Division of Nephrology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO.
Division of Nephrology, Saint Louis University School of Medicine, St. Louis, MO.
Transplantation. 2019 Nov;103(11):2373-2382. doi: 10.1097/TP.0000000000002599.
Cannabis is categorized as an illicit drug in most US states, but legalization for medical indications is increasing. Policies and guidance on cannabis use in transplant patients remain controversial.
We examined a database linking national kidney transplant records (n = 52 689) with Medicare claims to identify diagnoses of cannabis dependence or abuse (CDOA) and associations [adjusted hazard ratio (aHR) with 95% upper and lower confidence limits (CLs)] with graft, patient, and other clinical outcomes.
CDOA was diagnosed in only 0.5% (n = 254) and 0.3% (n = 163) of kidney transplant recipients in the years before and after transplant, respectively. Patients with pretransplant CDOA were more likely to be 19 to 30 years of age and of black race, and less likely to be obese, college-educated, and employed. After multivariate and propensity adjustment, CDOA in the year before transplant was not associated with death or graft failure in the year after transplant, but was associated with posttransplant psychosocial problems such as alcohol abuse, other drug abuse, noncompliance, schizophrenia, and depression. Furthermore, CDOA in the first year posttransplant was associated with an approximately 2-fold increased risk of death-censored graft failure (aHR, 2.29; 95% CL, 1.59-3.32), all-cause graft loss (aHR, 2.09; 95% CL, 1.50-2.91), and death (aHR, 1.79; 95% CL, 1.06-3.04) in the subsequent 2 years. Posttransplant CDOA was also associated with cardiovascular, pulmonary, and psychosocial problems, and with events such as accidents and fractures.
Although associations likely, in part, reflect associated conditions or behaviors, clinical diagnosis of CDOA in the year after transplant appears to have prognostic implications for allograft and patient outcomes. Recipients with posttransplant CDOA warrant focused monitoring and support.
大麻在美国大多数州被归类为非法药物,但用于医疗用途的合法化正在增加。关于移植患者使用大麻的政策和指导仍存在争议。
我们检查了一个将全国肾脏移植记录(n=52689)与医疗保险索赔相关联的数据库,以确定大麻依赖或滥用(CDOA)的诊断,并探讨其与移植物、患者和其他临床结局的相关性[调整后的危险比(aHR)及其 95%置信区间上限(UL)和下限(CL)]。
在移植前和移植后分别仅有 0.5%(n=254)和 0.3%(n=163)的肾脏移植受者被诊断为 CDOA。移植前患有 CDOA 的患者更可能在 19 至 30 岁之间,且为黑人,而肥胖、受过大学教育和有工作的可能性较小。在进行多变量和倾向评分调整后,移植前一年的 CDOA 与移植后一年的死亡或移植物失败无关,但与移植后出现的心理社会问题相关,如酒精滥用、其他药物滥用、不遵医嘱、精神分裂症和抑郁症。此外,移植后第一年的 CDOA 与死亡或移植物失败风险增加约 2 倍相关(aHR,2.29;95% CL,1.59-3.32),与全因移植物丢失(aHR,2.09;95% CL,1.50-2.91)和死亡(aHR,1.79;95% CL,1.06-3.04)相关。移植后 CDOA 还与心血管、肺部和心理社会问题以及事故和骨折等事件相关。
尽管这些关联可能部分反映了相关疾病或行为,但移植后一年内诊断出 CDOA 似乎对移植物和患者结局具有预后意义。移植后患有 CDOA 的受者需要进行重点监测和支持。