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Cannabis and Epilepsy: How CBD Became an FDA-Approved Treatment

A plain-English guide to cannabis epilepsy CBD: what adults 21+ should know, how to think about it, and where to go for the next level of detail.

·3 min read

The Short Answer

Cannabis and epilepsy have one of the more clinically-established relationships in the cannabis-medicine space. Epidiolex, a purified plant-derived CBD pharmaceutical, was approved by the FDA in 2018 for the treatment of specific rare, severe childhood-onset epilepsy syndromes (Dravet syndrome, Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, and tuberous sclerosis complex). This is the first, and as of early 2026, one of the only — FDA-approved medications derived directly from the cannabis plant.

What Epidiolex Is

Epidiolex is a purified CBD solution manufactured under pharmaceutical standards. It is:

  • Plant-derived from hemp.
  • Highly purified (over 98 percent CBD).
  • Prescribed by neurologists for the approved indications.
  • Covered by insurance for the approved indications.
  • Tested in large-scale randomized controlled trials that demonstrated seizure-frequency reduction.

Which Epilepsy Syndromes It Treats

The three approved indications:

Dravet syndrome. A rare, severe, treatment-resistant childhood epilepsy with multiple seizure types and significant developmental impact.

Lennox-Gastaut syndrome. Another severe childhood-onset epilepsy with multiple seizure types and often significant cognitive involvement.

Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC). A genetic condition that can cause seizures (along with other manifestations).

Epidiolex is approved for patients one year and older with these conditions. It is not approved for general epilepsy, adult-onset seizure disorders, or other neurological conditions.

The Research Behind the Approval

Epidiolex approval followed multiple randomized, placebo-controlled trials showing statistically significant reductions in seizure frequency. Key findings:

  • Reduction in seizure frequency across all three indications.
  • Some patients saw dramatic responses; others had minimal response.
  • Side effects include drowsiness, decreased appetite, diarrhea, liver-enzyme elevations in some patients (requiring monitoring).
  • Drug interactions with other seizure medications, particularly clobazam, require careful dose management.

Why This Matters for Other Conditions

Epidiolex's approval:

  • Validates the clinical-research pathway for cannabis-derived medications.
  • Demonstrates that rigorous trials are possible despite federal Schedule I status.
  • Provides a model for other cannabis-derived pharmaceuticals.
  • Doesn't translate to general endorsement of non-pharmaceutical CBD for other conditions, the approval is for specific indications, not CBD in general.

CBD for Non-Approved Indications

Consumer CBD products are sometimes marketed with seizure-related claims. Important distinctions:

  • Epidiolex is a pharmaceutical dosed under medical supervision at levels typically 5 to 25 mg/kg/day.
  • Consumer CBD products are sold at much lower doses with no pharmaceutical QC.
  • Non-Epidiolex CBD for the approved epilepsy indications is not recommended substitution; patients should use the approved medication under neurologist supervision.

Cannabis (Not Just CBD) for Epilepsy

THC-containing cannabis products have been studied for some seizure conditions with less consistent results. Some parents of children with severe epilepsy have pursued whole-plant or high-CBD cannabis under state medical programs before Epidiolex approval. The clinical picture is complex and individualized.

Where to Go Next

Related reading: medical cannabis 101, cbd oil benefits, and full-spectrum vs broad-spectrum vs isolate.

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*This article is consumer education for adults 21+. Nothing here is medical, legal, or financial advice. Cannabis laws vary by state, always verify your state's current rules and, for health questions, consult a licensed clinician. For regulated New York retail, verify licensing via the OCM QR-code system at cannabis.ny.gov.*