| Literature DB >> 22907121 |
Berend Malchow1, Alkomiet Hasan, Paolo Fusar-Poli, Andrea Schmitt, Peter Falkai, Thomas Wobrock.
Abstract
Substance abuse is the most prevalent comorbid psychiatric condition associated with schizophrenia, and cannabis is the illicit drug most often abused. Apart from worsening the course of schizophrenia, frequent cannabis use especially at an early age seems to be an important risk factor for developing schizophrenia. Although a large body of neuroimaging studies gives evidence for structural alterations in many different brain regions in schizophrenia patients, there is still limited knowledge of the impact of cannabis abuse on brain structure in schizophrenia. We performed a systematic review including structural magnetic resonance imaging studies comparing high-risk and schizophrenia patients with and without cannabis abuse and found inconclusive results. While there is some evidence that chronic cannabis abuse could alter brain morphology in schizophrenia in patients continuing their cannabis consumption, there is no convincing evidence that this alteration takes place before the onset of schizophrenia when looking at first-episode patients. There is some weak evidence that cannabis abuse could affect brain structures in high-risk subjects, but replication of these studies is needed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22907121 PMCID: PMC3560946 DOI: 10.1007/s00406-012-0346-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Arch Psychiatry Clin Neurosci ISSN: 0940-1334 Impact factor: 5.270
Overview of structural magnetic resonance imaging studies in first-episode (FES) or early-onset (EOS) schizophrenia and comorbid cannabis abuse
| Study | Methods | Design | Participants | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cahn et al. [ | sMRI, 1.5 Tesla, 1.2 mm thickness; ROI; VBM | Cross-sectional | First-episode schizophrenia with ( | No difference in volumes of total white or grey matter, cerebellum and caudate; reduced asymmetry of the lateral ventricles in the SZ-SUD-subgroup |
| Szesko et al. [ | sMRI, 1.5 Tesla, 1.5 mm thickness; ROI | Cross-sectional | First-episode schizophrenia with ( | Cannabis abuse is associated with less anterior cingulate grey matter; no grey matter volume loss in frontal temporal gyrus or orbitofrontal gyrus |
| Bangalore et al. [ | sMRI, 1.5 Tesla, 1.5 mm thickness; VBM, a priori single mask consisting of hypothesized CB1-rich regions (bilaterally) that included DLPFC, hippocampus, posterior cingulate and cerebellum | Cross-sectional | First-episode schizophrenia with ( | Decrease in grey matter density in the right posterior cingulate cortex (PCC) in SZ-SUD |
| Rais et al. [ | sMRI, 1.5 Tesla, 1.2 mm thickness; VBM | Cross-sectional and Longitudinal | First-episode schizophrenia with ( | No morphological difference between the two groups at the beginning of the study at five-year follow-up SZ-SUD shows more pronounced brain volume reduction and larger increase in lateral and third ventricle volumes than SZ-NSUD |
| Peters et al. [ | sMRI, DTI | Cross-sectional | Male ROS ( | ROS with cannabis use before the age of 17 showed increased directional coherence in the bilateral uncinate fasciculus, anterior internal capsule and frontal white matter. These abnormalities were absent in FOS without cannabis use before the age of 17 |
| Wobrock et al. [ | sMRI, 1.5 Tesla, 1.0 mm thickness; ROI | Cross-sectional | First-episode schizophrenia (recent-onset psychosis) with ( | No differences in the assessed temporolimbic brain morphology (superior temporal gyrus (STG), amygdala–hippocampus complex and cingulum) between the two subgroups |
| Dekker et al. [ | sMRI, DTI | Cross-sectional | EOS with regular use of cannabis before the age of 15 ( | Cannabis-naïve EOS showed reduced white matter density and reduced fractional anisotropy in the splenium of the corpus callosum compared with EOS with early-onset cannabis use. In the same brain area, cannabis-naïve EOS showed reduced fractional anisotropy compared with HC |
| Rais et al. [ | sMRI, 1.5 Tesla, 1.2 mm thickness | Cross-sectional, cortical thickness measurement | ROS ( | Thinning of right supplementary motor cortex, inferior frontal cortex, superior temporal gyrus, angular gyrus, occipital and parietal lobe compared to controls, compared to ROS without cannabis abuse thinning of left DLPFC, left ACC and left occipital lobe demonstrated |
| Cohen et al. [ | sMRI, 1.5 Tesla, 1 mm thickness | Cross-sectional | First-episode schizophrenia with ( | FES displayed lower total cerebellar grey matter than HC, no difference between FES with and without cannabis abuse in adolescent and young adults |
| James et al. [ | sMRI, DTI, VBM | Cross-sectional | EOS with ( | EOS with cannabis abuse showed GM density loss in temporal fusiform gyrus, parahippocampal gyrus, ventral striatum, right middle temporal gyrus, insular cortex, precuneus, right paracingulate gyrus, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, left postcentral gyrus, lateral occipital cortex and cerebellum. Similar group comparison showed decreased fractional anisotropy (FA) in particular in brain stem, internal capsule, corona radiata, superior and inferior longitudinal fasciculus in EOS with cannabis abuse |
| Kumra et al. [ | sMRI, ROI | Cross-sectional | Adolescents with EOS ( | A significant EOS-by-CUD interaction was observed. In the left superior parietal region, both “pure” EOS and “pure” CUD had smaller grey matter volumes that were associated with lower surface area compared with HC. A similar alteration was observed in the comorbid group compared with HC, but there was no additive volumetric deficit found in the comorbid group compared with the separate groups. In the left thalamus, the comorbid group had smaller grey matter volumes compared with the CUD and HC groups |
sMRI structural magnetic resonance imaging, DTI diffusion tensor imaging, ROI region of interest, VBM voxel-based morphometry, GM grey matter, WM white matter, SUD substance use disorder (substance abuse or dependency), NSUD no substance use disorder (no substance abuse or dependency), SZ schizophrenia, FES first-episode schizophrenia, EOS early-onset schizophrenia, HC healthy controls
Overview of structural magnetic resonance imaging studies in high-risk or prodromal schizophrenia patients with comorbid cannabis abuse
| Study | Methods | Design | Participants | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Habets et al. [ | sMRI, cortical thickness | Cross-sectional | Patients with schizophrenia ( | Patient group displayed reductions in cortical thickness for cannabis exposure, a similar pattern was found in the sibling–control comparison for cannabis |
| Welch et al. [ | sMRI, 1 Tesla, ROI; | Longitudinal | Subjects at high risk for developing schizophrenia exposed ( | Cannabis exposure was associated with bilateral thalamic volume loss over time |
| Welch et al. [ | sMRI, 1 Tesla, ROI; | Cross-sectional | Subjects at high risk for developing schizophrenia ( | Level of cannabis use correlated significantly and positively with volume increase in the left and right lateral ventricles and third ventricle |
sMRI structural magnetic resonance imaging, DTI diffusion tensor imaging, ROI region of interest, VBM voxel-based morphometry, GM grey matter, WM white matter, SUD substance use disorder (substance abuse or dependency), NSUD no substance use disorder (no substance abuse or dependency), SZ schizophrenia, FES first-episode schizophrenia, EOS early-onset schizophrenia, HC healthy controls
Overview of structural magnetic resonance imaging studies in schizophrenia patients (not FES or EOS) with comorbid cannabis abuse
| Study | Methods | Design | Participants | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Solowij et al. [ | sMRI, 3 Tesla, ROI, semi-automated methods | Cross-sectional | Patients with schizophrenia ( | Cerebellar white matter volume was reduced in cannabis users with and without schizophrenia compared to healthy non-users, by 29.7 % and 23.9 %, respectively, and by 17.7 % in patients without cannabis use. Healthy cannabis users did not differ in white matter volume from either of the schizophrenia groups. There were no group differences in cerebellar grey matter or total volumes. Total cerebellar volume decreased as a function of duration of cannabis use in the healthy users |
| Ho et al. [ | sMRI, 3 Tesla, slice thickness 3 mm, ROI; CNR1-genotyping; | Cross-sectional | Schizophrenia patients without ( | Patients with cannabis abuse/dependence had smaller fronto-temporal WM volumes than patients without heavy cannabis use. Significant genotype-by-cannabis use interaction effects on WM volumes |
sMRI structural magnetic resonance imaging, DTI diffusion tensor imaging, ROI region of interest, VBM voxel-based morphometry, GM grey matter, WM white matter, SUD substance use disorder (substance abuse or dependency), NSUD no substance use disorder (no substance abuse or dependency), SZ schizophrenia, FES first-episode schizophrenia, EOS early-onset schizophrenia, HC healthy controls