Karolinska Institute: Heavy cannabis use at a young age increases the risk of
early death, according to the longest follow-up study to date on
cannabis use. The new study, which was done by researchers at Karolinska
Institutet in Sweden, is published in
The American Journal of Psychology
. Cannabis use increases the risk of
developing schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders later in life,
something that the researchers reported in a previous paper after having
followed up all men who were enlisted for military service in 1969–70.
At this time, the men answered questions on drug use; today, they are
around 60, an age when any harmful long-time effects of cannabis use can
start to show. The researchers therefore made a new follow-up to find
out if the mortality rate was higher amongst men who reported using
cannabis in their youth.
“A fresh WHO report has shown that cannabis has
extensive effects on the health, even if the mental effects are the most
salient,” says lead author
Edison Manrique-Garcia
at the Department of Public Health Sciences.
Over 50,000 men were included in the study
population, 4,000 of whom had died between 1970 and 2011. The
researchers found that men who reported the heaviest cannabis use in
their youth (over 50 occasions) ran a 40 per cent higher risk of death
than those who reported lighter or no cannabis use (odds ratio 1.4; 95%
confidence interval 1.1–1.8). They also found that the correlation
remained even when controlling for other factors affecting mortality,
such as alcohol use, mental illness and childhood/adolescent social
problems.
Since it is well-established that cannabis use
increases the risk of psychotic disorders, the researchers studied if
those who had suffered psychotic episodes had particularly high
mortality rates and if cannabis use affects this. 683 people had been
treated for psychosis.
“For the men who had suffered psychosis, the
mortality rate was roughly four times higher, but this was independent
of earlier cannabis use,” says study leader
Peter Allebeck
, also at the Department of Public Health Sciences. “Our conclusion
is that early cannabis use can contribute to premature death,
particularly through injuries and suicide, and that this is unrelated to
the increased risk of psychosis.”
Since the study gave no details of cannabis use
during the follow-up time, it is impossible to tell if the increased
risk amongst heavy early cannabis users is attributable to strong
effects of the drug in their youth or to continued use of cannabis later
in life.
The study was financed with grants from Swedish
Research Council for Health, Working Life and Welfare and from Stockholm
County Council.
Publication:
'Cannabis, Psychosis, and Mortality: A Cohort
Study of 50,373 Swedish Men', Edison Manrique-Garcia, Antonio Ponce de
Leon, Christina Dalman, Sven Andréasson and Peter Allebeck,
American Journal of Psychiatry
, published online 22 April 2016, doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2016.14050637
For further questions, please contact:
Peter Allebeck, Professor, Consultant
Department of Public Health Sciences
Telephone: +46 (0)8-524 801 72 or +46 (0)73-370 00 88
E-mail: Peter.Allebeck@ki.se