University of California, San Francisco, and San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center, San Francisco, California (M.G., M.A., J.F., S.K.).
The Wright Center for Graduate Medical Education, Scranton, Pennsylvania (D.R.).
Ann Intern Med. 2018 Jul 17;169(2):106-115. doi: 10.7326/M18-0522. Epub 2018 Jul 3.
The health effects of smoking marijuana are not well-understood.
To examine the association between marijuana use and respiratory symptoms, pulmonary function, and obstructive lung disease among adolescents and adults.
PubMed, Embase, PsycINFO, MEDLINE, and the Cochrane Library from 1 January 1973 to 30 April 2018.
Observational and interventional studies published in English that reported pulmonary outcomes of adolescents and adults who used marijuana.
Four reviewers independently extracted study characteristics and assessed risk of bias. Three reviewers assessed strength of evidence. Studies of similar design with low or moderate risk of bias and sufficient data were pooled.
Twenty-two studies were included. A pooled analysis of 2 prospective studies showed that marijuana use was associated with an increased risk for cough (risk ratio [RR], 2.04 [95% CI, 1.02 to 4.06]) and sputum production (RR, 3.84 [CI, 1.62 to 9.07]). Pooled analysis of cross-sectional studies (1 low and 3 moderate risk of bias) showed that marijuana use was associated with cough (RR, 4.37 [CI, 1.71 to 11.19]), sputum production (RR, 3.40 [CI, 1.99 to 5.79]), wheezing (RR, 2.83 [CI, 1.89 to 4.23]), and dyspnea (RR, 1.56 [CI, 1.33 to 1.83]). Data on pulmonary function and obstructive lung disease were insufficient.
Few studies were at low risk of bias, marijuana exposure was limited in the population studied, cohorts were young overall, assessment of marijuana exposure was not uniform, and study designs varied.
Low-strength evidence suggests that smoking marijuana is associated with cough, sputum production, and wheezing. Evidence on the association between marijuana use and obstructive lung disease and pulmonary function is insufficient.
None. (PROSPERO: CRD42017059224).
吸食大麻对健康的影响尚未得到充分认识。
研究青少年和成年人吸食大麻与呼吸道症状、肺功能和阻塞性肺疾病之间的关系。
PubMed、Embase、PsycINFO、MEDLINE 和 Cochrane Library 从 1973 年 1 月 1 日至 2018 年 4 月 30 日。
以英文发表的观察性和干预性研究,报告了吸食大麻的青少年和成年人的肺部结果。
四名审查员独立提取研究特征并评估偏倚风险。三名审查员评估证据的力度。对设计相似、低或中度偏倚风险和数据充足的研究进行了汇总。
共纳入 22 项研究。两项前瞻性研究的汇总分析显示,大麻使用与咳嗽(风险比[RR],2.04[95%CI,1.02 至 4.06])和咳痰(RR,3.84[CI,1.62 至 9.07])风险增加相关。对横断面研究的汇总分析(1 项低风险和 3 项中风险)显示,大麻使用与咳嗽(RR,4.37[CI,1.71 至 11.19])、咳痰(RR,3.40[CI,1.99 至 5.79])、喘息(RR,2.83[CI,1.89 至 4.23])和呼吸困难(RR,1.56[CI,1.33 至 1.83])相关。关于肺功能和阻塞性肺疾病的数据不足。
少数研究的偏倚风险较低,大麻暴露在研究人群中受到限制,总体队列较年轻,大麻暴露的评估不统一,研究设计也存在差异。
低强度证据表明,吸食大麻与咳嗽、咳痰和喘息有关。关于大麻使用与阻塞性肺疾病和肺功能之间关系的证据不足。
无。(PROSPERO:CRD42017059224)。