Foster Katherine T, Arterberry Brooke J, Zucker Robert A, Hicks Brian M
University of Washington, Department of Psychology, United States; University of Washington, Department of Global Health, United States.
Iowa State University, Department of Psychology, United States; Center for the Study of Drugs, Alcohol, Smoking and Health, School of Nursing, University of Michigan, United States; University of Michigan, Department of Psychiatry, United States.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2021 Sep 1;226:108887. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2021.108887. Epub 2021 Jun 26.
Regular cannabis use, even without cannabis use disorder (CUD), is associated with numerous biopsychosocial problems. Biopsychosocial risk factors that precede regular use and CUD might reflect broader pre-existing risk factors rather than the consequence of cannabis use. We aimed to (1) replicate prior work differentiating psychosocial problems associated with regular cannabis use with or without CUD relative to no-use in adulthood, and (2) test if these use groups differed in biopsychosocial functioning in early and middle childhood.
Biopsychosocial characteristics of individuals at-risk for substance use problems (n = 402) reporting no-use, regular use without CUD, and regular use with CUD by young adulthood were prospectively compared during early childhood (ages 3-5), middle childhood (ages 9-11) and young adulthood (ages 18-25).
Regular use (vs. no-use) was associated with more health problems (mean d = |0.57|), psychopathology (mean d = |0.72|), social and family environment risk (mean d = |0.88|) in childhood and adulthood and comorbid substance use in adulthood (mean d = |1.25|). Regular use with and without CUD was linked to similar, developmentally-persistent patterns of problems across domains.
We found that childhood risk factors present many years prior to cannabis initiation (as early as age 3) differentiated patterns of adult cannabis use and CUD status in adulthood. Therefore, biopsychosocial impairments associated with regular cannabis use in adulthood is not solely attributable to cannabis exposure but can be traced back to early and persistent biopsychosocial risk that may benefit from early behavioral intervention, irrespective of CUD diagnosis.
经常使用大麻,即使没有大麻使用障碍(CUD),也与众多生物心理社会问题相关。在经常使用大麻和CUD之前的生物心理社会风险因素可能反映了更广泛的预先存在的风险因素,而非大麻使用的后果。我们旨在:(1)重复之前的研究,区分成年期与经常使用大麻(无论有无CUD)相关的心理社会问题与不使用大麻的情况;(2)测试这些使用组在儿童早期和中期的生物心理社会功能是否存在差异。
前瞻性比较了有物质使用问题风险的个体(n = 402)在儿童早期(3 - 5岁)、儿童中期(9 - 11岁)和青年期(18 - 25岁)报告的不使用、无CUD的经常使用以及有CUD的经常使用大麻的生物心理社会特征。
经常使用大麻(与不使用相比)与儿童期和成年期更多的健康问题(平均d = |0.57|)、精神病理学问题(平均d = |0.72|)、社会和家庭环境风险(平均d = |0.88|)以及成年期的共病物质使用(平均d = |1.25|)相关。有无CUD的经常使用大麻与各领域相似的、具有发展持续性的问题模式相关。
我们发现,在开始使用大麻(早在3岁)之前多年就存在的儿童期风险因素区分了成年期大麻使用模式和CUD状态。因此,成年期与经常使用大麻相关的生物心理社会损害并非仅归因于大麻暴露,而是可追溯到早期且持续存在的生物心理社会风险,无论CUD诊断如何,这些风险可能受益于早期行为干预。