Agrawal Arpana, Lynskey Michael T, Madden Pamela A F, Pergadia Michele L, Bucholz Kathleen K, Heath Andrew C
Washington University School of Medicine, Department of Psychiatry, St. Louis, MO 63110, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2009 Apr 1;101(1-2):8-12. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2008.10.019. Epub 2008 Dec 9.
Compared to those who reported a lifetime co-occurrence of cannabis and tobacco use, individuals who report simultaneous use of cannabis and tobacco are more likely to also report higher rates of substance-related problems and psychopathology. In a sample of young women, we examine (a) co-occurring use, or whether regular cigarette smoking is associated with increased cannabis involvement and (b) simultaneous use, a special form of co-occurring use where cannabis and cigarettes are typically used on the same occasion to test whether those who use cannabis and tobacco simultaneously are also more likely to report greater cannabis involvement and (c) the extent to which latent genetic and environmental factors contribute to simultaneous use in those with a history of co-occurring cannabis use and regular cigarette smoking. Women (N=3427) who report regular cigarette smoking are 4.5-9.5 times more likely to report co-occurring cannabis use and other stages of cannabis involvement, including DSM-IV cannabis abuse and dependence. In those women who report co-occurring regular cigarette smoking and lifetime cannabis use (N=1073), simultaneous use of cannabis and tobacco was associated with increased likelihood of negative cannabis-related outcomes. Simultaneous users were 1.6 times more likely to meet criteria for DSM-IV cannabis abuse, even after controlling for early covariates and for prior stages of cannabis involvement. Simultaneous use was not heritable, and twin similarity was attributable to shared environmental factors (31%). While our study does not determine causality between simultaneous tobacco-cannabis use and cannabis involvement, results indicate that simultaneous use is potentially a marker for more severe psychosocial consequences associated with cannabis use.
与那些报告一生同时使用大麻和烟草的人相比,报告同时使用大麻和烟草的个体更有可能报告更高的物质相关问题和精神病理学发生率。在一个年轻女性样本中,我们研究了:(a)同时使用,即经常吸烟是否与大麻使用增加有关;(b)同步使用,这是同时使用的一种特殊形式,即大麻和香烟通常在同一场合使用,以测试同时使用大麻和烟草的人是否也更有可能报告更高的大麻使用频率;以及(c)潜在的遗传和环境因素在有同时使用大麻和经常吸烟史的人群中对同步使用的影响程度。报告经常吸烟的女性(N = 3427)报告同时使用大麻及其他大麻使用阶段(包括《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版中的大麻滥用和依赖)的可能性要高出4.5至9.5倍。在那些报告同时经常吸烟和一生使用大麻的女性(N = 1073)中,同时使用大麻和烟草与大麻相关负面结果的可能性增加有关。即使在控制了早期协变量和大麻使用的先前阶段之后,同步使用者符合《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版大麻滥用标准的可能性仍高出1.6倍。同步使用并非可遗传的,双胞胎之间的相似性归因于共同的环境因素(31%)。虽然我们的研究并未确定同时使用烟草和大麻与大麻使用频率之间的因果关系,但结果表明,同步使用可能是与大麻使用相关的更严重心理社会后果的一个标志。