| Literature DB >> 35903331 |
Anaëlle Monfort1,2,3, Ema Ferreira2,3, Grégoire Leclair1,3, Gregory Anton Lodygensky2,4.
Abstract
Cannabis is one of the most widely used illicit drugs during pregnancy and lactation. With the recent legalization of cannabis in many countries, health professionals are increasingly exposed to pregnant and breastfeeding women who are consuming cannabis on a regular basis as a solution for depression, anxiety, nausea, and pain. Cannabis consumption during pregnancy can induce negative birth outcomes such as reduced birth weight and increased risk of prematurity and admission to the neonatal intensive care unit. Yet, limited information is available regarding the pharmacokinetics of cannabis in the fetus and newborn exposed during pregnancy and lactation. Indeed, the official recommendations regarding the use of cannabis during these two critical development periods lack robust pharmacokinetics data and make it difficult for health professionals to guide their patients. Many clinical studies are currently evaluating the effects of cannabis on the brain development and base their groups mostly on questionnaires. These studies should be associated with pharmacokinetics studies to assess correlations between the infant brain development and the exposure to cannabis during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Our project aims to review the available data on the pharmacokinetics of cannabinoids in adults, neonates, and animals. If the available literature is abundant in adult humans and animals, there is still a lack of published data on the exposure of pregnant and lactating women and neonates. However, some of the published information causes concerns on the exposure and the potential effects of cannabis on fetuses and neonates. The safety of cannabis use for non-medical purpose during pregnancy and breastfeeding needs to be further characterized with proper pharmacokinetic studies in humans feasible in regions where cannabis has been legalized. Given the available data, significant transfer occurs to the fetus and the breastfed newborn with a theoretical risk of accumulation of products known to be biologically active.Entities:
Keywords: breastfeeding; cannabis; exposure; neonates; pharmacokinetics; pregnancy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35903331 PMCID: PMC9315316 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2022.919630
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.988
FIGURE 1Literature review flow chart.
Pharmacokinetics of cannabinoids in the general population.
| Plasma/serum | |||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Administration mode | Pulmonary | Oral | Intravenous | ||||||||||||
| Measured cannabinoids | THC, 11-OH-THC, THC-COOH, CBD, CBN, THC-COOH-glucuronide, THC-glucuronide | THC, 11-OH-THC, THC-COOH, CBD, 7-OH-CBD, 7-COOH-CBD | THC, 11-OH-THC, THC-COOH, THC-COOH glucuronide | ||||||||||||
| Doses (mg) | 3.1–8.8 (THC) | 11.6–23 (THC) | 26.9–36.5 (THC) | 49.1–54 (THC) 58 (CBD) 1.7 (CBN) | 61.2–69.4 (THC) | 0.3–1.5 (THC) 1.2–1.4 (THCA) 0.7–0.9 (CBD) .8–4.4 (CBDA) | 3–10.8 (THC) 5.0–10 (CBD) | 14.8–16.2 (THC) 15 (CBD) | 20 (THC) 20–30 (CBD) | 45 (CBD) 50 (THC) | 90 (THC) 90–100 (CBD) | 200 (CBD) | 400 (CBD) | 750–800 (CBD) | 2.4 to 6.5 (THC) |
| Cmax (ng/ml) | 18.9–53 (THC) 1.4 (11-OH-THC) 10.0 (THC-COOH) | 1.5–186.2 (THC) 0–11.1 (11-OH-THC) 1–103.6 (THC-COOH) | 0–276 (THC) 0.7–32.3 (11-OH-THC) 7.3–310.6 (THC-COOH) | 1.9–421 (THC) 0–42 (11-OH-THC) 9–207 (THC-COOH) 5.7–48.2 (CBD) 0–5.3 (CBN) 0–5.6 (THC glucuronide) 15.6–462 (TCH-COOH glucuronide) | 22.5–813.2 (THC) 3–41 (11-OH-THC) 11–128 (THC-COOH) | 0.4–1.01 (THC) 40.3–72.4 (THCA-A) 0.55–1.5 (11-OH-THC) 0.3–1.5 (CBD) 28.3–94.3 (CBDA) 4.3–17.1 (THC-COOH) 7.7–40.2 (THC-COOH glucuronide) 0.12–0.8 (6-OH-CBD) 151.45–159.93 (7-OH-CBD) 74.73–118.03 (7-CBD-COOH) | 0.53–10.6 (THC) 0–15.0 (11-OH-THC) 1.27–281.6 (THC-COOH) 0–4.27 (CBD) | 0.7–38.2 (THC) 0–19.5 (11-OH-THC) 11.0–409 (THC-COOH) 2.0–20.5 (CBD) | 0.42–67.6 (THC) 0.57–38.9 (11-OH-THC) 1.9–441 (THC-COOH) 0.3–281.6 (CBD) 0.54–0.64 (CBN) | 16.8–21.2 (CBD) 94.34 (THC) 66.09 (11-OH-THC) 585.57 (THC-COOH) | 9–126 (CBD) 9–127.1 (THC) 20 (11-OH-THC) | 148–381 (CBD) 3.19–7.56 (6-OH-CBD) 41.8–76.4 (7-OH-CBD) 221–823 (7-CBD-COOH) | 114.2–181.2 (CBD) | 157.1–1,050 (CBD) 180–2,800 (7-OH-CBD) 831–2,978 (7-CBD-COOH) | 66–817.6 (THC), 9.1–33.0 (11-OH-THC), 36.7–84.2 (THC-COOH), 31.1–98.2 (THC-COOH glucuronide) |
| Tmax | 1–66 min (THC), 4.2–69 min (11-OH-THC), 4.2-minutes-10.4 h (THC-COOH), 7–66 min (CBD, CBN), 13–40 min (THC glucuronide), 16.8 minutes-26 h (THC-COOH glucuronide) | 0.5–12 h (THC, CBD), 0.5–24 h (11-OH-THC), 1.1–8 h (THC-COOH), 2–6 h (THC-COOH glucuronide), 0.7–6 h (6-OH-CBD), 1.5–12 h (7-OH-CBD), 2.1–24 h (7-CBD-COOH), 0.9–1.1 h (CBN), 1–2 h (THCA-A), 0.5–2 h (CBDA) | 5–10 min (11-OH-THC) | ||||||||||||
| 60 min (THC-COOH) | |||||||||||||||
| T1/2 (hours) | 0.2–6.8 (THC), 0.06–4.6 (11-OH-THC), 0.18–41.9 (THC-COOH) | 1.1–28.4 (THC), 2.3–41.3 (CBD), 1.0–8.8 (11-OH-THC), 9.9–113.2 (THC-COOH), 10.3–159.4 (THC-COOH glucuronide), 2.4–13.2 (6-OH-CBD), 2.9–20.2 (7-OH-CBD), 19.8–28 (7-CBD-COOH), 2–3.2 (THCA-A), 0.6–9 (CBDA) | 1.6–1.9 (THC) | ||||||||||||
| 5.2–6.2 days (THC-COOH) | |||||||||||||||
| 3.7–6.8 days (THC-COOH glucuronide) | |||||||||||||||
| Window of detection (hours) | >30 (THC, 11-OH-THC, THC-COOH glucuronide), >168 (THC-COOH), 4 (CBD, THC glucuronide), 3 (CBN) | >130 (THC, 11-OH-THC), >96 (CBD, 7-OH-CBD, 7-CBD-COOH), >24 (THC-COOH, CBN), 10 (6-OH-CBD) | |||||||||||||
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Pharmacokinetics of cannabinoids in pregnant and lactating women and neonates.
| Matrices | Measured cannabinoids | Time of sampling | Measured concentrations (ng/ml) | Articles |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pregnant woman urine | THC-COOH | Up to 14 weeks after the last cannabis consumption | 3.9–348.1 ng/ml |
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| Breast milk | THC, THC-COOH, 11-OH-THC, CBG, THC-COOH glucuronide, THC-glucuronide, CBD, CBC, CBN, THCV, THCVCOOH | >6 weeks after the last cannabis consumption | Breast milk: 1.0–420 (THC), 1.1–12.8 (11-OH-THC), 0.8–11 (THC-COOH), 0.4–17 (CBD), 0.4–7.1 (CBG) Maternal plasma: 7.2 (THC), 2.5 (11-OH-THC), 19 (THC-COOH) Infant feces: 347 (THC), 67 (11-OH-THC), 611 (THC-COOH) |
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| Meconium | THC, THC-COOH, 11-OH-THC, CBD, CBN, diOH-THC THC-COOH glucuronide, 8-OH-THC | 0–48 h after delivery | THC: 2.4–81.2 ng/g THC-COOH: 1.4–1,856 ng/g 11-OH-THC: 1.2–929 ng/g diOH-THC: 2.4–887.4 ng/g CBD: 7.1–335.3 ng/g CBN: 10.1–189.8 ng/g THC-COOH glucuronide: 19.4–306.8 ng/g 8-OH-THC: 7.9–16.7 ng/g |
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| Umbilical cord | THC, THC-COOH, 11-OH-THC, CBD, THC-COOH glucuronide diOH-THC, THC glucuronide | Immediately after delivery | THC-COOH: 0.2–20.9 ng/g THC: 0.2–1.3 ng/g 11-OH-THC: 0.3–3.1 ng/g |
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| Cord blood | THC, THC-COOH | Maternal blood: <0.2–6 ng/ml (THC), 2.3–225 ng/ml (THC-COOH) Cord blood: <0.2–1.0 ng/ml (THC), 0.4–18 ng/ml (THC-COOH) |
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| Urine | THC-COOH | 48 h after delivery | Maternal urine: 10–685 μg/g of creatinine Infant urine: 2.7–37.5 μg/g of creatinine |
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| Hair (neonates) | THC, CBN | 12–24 h after delivery | THC: 0.22–0.86 ng/mg CBN: <0.2–0.25 ng/mg Cannabinoids: 1.9 ng/mg |
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Pharmacokinetics of cannabinoids in animal models (avant).
| Rats | Guinea pigs | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Measured Compounds | THC, 11-OH-THC, THC-COOH, CBD, CBDV, THCV and CBG | THC, CBD, 11-OH-THC, THC-COOH | ||||||||
| Matrices | Plasma | Urine | Maternal and fetal plasma | Plasma | ||||||
| Mode of administration | Oral | Intravenous | Intranasal | Pulmonary | Subcutaneous | Intraperitoneal | Oral | Intravenous | Transdermal | |
| Cmax (ng/ml) | 39–3,200 (CBD) 5.5–3,200 (THC) 43 (THC-COOH) 20 (11-OH-THC) 2,200 (CBDV) 210 (THCV) 1,050 (CBG) | 3,596–12,917 (CBD) 194–20,620 ng/ml (THC), 10 ng/ml (11-OH-THC), 6 ng/ml (THC-COOH) | 19.9–35.4 (CBD) 49–66 (THC) | 230–330 (CBD) 11–300 (THC) 3.2 (THC-COOH) | 45–70 (CBD) 25–100 (THC) 5–10 (11-OH-THC) 11.9 (THC-COOH) | 2,400–2,600 (CBD) 1,300 (CBDV) 400 (THCV) 810 (CBG) | 8.5–9.3 (11-OH-THC) 18.4–22 (THC-COOH) | Maternal: 99–304 (THC) Fetal: 10–41 (THC) | 269 (CBD) 197.7 (THC) | 8.6–35.6 (CBD) |
| Tmax (hours) | 1–8 (CBD) 0.7–6 (THC) 8 (THC-COOH) 1–2 (11-OH-THC) 0.5 (CBDV, CBG) 2 (THCV) | 0.3–0.5 (CBD) 1.5–1.6 (THC) | 0–15 min (CBD) 0–10 min (THC) 8 h (THC-COOH) | 1 (CBD, THC, 11-OH-THC) 4 (THC-COOH) | 0.5–2 (CBD) 4 (CBDV) 0.5 (THCV) 1 (CBG) | Maternal and fetal: 1 h (THC) (not Tmax) | 31.2–38.4 (CBD) | |||
| Half-life (hours) | 1.8–4.6 (CBD) 4.0 (CBDV) 1.5 (THCV) 1.7 (CBG) | 1.1–1.4 (CBD) 1.3 (THC) | 1.2–2.8 (CBD) | 3.7 (THC) | 7.8–10.1 (CBD) 6.7 (CBDV) 10 (THCV) 9.3 (CBG) | 3.5 (CBD) | ||||
| Time of sampling | 0–24 h after administration | 0–48 h after administration | ||||||||
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FIGURE 2Ratios of fetal concentrations over maternal concentrations over 3 h in rhesus monkeys based on data obtained by Bailey et al. (1987).
Missing data on the pharmacokinetics of cannabinoids in animals, adults and newborns.
| Model | Matrix | Missing data |
|---|---|---|
| Animals | Plasma, urine, feces, breast milk | • CBD metabolites and THC-COOH glucuronide concentrations |
| Adults | Plasma | • Cannabinoids concentrations in pregnant women |
| Breast milk | • THC, 11-OH-THC, THC-COOH pharmacokinetics profile over 24 h and more • CBD metabolites concentrations • Pharmacokinetics of CBD and its metabolites after CBD only consumption • Effects of the mode of administration on cannabinoid concentration in breast milk | |
| Urine | • CBD metabolites concentrations | |
| Newborns | Meconium | • CBD metabolites concentrations • Correlation between cannabinoid concentrations and the frequency of consumption • Correlation between cannabinoid concentrations and the last trimester of use during pregnancy |
| Infant blood | • Cannabinoid concentrations |
FIGURE 3Mean plasma levels of THC during and after smoking a single 3.55% THC marijuana cigarette obtained by Huestis et al. (1992).
FIGURE 4Area of theoretical THC concentrations in pregnant women over 3 h after a single 3.55% THC marijuana cigarette.
FIGURE 5Area of theoretical THC concentrations in fetuses over 3 h after a single 3.55% THC marijuana cigarette.