Stith Sarah S, Vigil Jacob M, Brockelman Franco, Keeling Keenan, Hall Branden
Department of Economics, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, United States.
Department of Psychology, The University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM, United States.
Front Pharmacol. 2018 Aug 28;9:916. doi: 10.3389/fphar.2018.00916. eCollection 2018.
The Releaf App mobile software application (app) data was used to measure self-reported effectiveness and side effects of medical cannabis used under naturalistic conditions. Between 5/03/2016 and 12/16/2017, 2,830 Releaf App users completed 13,638 individual sessions self-administering medical cannabis and indicated their primary health symptom severity rating on an 11-point (0-10) visual analog scale in real-time prior to and following cannabis consumption, along with experienced side effects. Releaf App responders used cannabis to treat myriad health symptoms, the most frequent relating to pain, anxiety, and depressive conditions. Significant symptom severity reductions were reported for all the symptom categories, with mean reductions between 2.8 and 4.6 points (ds ranged from 1.29-2.39, s < 0.001). On average, higher pre-dosing symptom levels were associated with greater reported symptom relief, and users treating anxiety or depression-related symptoms reported significantly more relief (ps < 0.001) than users with pain symptoms. Of the 42 possible side effects, users were more likely to indicate and showed a stronger correlation between symptom relief and experiences of positive (94% of sessions) or a context-specific side effects (76%), whereas negative side effects (60%) were associated with lessened, yet still significant symptom relief and were more common among patients treating a depressive symptom relative to patients treating anxiety and pain-related conditions. Patient-managed cannabis use is associated with clinically significant improvements in self-reported symptom relief for treating a wide range of health conditions, along with frequent positive and negative side effects.
Releaf App移动软件应用程序(应用)的数据被用于衡量在自然条件下使用医用大麻的自我报告有效性和副作用。在2016年5月3日至2017年12月16日期间,2830名Releaf App用户完成了13638次自我使用医用大麻的个人疗程,并在大麻消费前后实时以11分制(0 - 10)视觉模拟量表表明其主要健康症状严重程度评级,同时报告了所经历的副作用。Releaf App的回应者使用大麻来治疗多种健康症状,最常见的与疼痛、焦虑和抑郁状况有关。所有症状类别均报告有显著的症状严重程度降低,平均降低2.8至4.6分(效应量范围为1.29 - 2.39,P < 0.001)。平均而言,给药前较高的症状水平与报告的更大症状缓解相关,并且治疗焦虑或抑郁相关症状的用户报告的缓解程度(P < 0.001)显著高于有疼痛症状的用户。在42种可能的副作用中,用户更有可能表明并显示出症状缓解与积极(94%的疗程)或特定背景副作用(76%)的经历之间有更强的相关性,而负面副作用(60%)与减轻但仍显著的症状缓解相关,并且在治疗抑郁症状的患者中比治疗焦虑和疼痛相关状况的患者更常见。患者管理的大麻使用与在治疗广泛健康状况时自我报告的症状缓解方面具有临床显著改善相关,同时伴有频繁的正负副作用。