medicine to patients who are sensitive to psychoactive effects, have concerns about intoxication, or require a more conservative initial approach to titration.
Clinical Indications Where Low-THC Strains Excel
- Anxiety disorders: CBD’s anxiolytic mechanism does not carry the anxiety-inducing risk associated with high-THC preparations
- Inflammatory conditions including arthritis and Crohn’s disease where CB2-mediated modulation is the primary goal
- Paediatric and elderly patients where psychoactive burden poses greater risk
- Patients in safety-critical occupations who need to minimise cognitive impairment
The clinical utility of Harlequin extends beyond simply avoiding intoxication. CBD acts at multiple receptor sites beyond the endocannabinoid system, including serotonin 5-HT1A and TRPV1 receptors, providing analgesic, anti-inflammatory, and anxiolytic effects through distinct mechanisms. This makes it complementary to THC-dominant preparations rather than merely a weaker substitute.
Pharmacokinetics of High-CBD Preparations
- CBD does not produce significant psychoactivity at therapeutic doses but does modulate THC effects when co-present
- Peak plasma concentration after inhalation: 3–10 minutes; oral: 60–180 minutes with high variability
- CBD has a half-life of approximately 2–5 days with chronic dosing due to lipid accumulation
- Drug interactions: CBD inhibits CYP2C19 and CYP3A4 — clinically significant with warfarin, clobazam, and certain SSRIs
Prescribers should note that Harlequin, like all CBD-containing preparations, carries drug interaction risk. A thorough medicines reconciliation is essential before prescribing, particularly in patients taking anticoagulants, antiepileptics, or antidepressants. Liver function monitoring is appropriate for long-term high-dose CBD use.
Prescribing Harlequin in UK Clinical Practice
- Suitable as a first-line cannabis preparation in patients with anxiety or cannabis-naïve populations
- Effective starting point when the goal is anti-inflammatory or analgesic benefit without sedation
- Available through several UK licensed importers as dried flower and oil preparations
- Document informed consent explicitly noting the distinction between CBD-dominant and THC-dominant effects
Harlequin is increasingly recognised by UK specialist prescribers as a pragmatic entry point for patients who might otherwise decline a cannabis prescription due to concerns about intoxication. Its tolerability profile, combined with genuine therapeutic activity, supports its inclusion on any balanced clinical formulary.