Reece Albert Stuart, Bennett Kellie, Hulse Gary Kenneth
Division of Psychiatry, University of Western Australia, Crawley, WA 6009, Australia.
School of Medical and Health Sciences, Edith Cowan University, Joondalup, WA 6027, Australia.
J Xenobiot. 2023 Jul 18;13(3):323-385. doi: 10.3390/jox13030024.
Recent European data facilitate an epidemiological investigation of the controversial cannabis-cancer relationship. Of particular concern were prior findings associating high-dose cannabis use with reproductive problems and potential genetic impacts. Cancer incidence data age-standardised to the world population was obtained from the European Cancer Information System 2000-2020 and many European national cancer registries. Drug use data were obtained from the European Monitoring Centre for Drugs and Drug Addiction. Alcohol and tobacco consumption was sourced from the WHO. Median household income was taken from the World bank. Cancer rates in high-cannabis-use countries were significantly higher than elsewhere (β-estimate = 0.4165, = 3.54 × 10). Eighteen of forty-one cancers (42,675 individual rates) were significantly associated with cannabis exposure at bivariate analysis. Twenty-five cancers were linked in inverse-probability-weighted multivariate models. Temporal lagging in panel models intensified these effects. In multivariable models, cannabis was a more powerful correlate of cancer incidence than tobacco or alcohol. Reproductive toxicity was evidenced by the involvement of testis, ovary, prostate and breast cancers and because some of the myeloid and lymphoid leukaemias implicated occur in childhood, indicating inherited intergenerational genotoxicity. Cannabis is a more important carcinogen than tobacco and alcohol and fulfills epidemiological qualitative and quantitative criteria for causality for 25/41 cancers. Reproductive and transgenerational effects are prominent. These findings confirm the clinical and epidemiological salience of cannabis as a major multigenerational community carcinogen.
欧洲近期的数据有助于对存在争议的大麻与癌症关系进行流行病学调查。特别令人担忧的是先前的研究结果,即高剂量使用大麻与生殖问题和潜在的遗传影响有关。从欧洲癌症信息系统2000 - 2020年以及许多欧洲国家癌症登记处获取了按世界人口年龄标准化的癌症发病率数据。药物使用数据来自欧洲药物和药物成瘾监测中心。酒精和烟草消费数据来自世界卫生组织。家庭收入中位数取自世界银行。大麻高消费国家的癌症发病率显著高于其他地区(β估计值 = 0.4165, = 3.54 × 10)。在双变量分析中,41种癌症中的18种(42,675个个体发病率)与大麻暴露显著相关。在逆概率加权多变量模型中,有25种癌症存在关联。面板模型中的时间滞后强化了这些影响。在多变量模型中,大麻比烟草或酒精更能有力地关联癌症发病率。睾丸癌、卵巢癌、前列腺癌和乳腺癌的发生以及一些涉及的髓系和淋巴系白血病发生在儿童期,这证明了生殖毒性,表明存在遗传的代际基因毒性。大麻是比烟草和酒精更重要的致癌物,并且满足25/41种癌症因果关系的流行病学定性和定量标准。生殖和跨代影响显著。这些发现证实了大麻作为一种主要的多代社区致癌物在临床和流行病学上的重要性。