Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA, USA; Institute for Addiction Science, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Department of Population and Public Health Sciences, University of Southern California Keck School of Medicine, Los Angeles, CA, USA; Institute for Addiction Science, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
Addict Behav. 2024 Nov;158:108106. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2024.108106. Epub 2024 Jul 19.
Prospective associations of adolescent cannabis use with nicotine use persistence are not well characterized but are important for informing prevention and policy. This study examined the association of 4 types of cannabis product use with subsequent persistent nicotine product use among adolescents.
We used prospective data from an adolescent cohort (14-17 years) from Southern California surveyed at baseline and at approximately 6-month follow-up (2022-2023). We incorporated three mutually non-exclusive analytic samples comprised of individuals with baseline past 6-month use of: (1) any nicotine product (N=308 [mean[SD] age = 16.3[0.6] years]), (2) e-cigarettes (n = 276), and (3) any combustible tobacco product (n = 137). Baseline past 6-month cannabis smoking, vaping, edible use, cannabidiol [CBD] or hemp product use, and any cannabis product use (yes/no) were separately modeled as predictors of past 6-month persistent use of any nicotine products, e-cigarettes, and combustible tobacco at follow-up.
Baseline use of any cannabis product was associated with increased odds of persistent use of e-cigarettes or any nicotine product (adjusted odds ratio[OR] range: 1.96-2.66). Cannabis smoking was positively associated with persistent any nicotine product use (adjusted OR=2.19, 95 % CI=1.20-4.02). Cannabis smoking, vaping, and edible use predicted persistent use of e-cigarettes (adjusted OR range: 2.22-2.79). Cannabis product use did not predict combustible tobacco use persistence. Associations of CBD/hemp product use with nicotine use persistence outcomes were all non-significant.
Adolescents who use cannabis may be at elevated risk for persistent nicotine use.
青少年吸食大麻与尼古丁使用持续存在的前瞻性关联尚未得到充分描述,但对于告知预防和政策制定非常重要。本研究调查了 4 种大麻产品使用与青少年随后持续使用尼古丁产品之间的关联。
我们使用了来自南加州青少年队列(14-17 岁)的前瞻性数据,该队列在基线和大约 6 个月的随访期(2022-2023 年)进行了调查。我们纳入了三个相互不排他的分析样本,包括基线过去 6 个月使用以下三种产品的个体:(1)任何尼古丁产品(N=308[平均[SD]年龄=16.3[0.6]岁])、(2)电子烟和(3)任何可燃烟草产品(n=137)。分别将基线过去 6 个月吸食大麻、吸食大麻、吸食大麻、吸食大麻 CBD[大麻二酚]或大麻素产品以及任何大麻产品使用(是/否)作为预测因子,用于预测随访时过去 6 个月持续使用任何尼古丁产品、电子烟和可燃烟草产品。
基线使用任何大麻产品与持续使用电子烟或任何尼古丁产品的几率增加相关(调整后的优势比[OR]范围:1.96-2.66)。吸食大麻与持续使用任何尼古丁产品呈正相关(调整后的 OR=2.19,95%CI=1.20-4.02)。吸食大麻、吸食大麻和吸食大麻食品可预测电子烟的持续使用(调整后的 OR 范围:2.22-2.79)。大麻产品使用与可燃烟草产品使用持续存在无关。大麻素产品使用与尼古丁使用持续存在结果的关联均无统计学意义。
使用大麻的青少年可能有更高的持续使用尼古丁的风险。