Study underlines cannabis link to psychosis

LONDON, (Reuters Life!) – People who use cannabis in  their youth dramatically increase their risk of psychotic  symptoms, and continued use of the drug can raise the risk of  developing a psychotic disorder in later life, scientists said  yesterday.

In a 10-year study of links between cannabis use and  psychosis, Dutch researchers found that cannabis use almost  doubled the risk of later psychotic symptoms.

Experts commenting on the results said the major challenge  for health authorities was to deter enough young people from  using cannabis so that rates of psychosis could be reduced.

“This study adds a further brick to the wall of evidence  showing that use of traditional cannabis is a contributory cause  of psychoses like schizophrenia,” said Robin Murray of the  Institute of Psychiatry at Kings College London, who was not  involved in the research.

Yesterday’s findings, published in the British Medical  Journal, echo research last year which found that young people  who smoke cannabis for six years or more are twice as likely to  have psychotic episodes, hallucinations or delusions.

Cannabis is the most commonly used illicit drug in the  world, particularly among adolescents, and is increasingly  linked to added risks of developing mental illness.

But scientists say it is not yet clear whether the link  between cannabis and psychosis is causal, or whether it is  because people with psychosis use cannabis to self-medicate to  calm their symptoms.

For this study, a team of Dutch researchers led by Jim van  Os from Maastricht University studied a random sample of 1,923  adolescents and young adults aged 14 to 24 years.

The study took place in Germany and the researchers  separated out anyone who said they were already using cannabis   and excluded those with pre-existing psychotic symptoms so they  could look at links between new cannabis use and psychosis.

They found that so-called “incident”, or new, cannabis use  almost doubled the risk of new psychotic symptoms, even after  accounting for factors such as age, sex, socio-economic status,  use of other drugs and other psychiatric problems.

They also found that in those who were already using  cannabis at the start of the study, continued use increased the  risk of persistent psychotic symptoms.

There was no evidence for  self-medication effects since psychotic symptoms did not predict  later cannabis use, they said.

Peter Kinderman, a professor of clinical psychology at the  University of Liverpool, said the study suggested authorities  should take “a cautious and thoughtful approach to cannabis  legislation.”

“It’s important to remember that psychosis is a very complex  bio-psycho-social phenomenon…but this important paper  certainly reminds us that there’s a strong link to the use of  cannabis,” he said in an emailed comment.