Adejumo Adeyinka Charles, Alliu Samson, Ajayi Tokunbo Opeyemi, Adejumo Kelechi Lauretta, Adegbala Oluwole Muyiwa, Onyeakusi Nnaemeka Egbuna, Akinjero Akintunde Micheal, Durojaiye Modupeoluwa, Bukong Terence Ndonyi
Department of Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Worcester, Massachusetts, United States of America.
Biomedical Engineering & Biotechnology Program, University of Massachusetts Lowell, Lowell Massachusetts, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2017 Apr 25;12(4):e0176416. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0176416. eCollection 2017.
Cannabis use is associated with reduced prevalence of obesity and diabetes mellitus (DM) in humans and mouse disease models. Obesity and DM are a well-established independent risk factor for non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD), the most prevalent liver disease globally. The effects of cannabis use on NAFLD prevalence in humans remains ill-defined. Our objective is to determine the relationship between cannabis use and the prevalence of NAFLD in humans. We conducted a population-based case-control study of 5,950,391 patients using the 2014 Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP), Nationwide Inpatient Survey (NIS) discharge records of patients 18 years and older. After identifying patients with NAFLD (1% of all patients), we next identified three exposure groups: non-cannabis users (98.04%), non-dependent cannabis users (1.74%), and dependent cannabis users (0.22%). We adjusted for potential demographics and patient related confounders and used multivariate logistic regression (SAS 9.4) to determine the odds of developing NAFLD with respects to cannabis use. Our findings revealed that cannabis users (dependent and non-dependent) showed significantly lower NAFLD prevalence compared to non-users (AOR: 0.82[0.76-0.88]; p<0.0001). The prevalence of NAFLD was 15% lower in non-dependent users (AOR: 0.85[0.79-0.92]; p<0.0001) and 52% lower in dependent users (AOR: 0.49[0.36-0.65]; p<0.0001). Among cannabis users, dependent patients had 43% significantly lower prevalence of NAFLD compared to non-dependent patients (AOR: 0.57[0.42-0.77]; p<0.0001). Our observations suggest that cannabis use is associated with lower prevalence of NAFLD in patients. These novel findings suggest additional molecular mechanistic studies to explore the potential role of cannabis use in NAFLD development.
在人类和小鼠疾病模型中,使用大麻与肥胖症和糖尿病(DM)患病率降低有关。肥胖症和糖尿病是公认的非酒精性脂肪性肝病(NAFLD)的独立危险因素,NAFLD是全球最普遍的肝脏疾病。大麻使用对人类NAFLD患病率的影响仍不明确。我们的目标是确定大麻使用与人类NAFLD患病率之间的关系。我们使用2014年医疗保健成本和利用项目(HCUP)、全国住院患者调查(NIS)中18岁及以上患者的出院记录,对5950391名患者进行了一项基于人群的病例对照研究。在确定患有NAFLD的患者(占所有患者的1%)后,我们接下来确定了三个暴露组:非大麻使用者(98.04%)、非依赖性大麻使用者(1.74%)和依赖性大麻使用者(0.22%)。我们对潜在的人口统计学和患者相关混杂因素进行了调整,并使用多变量逻辑回归(SAS 9.4)来确定与使用大麻相关的患NAFLD的几率。我们的研究结果显示,与非使用者相比,大麻使用者(依赖性和非依赖性)的NAFLD患病率显著更低(比值比:0.82[0.76 - 0.88];p<0.0001)。非依赖性使用者的NAFLD患病率低15%(比值比:0.85[0.79 - 0.92];p<0.0001),依赖性使用者低52%(比值比:0.49[0.36 - 0.65];p<0.0001)。在大麻使用者中,与非依赖性患者相比,依赖性患者的NAFLD患病率显著低43%(比值比:0.57[0.42 - 0.77];p<0.0001)。我们的观察结果表明,大麻使用与患者中较低的NAFLD患病率相关。这些新发现表明需要进行更多的分子机制研究,以探索大麻使用在NAFLD发展中的潜在作用。