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大麻的使用及其对不孕患者生育能力影响的认知。

The use of cannabis and perceptions of its effect on fertility among infertility patients.

作者信息

Jordan T, Ngo B, Jones C A

机构信息

Department of Obstetrics and Gynaecology, University of Toronto, 123 Edward Street, Suite 1200, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5G 1E2.

Division of Gastroenterology, Department of Hepatology and Nutrition, Hospital for Sick Children, 555 University Avenue, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, M5G 1X8.

出版信息

Hum Reprod Open. 2020 Feb 13;2020(1):hoz041. doi: 10.1093/hropen/hoz041. eCollection 2020.

Abstract

STUDY QUESTION

What is the prevalence of cannabis use and the perceptions of its impact on fertility among infertility patients?

SUMMARY ANSWER

A total of 13% of infertility patients used cannabis within the last year, and current usage is associated with patient perceptions of negative effects of cannabis on fertility and pregnancy.

WHAT IS KNOWN ALREADY

Cannabis use is increasing among the general population and pregnant women, particularly in places where cannabis use is legal despite having known and potential negative effects on fertility and pregnancy.

STUDY DESIGN SIZE DURATION

A cross-sectional patient survey study was performed between July 2017 and September 2017. Patients attending a university-affiliated hospital-based fertility clinic ( = 290) were invited to complete a written survey. Inclusion criteria were limited to the ability to read English. There were no exclusion criteria.

PARTICIPANTS/MATERIALS SETTING METHODS: Of the 290 patients approached, 270 (93%) agreed to participate. The questions covered demographics, cannabis usage, perceptions of the effect of cannabis on fertility and pregnancy, cessation of use due to infertility and personal history of disclosing cannabis use to healthcare providers (HCP).

MAIN RESULTS AND THE ROLE OF CHANCE

The results showed that 13% of respondents disclosed use of cannabis in the past year (past year users) and 38% had not used cannabis in the past year but had previously used cannabis (>1 year users) while 49% had never used cannabis (never users). Baseline demographics were similar for the three groups, but across four measures of fertility and pregnancy health, past-year users perceived less of a negative effect compared to >1 year users, and never users ( values of 0.02, 0.03, 0.01, <0.001 for questions on pregnancy, offspring health, male fertility and female fertility, respectively). Of past year users, 72% said they had or would disclose use to their HCP, but only 9.4% reported that their HCP had actually instructed them to discontinue use.

LIMITATIONS REASONS FOR CAUTION

Self-reported patient surveys are subject to reporting bias and may not reflect actual use and perceptions.

WIDER IMPLICATIONS OF THE FINDINGS

This study suggests that cannabis use is common among infertility patients. Given the known negative impacts of cannabis on pregnancy, the authors would have expected informed infertility patients to cease cannabis use as part of their efforts to conceive. As the prevalence of cannabis use in the last year among infertility patients is similar to that in the general Canadian population, it is unclear whether the prevalence of cannabis use in the sample population merely reflects the average usage in society or, after taking into account those who reduced their usage to improve their fertility, is a factor contributing to infertility and thus prompting fertility referral. Given concern about the potential negative impact of cannabis use on fertility, and that only 9% of past year users had been instructed by an HCP to cease cannabis use, HCPs should consider the benefits of counselling about cannabis cessation for patients who are attempting to conceive. Future research should focus on analysing the effects of cannabis use on female fertility and determining whether a reduction in use among patients with infertility can improve conception rates.

STUDY FUNDING/COMPETING INTERESTS: Michelle Shin, Clinical Research Associate, is supported by the University of Toronto GREI Fellowship Fund, which is sponsored by unrestricted research grants from EMD Serono, Merck Canada and Ferring Pharmaceuticals. The authors have no potential conflicts of interest to disclose.

摘要

研究问题

不孕患者中使用大麻的比例以及他们对大麻对生育能力影响的看法如何?

总结答案

共有13%的不孕患者在过去一年中使用过大麻,目前的使用情况与患者认为大麻对生育能力和怀孕有负面影响的看法有关。

已知信息

普通人群和孕妇中使用大麻的情况正在增加,特别是在大麻使用合法的地区,尽管大麻对生育能力和怀孕有已知的潜在负面影响。

研究设计、规模、持续时间:2017年7月至2017年9月进行了一项横断面患者调查研究。邀请了一家大学附属医院的生育诊所的患者(n = 290)完成一份书面调查问卷。纳入标准仅限于具备英语阅读能力。没有排除标准。

参与者/材料、环境、方法:在290名被邀请的患者中,270名(93%)同意参与。问题涵盖人口统计学、大麻使用情况、对大麻对生育能力和怀孕影响的看法、因不孕而停止使用大麻的情况以及向医疗保健提供者(HCP)披露大麻使用情况的个人历史。

主要结果及机遇的作用

结果显示,13%的受访者披露在过去一年中使用过大麻(过去一年使用者),38%在过去一年中未使用过大麻但之前使用过(超过一年使用者),49%从未使用过大麻(从未使用者)。三组的基线人口统计学特征相似,但在生育能力和怀孕健康的四项指标上,过去一年使用者相比超过一年使用者和从未使用者,认为负面影响较小(关于怀孕、后代健康、男性生育能力和女性生育能力的问题,P值分别为0.02、0.03、0.01、<0.001)。在过去一年使用者中,72%表示他们已经或将会向其HCP披露使用情况,但只有9.4%报告称他们的HCP实际上已指示他们停止使用。

局限性、谨慎的原因:患者自我报告的调查容易受到报告偏差的影响,可能无法反映实际使用情况和看法。

研究结果的更广泛影响

这项研究表明,大麻使用在不孕患者中很常见。鉴于大麻对怀孕已知的负面影响,作者原本预计了解情况的不孕患者会停止使用大麻,作为他们受孕努力的一部分。由于不孕患者中过去一年使用大麻的比例与加拿大普通人群相似,目前尚不清楚样本人群中使用大麻的比例仅仅是反映了社会的平均使用情况,还是在考虑了那些为提高生育能力而减少使用的人之后,是导致不孕并因此促使寻求生育治疗的一个因素。鉴于担心大麻使用对生育能力的潜在负面影响,且过去一年使用者中只有9%曾被HCP指示停止使用大麻,HCP应该考虑为试图受孕的患者提供关于停止使用大麻的咨询的益处。未来的研究应侧重于分析大麻使用对女性生育能力的影响,并确定不孕患者减少使用大麻是否能提高受孕率。

研究资金/利益冲突:米歇尔·米歇尔,临床研究助理,由多伦多大学GREI奖学金基金资助,该基金由EMD Serono、加拿大默克公司和辉凌制药公司的无限制研究资助赞助。作者没有潜在的利益冲突需要披露。

https://cdn.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/blobs/12d1/7016357/b101e47ffcbc/hoz041f1.jpg

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