Department of Psychiatry, Perelman School of Medicine, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Veterans Integrated Service Network 4 Mental Illness Research, Education, and Clinical Center at the Philadelphia VA Medical Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
JAMA Psychiatry. 2018 Jun 1;75(6):585-595. doi: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2018.0335.
Substantial shifts in perception and policy regarding cannabis have recently occurred, with use of cannabis increasing while its perceived harm decreases. One possible risk of increased cannabis use is poorer cognitive functioning, especially in youth.
To provide the first quantitative synthesis of the literature examining cannabis and cognitive functioning in adolescents and young adults (with a mean age of 26 years and younger).
PubMed, PsycInfo, Academic Search Premier, Scopus, and bibliographies of relevant reviews were searched for peer-reviewed, English-language studies from the date the databases began through May 2017.
Consensus criteria were used to determine study inclusion through abstract and manuscript review.
This study followed Meta-analysis of Observational Studies in Epidemiology guidelines. Effect size estimates were calculated using multivariate mixed-effects models for cognitive functioning outcomes classified into 10 domains.
Results from neurocognitive tests administered in cross-sectional studies were primary outcomes, and we examined the influence of a priori explanatory variables on variability in effect size.
Sixty-nine studies of 2152 cannabis users (mean [SD] age, 20.6 [2.8] years; 1472 [68.4%] male) and 6575 comparison participants with minimal cannabis exposure were included (mean [SD] age, 20.8 [3.4]; 3669 [55.8%] male). Results indicated a small overall effect size (presented as mean d) for reduced cognitive functioning associated with frequent or heavy cannabis use (d, -0.25; 95% CI, -0.32 to -0.17; P < .001). The magnitude of effect sizes did not vary by sample age or age at cannabis use onset. However, studies requiring an abstinence period longer than 72 hours (15 studies; n = 928) had an overall effect size (d, -0.08; 95% CI, -0.22 to 0.07) that was not significantly different from 0 and smaller than studies with less stringent abstinence criteria (54 studies; n = 7799; d, -0.30; 95% CI, -0.37 to -0.22; P = .01).
Associations between cannabis use and cognitive functioning in cross-sectional studies of adolescents and young adults are small and may be of questionable clinical importance for most individuals. Furthermore, abstinence of longer than 72 hours diminishes cognitive deficits associated with cannabis use. Although other outcomes (eg, psychosis) were not examined in the included studies, results indicate that previous studies of cannabis in youth may have overstated the magnitude and persistence of cognitive deficits associated with use. Reported deficits may reflect residual effects from acute use or withdrawal. Future studies should examine individual differences in susceptibility to cannabis-associated cognitive dysfunction.
最近,人们对大麻的看法和政策发生了重大转变,大麻的使用量增加,而其感知到的危害却降低了。大麻使用量增加的一个可能风险是认知功能下降,尤其是在年轻人中。
提供首次对青少年和年轻成年人(平均年龄 26 岁及以下)大麻使用与认知功能的文献进行定量综合分析。
从数据库开始到 2017 年 5 月,通过 PubMed、PsycInfo、Academic Search Premier、Scopus 和相关综述的参考文献搜索了同行评议的英文文献。
通过摘要和手稿审查使用共识标准来确定研究纳入标准。
本研究遵循观察性研究的荟萃分析流行病学指南。使用多元混合效应模型计算认知功能结果的效应大小估计值,这些结果分为 10 个领域。
横断面研究中使用神经认知测试的结果是主要结果,我们研究了先验解释变量对效应大小变异性的影响。
纳入了 2152 名大麻使用者(平均[标准差]年龄 20.6[2.8]岁;1472[68.4%]名男性)和 6575 名接触大麻最小的对照参与者(平均[标准差]年龄 20.8[3.4]岁;3669[55.8%]名男性)的 69 项研究。结果表明,频繁或大量使用大麻与认知功能下降相关的整体效应大小较小(表示为平均 d)(d,-0.25;95%置信区间,-0.32 至-0.17;P<0.001)。效应大小的大小与样本年龄或大麻使用起始年龄无关。然而,需要 72 小时以上禁欲期的研究(15 项研究;n=928)的整体效应大小(d,-0.08;95%置信区间,-0.22 至 0.07)与 0 无显著差异,且小于禁欲标准较宽松的研究(54 项研究;n=7799;d,-0.30;95%置信区间,-0.37 至-0.22;P=0.01)。
青少年和年轻成年人横断面研究中大麻使用与认知功能之间的关联较小,对大多数人来说可能具有可疑的临床重要性。此外,72 小时以上的禁欲会减少与大麻使用相关的认知缺陷。尽管纳入的研究中未检查其他结果(例如精神病),但结果表明,以前对青少年大麻的研究可能夸大了与使用相关的认知缺陷的程度和持久性。报告的缺陷可能反映了急性使用或戒断的残留影响。未来的研究应检查对大麻相关认知功能障碍易感性的个体差异。