Addiction Sciences Division, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, 3131 Harvey Avenue, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA.
Addiction Sciences Division, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, 3131 Harvey Avenue, Cincinnati, OH 45229, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2019 Nov 1;204:107557. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2019.107557. Epub 2019 Sep 16.
Cannabis use is a potential risk factor for respiratory disease but its role apart from tobacco use is unclear. We evaluated the association between regular cannabis use, with and without tobacco co-use, and onset of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and pneumonia.
Analysis of a limited data set obtained through IBM Watson Health Explorys, an electronic-health-record-integration platform. Matched controls using Mahalanobis distance within propensity score calipers were defined for: 1) cannabis-using patients (n = 8932); and subgroups of cannabis-using patients: 2) with an encounter diagnosis for tobacco use disorder (TUD; n = 4678); and 3) without a TUD diagnosis (non-TUD; n = 4254). Patients had at least: one recorded blood pressure measurement and one blood chemistry lab result in the MetroHealth System (Cleveland, Ohio). Cannabis-using patients had an encounter diagnosis of cannabis abuse/dependence and/or ≥2 cannabis-positive urine drug screens (UDSs). Control patients, not having cannabis-related diagnoses or cannabis-positive UDSs, were matched to the cannabis-using patients on demographics, residential zip code median income, body mass index, and, for the total sample, TUD-status.
Regular cannabis use was significantly associated with greater risk for asthma (odds ratio (OR) = 1.44; adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 1.50; OR = 1.32), COPD (OR = 1.56; aOR = 1.44; OR = 2.17), and pneumonia (OR = 1.80; OR = 1.84; OR = 2.13) in the total sample and TUD and non-TUD subgroups, respectively. TUD-patients had the greatest prevalence of respiratory disease, regardless of cannabis-use indication.
Regular cannabis use is associated with significantly greater risk of respiratory disease regardless of TUD status. Future research to understand the impact of cannabis use on respiratory health is warranted.
大麻使用是呼吸道疾病的潜在危险因素,但除了与烟草共同使用之外,其作用尚不清楚。我们评估了定期使用大麻(包括与烟草共同使用和不与烟草共同使用)与哮喘、慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)和肺炎发病之间的关系。
分析了通过 IBM Watson Health Explorys(电子健康记录整合平台)获得的有限数据集。使用倾向评分卡尺内的马哈拉诺比斯距离为以下患者定义匹配对照:1)使用大麻的患者(n=8932);和使用大麻的患者亚组:2)有烟草使用障碍(TUD)就诊诊断的患者(n=4678);和 3)没有 TUD 诊断的患者(非 TUD;n=4254)。患者至少有:在 MetroHealth 系统(俄亥俄州克利夫兰)有一次记录的血压测量和一次血液化学实验室结果。使用大麻的患者有大麻滥用/依赖的就诊诊断和/或≥2 次大麻阳性尿液药物筛查(UDS)。对照患者没有与大麻相关的诊断或大麻阳性 UDS,根据人口统计学、居住邮政编码中位数收入、体重指数以及总样本中的 TUD 状态与使用大麻的患者进行匹配。
定期使用大麻与哮喘(优势比(OR)=1.44;调整后的优势比(aOR)=1.50;OR=1.32)、COPD(OR=1.56;aOR=1.44;OR=2.17)和肺炎(OR=1.80;OR=1.84;OR=2.13)的发病风险显著增加相关,分别在总样本和 TUD 和非 TUD 亚组中。无论大麻使用指征如何,TUD 患者的呼吸道疾病患病率最高。
无论 TUD 状态如何,定期使用大麻与呼吸道疾病的发病风险显著增加有关。需要开展未来的研究,以了解大麻使用对呼吸道健康的影响。