Allick Aliyah, Park Grace, Kim Kwon, Vintimilla Michelle, Rathod Krutika, Lebo Rachael, Nanavati Julie, Hammond Christopher J
Division of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Front Psychiatry. 2021 Dec 1;12:745193. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.745193. eCollection 2021.
Adolescent-onset cannabis use is rising in the era of marijuana legalization. Recent imaging studies have identified neuroanatomical differences between adult cannabis users and controls that are more prominent in early-onset users. Other studies point to sex-dependent effects of cannabis. A systematic review following PRISMA guidelines and subsequent effect-size seed-based d mapping (SDM) meta-analyses were conducted to investigate relationships between age (across the 12-to-21-year-old developmental window), sex, and gray matter volume (GMV) differences between cannabis using (CU) and typically developing (TD) youth. Our search identified 1,326 citations, 24 of which were included in a qualitative analysis. A total of 6 whole-brain voxel-based morphometry (VBM) studies comparing regional GMV between 357 CU [mean (SD) age = 16.68 (1.28); 71% male] and 404 TD [mean (SD) age = 16.77 (1.36); 63% male] youth were included in the SDM-meta-analysis. Meta-analysis of whole-brain VBM studies identified no regions showing significant GMV difference between CU and TD youth. Meta-regressions showed divergent effects of age and sex on cortical GMV differences in CU vs. TD youth. Age effects were seen in the superior temporal gyrus (STG), with older-aged CU youth showing decreased and younger-aged CU youth showing increased STG GMV compared to age-matched TD youth. Parallel findings in the STG were also observed in relation to duration of CU (years) in supplemental meta-regressions. Regarding sex effects, a higher proportion of females in studies was associated with increased GMV in the middle occipital gyrus in CU vs. TD youth. These findings suggest that GMV differences between CU and TD youth, if present, are subtle, and may vary as a function of age, cumulative cannabis exposure, and sex in young people. Whether age- and sex-related GMV differences are attributable to common predispositional factors, cannabis-induced neuroadaptive changes, or both warrant further investigation.
在大麻合法化的时代,青少年期开始使用大麻的情况正在增加。最近的影像学研究已经确定成年大麻使用者与对照组之间存在神经解剖学差异,这些差异在早发型使用者中更为明显。其他研究指出了大麻对性别的依赖性影响。我们遵循PRISMA指南进行了一项系统综述,并随后进行了基于效应量种子的d映射(SDM)元分析,以研究年龄(在12至21岁的发育窗口内)、性别以及大麻使用(CU)青少年与正常发育(TD)青少年之间的灰质体积(GMV)差异之间的关系。我们的搜索共识别出1326条引文,其中24条被纳入定性分析。共有6项基于体素的全脑形态测量(VBM)研究比较了357名CU青少年[平均(标准差)年龄 = 16.68(1.28);71%为男性]和404名TD青少年[平均(标准差)年龄 = 16.77(1.36);63%为男性]之间的区域GMV,这些研究被纳入SDM元分析。全脑VBM研究的元分析未发现CU青少年和TD青少年之间存在显著GMV差异的区域。元回归显示年龄和性别对CU青少年与TD青少年皮质GMV差异有不同影响。在颞上回(STG)观察到年龄效应,与年龄匹配的TD青少年相比,年龄较大的CU青少年STG的GMV降低,而年龄较小的CU青少年STG的GMV增加。在补充元回归中,关于CU持续时间(年),在STG中也观察到了类似的结果。关于性别效应,研究中女性比例较高与CU青少年相对于TD青少年枕中回GMV增加有关。这些发现表明,CU青少年和TD青少年之间的GMV差异(如果存在)是细微的,并且可能因年轻人的年龄、累积大麻暴露和性别而有所不同。年龄和性别相关的GMV差异是归因于共同的易患因素、大麻诱导的神经适应性变化,还是两者兼而有之,值得进一步研究。