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与2017年美国国家科学院报告的证据相比,美国的资格条件。

United States' qualifying conditions compared to evidence of the 2017 National Academy of Sciences Report.

作者信息

Stains Elena L, Kennalley Amy L, Tian Maria, Boehnke Kevin F, Kraus Chadd K, Piper Brian J

出版信息

medRxiv. 2024 Jul 10:2023.05.01.23289286. doi: 10.1101/2023.05.01.23289286.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

To compare the 2017 National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (NAS) report to state medical cannabis (MC) laws defining approved qualifying conditions (QC) from 2017 to 2024 and to determine if there exist gaps in evidence-based decision making.

METHODS

The 2017 NAS report assessed therapeutic evidence for over twenty medical conditions treated with MC. We identified the QCs of 38 states (including Washington, D.C.) where MC was legal in 2024. We also identified the QCs that these states used in 2017. QCs were then categorized based on NAS-established level of evidence: substantial/conclusive evidence of effectiveness, moderate evidence of effectiveness, limited evidence of effectiveness, limited evidence of ineffectiveness, and no/insufficient evidence to support or refute effectiveness. This study was completed between January 31, 2023 through May 20, 2024.

RESULTS

Most states listed at least one QC with substantial evidence-80.0% of states in 2017 and 97.0% in 2024. However, in 2024 only 8.3% of the QCs on states' QC lists met the standard of substantial evidence. Of the 20 most popular QCs in the country in 2017 and 2024, one only (chronic pain) was categorized by the NAS as having substantial evidence for effectiveness. However, seven (ALS, Alzheimer's disease, epilepsy, glaucoma, Huntington's disease, Parkinson's disease, spastic spinal cord damage) were rated as either ineffective or insufficient evidence.

CONCLUSION

Most QCs lack evidence for use based on the 2017 NAS report. Many states recommend QCs with little evidence, such as amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), or even those for which MC is ineffective, like depression. There have been insufficient updates to QCs since the NAS report. These findings highlight a disparity between state-level MC recommendations and the evidence to support them.

摘要

目的

比较2017年美国国家科学院、工程院和医学院(NAS)的报告与2017年至2024年各州界定获批合格条件(QC)的医用大麻(MC)法律,并确定循证决策中是否存在差距。

方法

2017年NAS报告评估了MC治疗的二十多种医疗状况的治疗证据。我们确定了2024年MC合法的38个州(包括华盛顿特区)的QC。我们还确定了这些州在2017年使用的QC。然后根据NAS确定的证据水平对QC进行分类:有效性的充分/确凿证据、有效性的中等证据、有效性的有限证据、无效性的有限证据,以及无/不足证据支持或反驳有效性。本研究于2023年1月31日至2024年5月20日完成。

结果

大多数州列出了至少一项有充分证据的QC——2017年80.0%的州,2024年为97.0%。然而,2024年各州QC清单上只有8.3%的QC符合充分证据标准。在2017年和2024年美国最常见的20种QC中,只有一种(慢性疼痛)被NAS归类为有充分的有效性证据。然而,七种(肌萎缩侧索硬化症、阿尔茨海默病、癫痫、青光眼、亨廷顿舞蹈病、帕金森病、痉挛性脊髓损伤)被评为无效或证据不足。

结论

根据2017年NAS报告,大多数QC缺乏使用证据。许多州推荐的QC证据很少,如肌萎缩侧索硬化症(ALS),甚至是MC无效的疾病,如抑郁症。自NAS报告以来,QC的更新不足。这些发现凸显了州级MC建议与支持它们的证据之间的差距。

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