Beyer Emillie, Poudel Govinda, Antonopoulos Stephanie, Thomson Hannah, Lorenzetti Valentina
Neuroscience of Addiction and Mental Health Program, Healthy Brain and Mind Research Centre, School of Behavioural and Health Sciences, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Mary MacKillop Institute for Health Research, Australian Catholic University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
Front Behav Neurosci. 2024 Feb 6;17:1323609. doi: 10.3389/fnbeh.2023.1323609. eCollection 2023.
Cannabis is one of the most widely used psychoactive substances globally. Cannabis use can be associated with alterations of reward processing, including affective flattening, apathy, anhedonia, and lower sensitivity to natural rewards in conjunction with higher sensitivity to cannabis-related rewards. Such alterations have been posited to be driven by changes in underlying brain reward pathways, as per prominent neuroscientific theories of addiction. Functional neuroimaging (fMRI) studies have examined brain reward function in cannabis users via the monetary incentive delay (MID) fMRI task; however, this evidence is yet to be systematically synthesised.
We aimed to systematically integrate the evidence on brain reward function in cannabis users examined by the MID fMRI task; and in relation to metrics of cannabis exposure (e.g., dosage, frequency) and other behavioural variables.
We pre-registered the review in PROSPERO and reported it using PRISMA guidelines. Literature searches were conducted in PsycINFO, PubMed, Medline, CINAHL, and Scopus.
Nine studies were included, comprising 534 people with mean ages 16-to-28 years, of which 255 were people who use cannabis daily or almost daily, and 279 were controls. The fMRI literature to date led to largely non-significant group differences. A few studies reported group differences in the ventral striatum while participants anticipated rewards and losses; and in the caudate while participants received neutral outcomes. A few studies examined correlations between brain function and withdrawal, dosage, and age of onset; and reported inconsistent findings.
There is emerging but inconsistent evidence of altered brain reward function in cannabis users examined with the MID fMRI task. Future fMRI studies are required to confirm if the brain reward system is altered in vulnerable cannabis users who experience a Cannabis Use Disorder, as postulated by prominent neuroscientific theories of addiction.
大麻是全球使用最广泛的精神活性物质之一。使用大麻可能与奖赏处理的改变有关,包括情感平淡、冷漠、快感缺失,以及对自然奖赏的敏感性降低,同时对与大麻相关的奖赏敏感性增加。根据著名的成瘾神经科学理论,这种改变被认为是由潜在的大脑奖赏通路变化驱动的。功能神经影像学(fMRI)研究通过金钱激励延迟(MID)fMRI任务检查了大麻使用者的大脑奖赏功能;然而,这一证据尚未得到系统的综合。
我们旨在系统地整合通过MID fMRI任务检查的大麻使用者大脑奖赏功能的证据;以及与大麻暴露指标(如剂量、频率)和其他行为变量相关的证据。
我们在PROSPERO中预先注册了该综述,并按照PRISMA指南进行报告。在PsycINFO、PubMed、Medline、CINAHL和Scopus中进行了文献检索。
纳入了9项研究,共534人,平均年龄为16至28岁,其中255人每天或几乎每天使用大麻,279人为对照组。迄今为止的fMRI文献在很大程度上显示出无显著的组间差异。一些研究报告了在参与者预期奖赏和损失时腹侧纹状体的组间差异;以及在参与者接受中性结果时尾状核的组间差异。一些研究检查了脑功能与戒断、剂量和发病年龄之间的相关性,并报告了不一致的结果。
有新出现但不一致的证据表明,通过MID fMRI任务检查的大麻使用者大脑奖赏功能发生了改变。未来需要进行fMRI研究,以确认大脑奖赏系统是否如著名的成瘾神经科学理论所假设的那样,在患有大麻使用障碍的易患大麻使用者中发生改变。