Canopy Growth Corporation, Smiths Falls, Ontario, Canada.
Cannabis Cannabinoid Res. 2024 Aug;9(4):967-978. doi: 10.1089/can.2022.0340. Epub 2023 Aug 11.
A growing number of females report consuming cannabis products. There is a paucity of data on sex differences in safety and subjective effects after repeated use of varying oral doses of Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC; the primary psychoactive constituent of cannabis). Data were from two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, multiple-dose, between-subject trials of two THC-containing oral cannabis products. Healthy adults received placebo, low-dose THC (∼2.5 or ∼5 mg per dose), or high-dose THC (∼7.5 or ∼10 mg per dose) twice daily for 7 days. There were 38 males (8 placebo, 17 low-dose THC, 13 high-dose THC) and 46 females (8 placebo, 17 low-dose THC, 21 high-dose THC). Analyses compared adverse events (AEs) and subjective effects between males and females, by THC dose. In the placebo and low-dose THC groups, there were no sex differences in the relative rate of AEs. In the high-dose THC group, females versus males reported 3.08 (95% confidence interval [CI]=1.31-8.33) times as many AEs. There were no significant interactions of sex×low-dose THC group for any subjective effect. In the high-dose THC group, females versus males reported greater "relaxed" ratings (=15.14, 95% CI=1.44-28.84, =0.027), whereas in the placebo group, males versus females reported greater ratings of "liking the effect" (=-30.01, 95% CI=2.77-57.26, =0.028). Although analyses were underpowered to assess the sex×THC dose×day interaction, the initial sex disparity in AEs and some subjective effects in the high-dose THC group appeared to shrink after the first day. In this exploratory analysis, sex differences in some responses to oral THC were nuanced. Females appeared more sensitive than males to AEs and some subjective effects at higher but not lower doses. Males reported higher ratings than females on some subjective effects in response to placebo. Initial sex differences in response to higher doses of oral THC tended to diminish over 7 days of dosing. If replicated, findings could help inform sex-specific dosing strategies of medical cannabis products and could help educate medical cannabis patients on any temporality of effects.
越来越多的女性报告说她们消费大麻制品。但是对于重复使用不同剂量的 Δ9-四氢大麻酚(THC;大麻的主要精神活性成分)后,安全性和主观影响方面的性别差异,数据仍然很少。这些数据来自两项随机、双盲、安慰剂对照、多剂量、个体间试验,涉及两种含有 THC 的口服大麻制品。健康成年人每天接受两次安慰剂、低剂量 THC(∼2.5 或 ∼5 毫克/剂量)或高剂量 THC(∼7.5 或 ∼10 毫克/剂量),持续 7 天。其中有 38 名男性(8 名安慰剂,17 名低剂量 THC,13 名高剂量 THC)和 46 名女性(8 名安慰剂,17 名低剂量 THC,21 名高剂量 THC)。分析比较了男性和女性之间的不良事件(AE)和主观影响,按 THC 剂量进行分析。在安慰剂和低剂量 THC 组中,AE 的相对发生率在性别之间没有差异。在高剂量 THC 组中,女性报告的 AE 是男性的 3.08 倍(95%置信区间[CI]=1.31-8.33)。对于任何主观影响,性别×低剂量 THC 组之间都没有显著的相互作用。在高剂量 THC 组中,女性报告的“放松”评分高于男性(=15.14,95%CI=1.44-28.84,=0.027),而在安慰剂组中,男性报告的“喜欢这种效果”的评分高于女性(=-30.01,95%CI=2.77-57.26,=0.028)。尽管分析的效力不足以评估 AE 和一些主观影响的性别×THC 剂量×天的相互作用,但在高剂量 THC 组中,AE 和一些主观影响的最初性别差异在第一天后似乎缩小了。在这项探索性分析中,口服 THC 反应的一些性别差异很细微。女性似乎比男性对高剂量但不是低剂量的 AE 和一些主观影响更敏感。男性在安慰剂反应中报告的某些主观影响评分高于女性。在接受高剂量口服 THC 的 7 天期间,对较高剂量的初始性别差异往往会减少。如果得到复制,这些发现可以帮助为医用大麻制品制定特定性别的剂量策略,并帮助教育医用大麻患者有关任何效应的时效性。