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Cannabis and the increased incidence and persistence of psychosis

10 de março de 201127min21
BMJ 2011; 342:d719 doi: 10.1136/bmj.d719 (Published 1 March 2011)

Cite this as: BMJ 2011; 342:d719

Cannabis and the increased incidence and persistence of psychosis

  1. Wayne Hall, NHMRC Australia fellow and professor1,
  2. Louisa Degenhardt, principal for adolescent health and professor2

+Author Affiliations

  1. 1UQ Centre for Clinical Research, University of Queensland, Herston QLD 4029, Australia
  2. 2Burnet Institute, Melbourne, Vic, Australia
  1. w.hall@uq.edu.au

Evidence suggests that cannabis precipitates schizophrenia in vulnerable people

Prospective studies in Australia, Germany, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and Sweden have found that regular use of cannabis is associated with an increased risk of psychotic symptoms and disorders in the general population.1 Some people have interpreted this as evidence that cannabis use is a contributory cause of psychoses.2 More sceptical researchers have argued that the association might be the result of residual confounding by—for example, the use of other drugs or genetic factors.3 Another possibility is that the association arises because people with psychosis use cannabis to self medicate their symptoms,2 even though evidence suggests that they use cannabis for much the same reasons as their peers without psychosis.2

The results of the linked prospective study by Kuepper and colleagues (doi:10.1136/bmj.d738) argue against these two alternative explanations.4 The authors excluded anyone who reported cannabis use or psychotic symptoms in the baseline survey so that they could examine the relation between incident cannabis use and incident psychotic symptoms. They found an association that survived statistical adjustment for confounders and was of similar size (odds ratio 1.87) to that in other prospective studies that adjusted for the effects of drug use, personal characteristics, and a personal history of psychotic symptoms1 or used fixed effects regression to control for unmeasured confounders.5 The results cast doubt on the argument that uncontrolled confounding explains the association between cannabis and psychosis and place the onus on those who support it to specify plausible confounding variables that have not been adequately controlled for in these studies.

Kuepper and colleagues also provided new information on the effects of continued cannabis use on psychotic symptoms over four years in a population sample. Prospective studies of people treated for psychosis have reported that patients with schizophrenia who use cannabis have more psychotic symptoms, respond poorly to neuroleptic drugs, and have a worse clinical course compared with those who do not use cannabis.2 Critics of these studies have argued that they have not properly controlled for the effects of confounding factors.6 Kuepper and colleagues showed that people who reported new psychotic symptoms, and who persisted in using cannabis between the second and fourth follow-up surveys, reported more persistent psychotic symptoms than those who stopped using cannabis. This association also persisted after controlling for potential confounders.

In the light of these findings and those of earlier studies, it is likely that cannabis use precipitates schizophrenia in people who are vulnerable because of a personal or family history of schizophrenia. This explanation is consistent with the modest increase in the risk of developing schizophrenia among regular cannabis users (twofold to threefold), and with the earlier onset of psychotic disorders in people who have used cannabis.2 A causal association is also biologically plausible; a double blind provocation study found that intravenous tetrahydrocannabinol provokes positive and negative psychotic symptoms in a dose dependent way in healthy volunteers and people with schizophrenia.7 8

The increase in risk may be modest for people without other risk factors for psychosis, increasing from around seven in 1000 in non-cannabis users to 14 in 1000 in regular users.9 It could be substantially higher in young people with an affected first degree relative, however. If the risks of regular cannabis use are multiplicative, the risk of psychosis in people with a family history of the disorder could increase from around one in 10 among non-users to one in five in regular users.9

Sensible reasoning supports the policy of providing young people with information about the risks of using cannabis.9 The case for communication is strengthened by evidence that regular cannabis use in adolescence predicts poorer educational outcomes, increased risk of using other illicit drugs, increased risk of depression, and poorer social relationships in early adulthood.10

The major challenge, however, is to deter enough young people from using cannabis so that the prevalence of psychosis is reduced. A modelling study suggests that we would need to prevent 2018-4530 young people in the United Kingdom from becoming regular cannabis users to prevent one case of schizophrenia, or to prevent four to five times as many (10 000-23 000) from light cannabis use to achieve the same result.11

The evidence on cannabis and psychosis has influenced the decision in the UK to retain criminal penalties for cannabis use, despite evidence that removing such penalties has little or no detectable effect on rates of use.12 An informed cannabis policy should be based not only on the harms caused by cannabis use, but also on the harms caused by social policies that attempt to discourage its use, such as criminal penalties for possession and use.9 12

Notes

Cite this as: BMJ 2011;342:d719

Footnotes

  • Research, doi:10.1136/bmj.d738
  • Competing interests: All authors have completed the Unified Competing Interest form at www.icmje.org/coi_disclosure.pdf (available on request from the corresponding author) and declare: WH and LD received funding from the National Health and Medical Research Council; no financial relationships with any organisations that might have an interest in the submitted work in the previous three years; no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work.

  • Provenance and peer review: Commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.

References


Sobre a UNIAD

A Unidade de Pesquisa em álcool e Drogas (UNIAD) foi fundada em 1994 pelo Prof. Dr. Ronaldo Laranjeira e John Dunn, recém-chegados da Inglaterra. A criação contou, na época, com o apoio do Departamento de Psiquiatria da UNIFESP. Inicialmente (1994-1996) funcionou dentro do Complexo Hospital São Paulo, com o objetivo de atender funcionários dependentes.



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