| Literature DB >> 21363868 |
Rebecca Kuepper1, Jim van Os, Roselind Lieb, Hans-Ulrich Wittchen, Michael Höfler, Cécile Henquet.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether use of cannabis in adolescence increases the risk for psychotic outcomes by affecting the incidence and persistence of subclinical expression of psychosis in the general population (that is, expression of psychosis below the level required for a clinical diagnosis).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21363868 PMCID: PMC3047001 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.d738
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138

Fig 1 Study design. Top: testing association between incident cannabis use with onset in period from baseline to T2 and incident psychotic symptoms with onset in period from T2 to T3 in individuals who had not used cannabis at baseline and who had not reported any psychotic experience at T2 (that is, no lifetime psychotic experiences by T2). Bottom: testing association between different cannabis exposure states (combinations of cannabis use at baseline (lifetime), or T2 or both (interval) and persistence of psychotic experiences (that is, presence of psychotic experiences at both T2 (lifetime) and T3 (interval))

Fig 2 Response rates and reasons for loss to follow-up
Characteristics of participants by use of cannabis at T2 (3.5 years after baseline) (n=1923). Figures are numbers (percentages)
| Used cannabis (n=393) | Did not use cannabis (n=1530) | |
|---|---|---|
| Men | 119 (30) | 807 (53) |
| Women | 274 (70) | 723 (47) |
| Socioeconomic status*: | ||
| Lower | 30 (7) | 85 (6) |
| Middle | 220 (54) | 894 (59) |
| Upper | 137 (34) | 524 (35) |
| Other | 22 (5) | 6 (0.4) |
| Urban/rural environment†: | ||
| Urban | 295 (75) | 1050 (69) |
| Rural | 98 (25) | 480 (31) |
| Childhood trauma‡: | ||
| Yes | 97 (25) | 266 (17) |
| No | 296 (75) | 1264 (83) |
| Use of other drugs at baseline§: | ||
| Yes | 25 (6) | 11 (1) |
| No | 368 (94) | 1519 (99) |
| Use of other drugs at T2§: | ||
| Yes | 40 (10) | 3 (0.2) |
| No | 353 (90) | 1527 (99) |
| Any psychiatric disorder at baseline**¶: | ||
| Yes | 76 (19) | 180 (12) |
| No | 317 (81) | 1350 (88) |
*Socioeconomic status: lower (lower class, lower middle class), middle (middle middle class), upper (higher middle class, upper class), other (none of the above or missing). Data missing for five participants.
†Urban (city of Munich, 10 559/km2), rural (surroundings of Munich, 1432/km2).
‡Childhood trauma: any traumatic experience during childhood.
§On more than five occasions.
¶Other than psychosis, according to M-CIDI diagnoses.
Patterns of cannabis use in relation to presence of psychotic symptoms* at T2 (3.5 years after baseline) and T3 (8.4 years after baseline) in risk set (n=1923). Figures are numbers (percentage†) of participants
| Cannabis use‡ | Psychotic symptoms at T2 | Psychotic symptoms at T3 | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | No | Yes | No | ||
| Yes | 81 (4) | 166 (9) | 42 (2) | 205 (11) | |
| No | 355 (18) | 1321 (69) | 189 (10) | 1487 (77) | |
| Yes | 126 (7) | 267 (14) | 69 (4) | 324 (17) | |
| No | 310 (16) | 1220 (64) | 162 (8) | 1368 (71) | |
*Any psychotic symptom lifetime (T2) and interval (T3) as assessed with M-CIDI (G) section.
†Some percentages do not total 100 because of rounding.
‡On more than five occasions as assessed with M-CIDI (L) section.
Association between incident cannabis use at T2 (3.5 years after baseline) and incident psychotic experiences at T3 (8.4 years after baseline) Figures are odds ratios (95% confidence intervals) and P values
| Cannabis use at T2 | Risk of psychotic experiences at T3 | |
|---|---|---|
| Unadjusted | Adjusted* | |
| Whole sample | 1.8 (1.3 to 2.4), <0.001 | 1.5 (1.1 to 2.1), 0.018 |
| After exclusion† | 2.1 (1.3 to 3.4), 0.004 | 1.9 (1.1 to 3.1), 0.021 |
*Adjusted for age, sex, socioeconomic status, use of other drugs, childhood trauma, and urban/rural environment.
†Excludes individuals with baseline cannabis use and pre-existing psychotic symptoms.
Course of psychotic experiences in relation to level of continued cannabis use at T2 (3.5 years after baseline) and T3 (8.4 years after baseline). Figures are numbers (percentages) of participants
| Cannabis continuation | Psychotic experiences at follow-up | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| None | At T2 or T3 | At T2 and T3 | |
| No use | 1071 (75) | 303 (21) | 64 (4) |
| At baseline but not at T2 | 59 (64) | 25 (27) | 8 (9) |
| At T2 but not at baseline | 144 (60) | 75 (32) | 19 (8) |
| At baseline and T2 | 90 (58) | 48 (31) | 17 (11) |
Association between continued use of cannabis (over period from baseline to T2) and persistence* of psychotic experiences over period from T2 to T3. Figures are odds ratios (95% confidence intervals) and P values
| Cannabis continuation | Risk of persistence of psychotic experiences | |
|---|---|---|
| Unadjusted | Adjusted† | |
| No use | 1 | 1 |
| At baseline but not at T2 | 2.0 (0.95 to 4.4), 0.068 | 2.1 (0.9 to 4.7), 0.078 |
| At T2 but not at baseline | 1.9 (1.1 to 3.2), 0.022 | 1.4 (0.8 to 2.5), 0.202 |
| At baseline and T2 | 2.6 (1.5 to 4.6), 0.001 | 2.2 (1.2 to 4.2), 0.016 |
*Persistence of psychotic experiences; present at T2 and T3.
†Adjusted for age, sex, socioeconomic status, use of other drugs baseline and T2, childhood trauma, and urban/rural environment.

Fig 3 Cannabis-psychosis persistence model. Person A has normal developmental expression of subthreshold psychotic experiences that are mild and transient. Person B has similar expression but longer persistence because of additional environmental exposure (here cannabis). Person C has prolonged persistence and subsequent transition to clinical psychotic disorder because of repeated environmental exposure—that is, repeated cannabis use