Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC 27705, United States; Clinical and Translational Science Institute, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC 27705, United States.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC 27705, United States; Clinical and Translational Science Institute, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC 27705, United States.
Addict Behav. 2023 Nov;146:107814. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2023.107814. Epub 2023 Jul 24.
Rates of tobacco and cannabis use are disproportionately high among individuals with pain, and evidence suggests that pain may engender greater likelihood of substance co-use, yielding additive risk. This study examined national associations of pain with past-month tobacco use, cannabis use, and co-use of tobacco and cannabis.
Data came from a nationally representative US sample of adults in Wave 5 (2018-2019) of the Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health study (N = 32,014). The sample included civilian, non-institutionalized people who use tobacco and people who do not use tobacco. Past-week pain intensity (0-10) was dichotomized (0-4 no/low pain; 5-10 moderate/severe pain). Multinomial models adjusted for demographics examined substance use category membership (no tobacco or cannabis use, exclusive cannabis use, exclusive tobacco use, co-use) as a function of pain status.
Moderate/severe pain was associated with increased relative risk of exclusive tobacco use (RRR [CI] 2.26 [2.05, 2.49], p <.001), exclusive cannabis use (1.49 [1.22, 1.82], p <.001), and co-use of tobacco and cannabis (2.79 [2.51, 3.10], p <.001), in comparison to no tobacco or cannabis use. Additionally, moderate/severe pain was associated with increased risk of co-use compared to exclusive tobacco use (1.23 [1.11, 1.37], p <.001) and exclusive cannabis use (1.88 [1.54, 2.29], p <.001).
Findings suggest that not only is pain independently associated with greater risk of exclusively using tobacco or cannabis, but pain is also associated with heightened risk of co-using both products. Future work should examine the dynamic and potentially bidirectional relationships between pain and use of cannabis and tobacco.
在有疼痛的人群中,烟草和大麻的使用率不成比例地高,有证据表明疼痛可能会增加物质共同使用的可能性,从而增加风险。本研究调查了疼痛与过去一个月内吸烟、使用大麻以及同时使用烟草和大麻的全国性关联。
数据来自于 2018-2019 年美国人口烟草健康评估研究第五波(Wave 5)的全国代表性成年人样本(N=32014)。该样本包括使用烟草和不使用烟草的平民和非机构化人群。过去一周的疼痛强度(0-10)分为(0-4 为无/低疼痛;5-10 为中度/严重疼痛)。多变量模型调整了人口统计学因素,考察了物质使用类别的成员身份(不使用烟草或大麻、仅使用大麻、仅使用烟草、同时使用烟草和大麻)作为疼痛状况的函数。
中度/严重疼痛与使用烟草的相对风险增加有关(RRR [CI] 2.26 [2.05, 2.49],p<.001)、与使用大麻的相对风险增加有关(1.49 [1.22, 1.82],p<.001)、与同时使用烟草和大麻的相对风险增加有关(2.79 [2.51, 3.10],p<.001),与不使用烟草或大麻相比。此外,与仅使用烟草相比(1.23 [1.11, 1.37],p<.001),中度/严重疼痛与共同使用的风险增加有关,与仅使用大麻相比(1.88 [1.54, 2.29],p<.001)。
研究结果表明,疼痛不仅与单独使用烟草或大麻的风险增加独立相关,而且与同时使用两种产品的风险增加相关。未来的工作应该研究疼痛和使用大麻和烟草之间的动态和潜在的双向关系。