4.6 Article

Cannabis use and psychosis: A longitudinal population-based study

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF EPIDEMIOLOGY
卷 156, 期 4, 页码 319-327

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OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
DOI: 10.1093/aje/kwf043

关键词

cannabis; drug utilization; psychoses; substance-induced; psychotic disorders; schizophrenia

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Cannabis use may increase the risk of psychotic disorders and result in a poor prognosis for those with an established vulnerability to psychosis. A 3-year follow-up (1997-1999) is reported of a general population of 4,045 psychosis-free persons and of 59 subjects in the Netherlands with a baseline diagnosis of psychotic disorder. Substance use was assessed at baseline, 1-year follow-up, and 3-year follow-up, Baseline cannabis use predicted the presence at follow-up of any level of psychotic symptoms (adjusted odds ratio (OR) = 2 76, 95% confidence interval (Cl): 1.18, 6.47), as well as a severe level of psychotic symptoms (OR = 24.17, 95% Cl: 5.44, 107.46), and clinician assessment of the need for care for psychotic symptoms (OR = 12.01, 95% Cl: 2.24, 64.34). The effect of baseline cannabis use was stronger than the effect at 1-year and 3-year follow-up, and more than 50% of the psychosis diagnoses could be attributed to cannabis use. On the additive scale, the effect of cannabis use was much stronger in those with a baseline diagnosis of psychotic disorder (risk difference, 54.7%) than in those without (risk difference, 2.2%; p for interaction = 0.001). Results confirm previous suggestions that cannabis use increases the risk of both the incidence of psychosis in psychosis-free persons and a poor prognosis for those with an established vulnerability to psychotic disorder.

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