Bechtold Jordan, Hipwell Alison, Lewis David A, Loeber Rolf, Pardini Dustin
From the Department of Psychiatry, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh; and the Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Arizona State University, Phoenix.
Am J Psychiatry. 2016 Aug 1;173(8):781-9. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2016.15070878. Epub 2016 May 3.
Adolescents who regularly use marijuana may be at heightened risk of developing subclinical and clinical psychotic symptoms. However, this association could be explained by reverse causation or other factors. To address these limitations, the current study examined whether adolescents who engage in regular marijuana use exhibit a systematic increase in subclinical psychotic symptoms that persists during periods of sustained abstinence.
The sample comprised 1,009 boys who were recruited in 1st and 7th grades. Self-reported frequency of marijuana use, subclinical psychotic symptoms, and several time-varying confounds (e.g., other substance use, internalizing/externalizing problems) were recorded annually from age 13 to 18. Fixed-effects (within-individual change) models examined whether adolescents exhibited an increase in their subclinical psychotic symptoms as a function of their recent and/or cumulative history of regular marijuana use and whether these effects were sustained following abstinence. Models controlled for all time-stable factors (default) and several time-varying covariates as potential confounds.
For each year adolescent boys engaged in regular marijuana use, their expected level of subsequent subclinical psychotic symptoms rose by 21% and their expected odds of experiencing subsequent subclinical paranoia or hallucinations rose by 133% and 92%, respectively. The effect of prior regular marijuana use on subsequent subclinical psychotic symptoms persisted even when adolescents stopped using marijuana for a year. These effects were after controlling for all time-stable and several time-varying confounds. No support was found for reverse causation.
These results suggest that regular marijuana use may significantly increase the risk that an adolescent will experience persistent subclinical psychotic symptoms.
经常使用大麻的青少年可能有更高风险出现亚临床和临床精神病性症状。然而,这种关联可能由反向因果关系或其他因素来解释。为解决这些局限性,本研究调查了经常使用大麻的青少年是否会出现亚临床精神病性症状的系统性增加,且在持续戒断期间这种增加仍然存在。
样本包括1009名在一年级和七年级时招募的男孩。从13岁到18岁,每年记录自我报告的大麻使用频率、亚临床精神病性症状以及几个随时间变化的混杂因素(如其他物质使用、内化/外化问题)。固定效应(个体内部变化)模型研究青少年是否会随着近期和/或累积的经常大麻使用史而出现亚临床精神病性症状增加,以及在戒断后这些影响是否持续。模型控制了所有时间稳定因素(默认)以及几个随时间变化的协变量作为潜在混杂因素。
青少年男孩每有一年经常使用大麻,其随后亚临床精神病性症状的预期水平就会上升21%,随后出现亚临床偏执或幻觉的预期几率分别上升133%和92%。即使青少年停止使用大麻一年,先前经常使用大麻对随后亚临床精神病性症状的影响仍然存在。这些影响是在控制了所有时间稳定和几个随时间变化的混杂因素之后。未发现反向因果关系的证据。
这些结果表明,经常使用大麻可能会显著增加青少年出现持续性亚临床精神病性症状的风险。