Few Lauren R, Grant Julia D, Nelson Elliot C, Trull Timothy J, Grucza Richard A, Bucholz Kathleen K, Verweij Karin J H, Martin Nicholas G, Statham Dixie J, Madden Pamela A F, Heath Andrew C, Lynskey Michael T, Agrawal Arpana
Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri.
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, Missouri.
J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2016 Nov;77(6):873-880. doi: 10.15288/jsad.2016.77.873.
Cannabis use, particularly at an early age, has been linked to suicidal thoughts and behavior, but minimal work has examined the association between cannabis use and lifetime nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI). The current study aims to characterize the overlap between lifetime and early cannabis use and NSSI and to examine genetic and environmental mechanisms of this association.
Adult male and female twins from the Australian Twin Registry (N = 9,583) were used to examine the odds of NSSI associated with lifetime cannabis use and early cannabis use (i.e., <17 years of age). These associations were also examined within monozygotic (MZ) twins discordant for cannabis use and MZ twins discordant for early cannabis use. Analyses were replicated in an independent sample of female twins (n = 3,787) accounting for the age at onset of cannabis use and NSSI.
Lifetime cannabis use (odds ratio [OR] = 2.84, 95% CI [2.23, 3.61]) and early cannabis use were associated with increased odds of NSSI (OR = 2.15, 95% CI [1.75, 2.65]), and this association remained when accounting for covariates. The association was only significant, however, in MZ twin pairs discordant for early cannabis use (OR = 3.20, 95% CI [1.17, 8.73]). Replication analyses accounting for the temporal ordering of cannabis use and NSSI yielded similar findings of nominal significance.
Results suggest that NSSI is associated with cannabis involvement via differing mechanisms. For lifetime cannabis use, the lack of association in discordant pairs suggests the role of shared genes and family environment. However, in addition to such shared familial influences, person-specific and putatively causal factors contribute to the relationship between early cannabis use and NSSI. Therefore, delaying the onset of cannabis use may reduce exposure to influences that exacerbate vulnerabilities to NSSI.
使用大麻,尤其是在早年使用大麻,已与自杀念头和行为相关联,但极少有研究探讨使用大麻与终生非自杀性自伤(NSSI)之间的关联。本研究旨在描述终生及早年使用大麻与NSSI之间的重叠情况,并研究这种关联的遗传和环境机制。
来自澳大利亚双胞胎登记处的成年男性和女性双胞胎(N = 9583)被用于研究与终生使用大麻和早年使用大麻(即<17岁)相关的NSSI几率。这些关联也在大麻使用情况不一致的同卵双胞胎(MZ)以及早年大麻使用情况不一致的MZ双胞胎中进行了研究。在一个独立的女性双胞胎样本(n = 3787)中重复进行了分析,该样本考虑了大麻使用和NSSI的起始年龄。
终生使用大麻(优势比[OR] = 2.84,95%置信区间[CI][2.23, 3.61])和早年使用大麻与NSSI几率增加相关(OR = 2.15,95% CI[1.75, 2.65]),在考虑协变量时这种关联仍然存在。然而,这种关联仅在早年大麻使用情况不一致的MZ双胞胎对中显著(OR = 3.20,95% CI[1.17, 8.73])。考虑到大麻使用和NSSI的时间顺序的重复分析得出了具有名义显著性的类似结果。
结果表明,NSSI通过不同机制与大麻使用相关。对于终生使用大麻,不一致双胞胎对中缺乏关联表明共享基因和家庭环境的作用。然而,除了这种共享的家族影响外,个体特异性和可能的因果因素也促成了早年使用大麻与NSSI之间的关系。因此,推迟大麻使用的起始时间可能会减少暴露于加剧NSSI易感性的影响因素。