Rubenstein Dana, Green Michael J, Sweitzer Maggie M, Keefe Francis J, McClernon F Joseph
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States.
Clinical and Translational Science Institute, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham, NC, United States.
Pain. 2025 Mar 1;166(3):518-526. doi: 10.1097/j.pain.0000000000003381. Epub 2024 Aug 21.
One-fifth of US adults experience chronic pain, which is associated with increased tobacco and cannabis use. Although bidirectional relationships between tobacco and pain have been demonstrated, pathways between pain, cannabis use, and co-use of cannabis and tobacco are understudied. We aimed to estimate the effects of (1) substance use (exclusive and co-use of cannabis and tobacco) on later pain intensity, and (2) pain intensity on later substance use. Data were from 31,983 adults in biennial surveys (2015-2021) of the US nationally representative longitudinal Population Assessment of Tobacco and Health Study (n = 71,055 pairs of consecutive surveys; T1 and T2). Past-week pain intensity was dichotomized (≤4/10 no/low pain; >4/10 moderate/severe pain). Mutually exclusive substance use categories (past 30 days) were no cannabis/tobacco use; exclusive cannabis/tobacco use; and co-use. Logistic regression assessed whether T1 substance use affected moderate/severe pain at T2. Multinomial models assessed whether pain status at T1 affected substance use at T2. Compared with no cannabis/tobacco use at T1, co-use (OR: 2.29 [95% CI: 2.09-2.51]), exclusive tobacco use (2.00 [1.86-2.14]), and exclusive cannabis use (1.35 [1.13-1.61]) were all associated with moderate/severe pain at T2. Moderate/severe pain at T1 increased odds of co-use (2.43 [2.22-2.66]), exclusive tobacco (2.12 [1.98-2.28]), and exclusive cannabis use (1.46 [1.29-1.65]) compared with no cannabis/tobacco use at T2, and increased odds of co-use at T2 compared with exclusive cannabis/tobacco use. Findings demonstrated bidirectional relationships between pain and the exclusive use and co-use of cannabis and tobacco and indicate potential synergy in the co-use of cannabis and tobacco with respect to pain.
五分之一的美国成年人患有慢性疼痛,这与烟草和大麻使用增加有关。尽管烟草与疼痛之间的双向关系已得到证实,但疼痛、大麻使用以及大麻与烟草共同使用之间的路径仍未得到充分研究。我们旨在评估:(1)物质使用(大麻和烟草的单独使用及共同使用)对后期疼痛强度的影响,以及(2)疼痛强度对后期物质使用的影响。数据来自美国具有全国代表性的纵向烟草与健康人口评估研究(n = 71,055对连续调查;T1和T2)2015 - 2021年的两年一次调查中的31,983名成年人。过去一周的疼痛强度被二分法划分(≤4/10为无/低疼痛;>4/10为中度/重度疼痛)。相互排斥的物质使用类别(过去30天)为不使用大麻/烟草;单独使用大麻/烟草;以及共同使用。逻辑回归评估T1期的物质使用是否会影响T2期的中度/重度疼痛。多项模型评估T1期的疼痛状态是否会影响T2期的物质使用。与T1期不使用大麻/烟草相比,共同使用(比值比:2.29 [95%置信区间:2.09 - 2.51])、单独使用烟草(2.00 [1.86 - 2.14])和单独使用大麻(1.35 [1.13 - 1.61])均与T2期的中度/重度疼痛相关。与T2期不使用大麻/烟草相比,T1期的中度/重度疼痛增加了共同使用(2.43 [2.22 - 2.66])、单独使用烟草(2.12 [1.98 - 2.28])和单独使用大麻(1.46 [1.29 - 1.65])的几率,并且与单独使用大麻/烟草相比增加了T2期共同使用的几率。研究结果表明疼痛与大麻和烟草的单独使用及共同使用之间存在双向关系,并表明大麻与烟草共同使用在疼痛方面可能存在协同作用。