Miller Rachel, Ream Geoffrey, McCormack Joanne, Gunduz-Bruce Handan, Sevy Serge, Robinson Delbert
Zucker Hillside Hospital, Glen Oaks, NY 11004, USA.
Schizophr Res. 2009 Sep;113(2-3):138-44. doi: 10.1016/j.schres.2009.04.018. Epub 2009 May 28.
Although several studies have reported on cannabis use and adherence for first episode of psychosis patients, the findings remain unclear as to whether cannabis use is a risk factor for poor adherence in young people with first-episode schizophrenia. This study was designed to follow patients' use of cannabis and adherence in a naturalistic setting during the first 12 months of treatment. It examines whether cannabis use is a risk factor for two distinct types of non-adherence: non-adherence to medication and treatment dropout.
Participants were 112 first-episode schizophrenia patients of diverse backgrounds at two community hospitals, enrolled in a study of differential effectiveness of two second-generation antipsychotic medications. Multiple indicators were used to assess cannabis use and adherence to medication. Patients were encouraged to continue in the study even after periods of treatment refusal or change from study to standardized medication. Study hypotheses were tested using Cox proportional hazards models with cannabis use as a time-varying covariate.
After 12 months, 23 had dropped out and 37 had at some point been non-adherent to medication. Of 34 participants who used cannabis during treatment, 32 had a prior diagnosis of cannabis abuse/dependence and 30 were male. Independently of age, race, socioeconomic status, gender, site, and medication assignment, cannabis use significantly increased hazard of non-adherence by a factor of 2.4 (p<.001) and hazard of dropout by a factor of 6.4 (p=.034).
Results indicate that cannabis use is a risk factor for non-adherence to medication and dropout from treatment. Treatment for first-episode schizophrenia may be more effective if providers address the issue of cannabis use with patients throughout the early years of treatment, especially for those with existing cannabis abuse/dependence.
尽管已有多项研究报道了精神病患者首次发病时使用大麻与依从性的情况,但关于大麻使用是否是首发精神分裂症青年患者依从性差的危险因素,研究结果仍不明确。本研究旨在追踪患者在治疗的前12个月自然环境下使用大麻的情况及依从性。它考察大麻使用是否是两种不同类型不依从的危险因素:不遵医嘱服药和治疗中断。
参与者为两家社区医院的112名背景各异的首发精神分裂症患者,他们参与了一项关于两种第二代抗精神病药物疗效差异的研究。使用多个指标评估大麻使用情况和服药依从性。即使在出现治疗拒绝期或从研究药物改为标准化药物后,也鼓励患者继续参与研究。使用Cox比例风险模型,将大麻使用作为随时间变化的协变量,对研究假设进行检验。
12个月后,23人退出研究,37人在某些时候未遵医嘱服药。在治疗期间使用大麻的34名参与者中,32人先前被诊断为大麻滥用/依赖,30人为男性。独立于年龄、种族、社会经济地位、性别、地点和药物分配,大麻使用使不依从风险显著增加2.4倍(p<.001),使退出风险增加6.4倍(p=.034)。
结果表明,大麻使用是不遵医嘱服药和治疗中断的危险因素。如果医疗服务提供者在治疗的早期阶段就与患者解决大麻使用问题,尤其是对那些已有大麻滥用/依赖的患者,首发精神分裂症的治疗可能会更有效。