You
are in Research Cannabis,
Cognition, And Residual ConfoundingJournal
of the American Medical Association vol. 287 no. 9 Harrison G. Pope, Jr, MD
06/03/02 In
this issue of the journal, Solowij and colleagues [1] report a variety of neuropsychological
deficits in long-term cannabis users who were tested a median of 17 hours after
their last reported cannabis intake. Their findings of impairments in memory and
attention are not surprising since several large and well-controlled studies have
found similar deficits on neuropsychological tests administered to long-term cannabis
users after 12 to 72 hours of abstinence. [2-5] If these deficits are brief and
reversible ( ie, due to a residue of cannabinoids lingering in the brain or to
withdrawal effects from abruptly stopping the drug ) they might not be a serious
threat. However, if these deficits are prolonged or irreversible ( ie, due to
neurotoxicity from years of cumulative cannabis exposure ), they become a matter
of grave concern. The findings of Solowij and colleagues favor the latter possibility
in that longer-term cannabis users in the study often showed significantly greater
deficits than shorter-term users, and neuropsychological performance measures
were often negatively correlated with lifetime duration of use. Furthermore, these
correlations could not be explained by greater withdrawal symptoms or heavier
recent cannabis consumption among the longer-term users. Solowij and colleagues
[1] conclude that "our results confirm that cognitive impairments develop
as a result of prolonged cannabis use . . . and [that] they worsen with increasing
years of use." The
findings reported by these leading researchers must be evaluated carefully. First,
Solowij et al report only an association between lifetime duration of cannabis
use and impairment at 17 hours since last cannabis use and therefore cannot extrapolate
from this finding to infer whether impairment persists for longer periods. Second,
the strength of the evidence for an association, even at the 17-hour mark, must
be evaluated in context with other reports. Previous data from Solowij favor the
possibility of persistent deficits associated with lifetime duration of cannabis
exposure. [6] However, the weight of evidence from other studies seems tilted
in the opposite direction. For example, a recent meta-analysis of neuropsychological
studies of long-term marijuana users found no significant evidence for deficits
in 7 of 8 neuropsychological ability areas and only a small effect size ( ie,
0.23 SD units; 99% confidence interval, 0.03-0.43 ) for the remaining area of
learning. [7] Another recent study [5] from our laboratory, published subsequent
to this meta-analysis, found virtually no significant differences between 108
heavy cannabis users and 72 controls -- screened to exclude those with current
psychiatric disorders, medication use, or any history of significant use of other
drugs or alcohol -- on a battery of 10 neuropsychological tests after 28 days
of supervised abstinence from the drug. In addition, no significant associations
were found between the number of episodes of lifetime cannabis use and any of
the test scores at day 28 even though the heavy users had smoked a median of about
15000 times over periods ranging from 10 to 33 years. [5] Further analysis of
these data for associations between lifetime use and performance at day 0 and
day 1 of abstinence revealed trends that were almost always in the same direction
as those reported by Solowij et al, [1] but the effect sizes were much smaller
( unpublished data ). We
also analyzed the possible reasons for the difference between our study [5] and
that of Solowij et al in the strength of association between duration of use and
performance after 1 day of abstinence. The participants in the 2 studies reported
very similar degrees of cannabis exposure, and the neuropsychological tests administered
were generally similar or even identical. Both studies had similar sample sizes
and thus similar statistical power. Therefore, the most likely remaining explanation
would seem to be lack of comparability between the exposed and nonexposed groups
within one or both studies with respect to factors associated with the outcomes
of interest ( ie, residual confounding ). For
example, cannabis users in the study by Solowij et al were seeking treatment for
cannabis dependence, whereas controls were recruited from the general population
by advertisement. Individuals seeking clinical treatment for cannabis dependence
might exhibit higher levels of depression, anxiety, or attention-deficit/hyperactivity
disorder than other cannabis users, and all of these psychiatric syndromes produce
deficits on neuropsychological testing.8-10 Some cannabis users seek treatment
because they have gotten into trouble with the law and so might have higher levels
of antisocial behavior than other users. Antisocial behavior is also linked to
neuropsychological deficits. [11] Although
Solowij and colleagues excluded subjects with psychotic disorders or current drug
or alcohol dependence ( other than cannabis ), subjects with depression, anxiety
disorders, or other psychiatric conditions were not excluded. Also, subjects receiving
prescription psychiatric medications, such as benzodiazepines or antidepressants,
that can impair cognitive function were also not excluded. [12, 13] In our study,
[5] subjects exhibiting any current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders, Fourth Edition Axis I disorder ( other than simple phobia or social
phobia ) or taking any psychoactive prescription medication were excluded. Thus,
confounding factors associated with treatment seeking are possible explanations
for the larger effect sizes in the study by Solowij et al. However, for this to
be correct, cannabis users in the study by Solowij et al would have to have had
more psychopathology or medication use than the controls, and the longer-term
users, in turn must have had a higher prevalence of these features than the shorter-term
users. However,
confounding can bias results in both directions. For instance, one might argue
that excluding cannabis users with current psychiatric disorders or currently
using medications would select in favor of unusually healthy long-term users who
performed better on testing than the average of the overall population from which
they were drawn. Moreover, cannabis use might cause or exacerbate anxiety or depressive
disorders and hence be indirectly to blame for any neuropsychological impairment
that these disorders create. This is a slightly different assertion, however,
from the claim that cannabis impairs cognitive function directly. Confounders
associated with treatment seeking represent only 1 of the many problems that threaten
naturalistic studies of substance abusers. Another is the problem of adjustment
for premorbid differences between groups. Lacking a historical measure of cognitive
function, which is based on testing subjects before they were first exposed to
cannabis, leads to the question of whether current differences observed between
groups are due to cannabis use or to some difference in premorbid cognitive ability
for which adjustment was not made. By matching groups on measures of intellectual
functioning that are relatively resilient to brain injury, Solowij and colleagues
have done their best to equalize the groups on premorbid cognitive abilities.
But since the 33 controls were recruited at 1 site and the 102 cannabis users
at 3 sites in different geographic settings, the possibility of residual confounding
due to subtle sociodemographic differences between groups cannot be entirely dismissed.
Two
of these sociodemographic differences in the group of longer-term cannabis users,
namely the larger proportion of men and the significantly greater age of these
subjects, are particularly important. Yet comparisons between the groups were
performed without adjustment for sex, and some comparisons were also performed
without adjustment for age, except in specific cases in which age correlated significantly
with a particular outcome variable. However, it is hazardous to use significance
testing instead of change-in-estimate criteria to exclude a potential confounding
variable from adjustment. Such variables may still change the estimate of the
effect considerably, even if they are not statistically significant, yielding
residual confounding once again. [14, 15] This is particularly worrisome with
the age variable, because age differed to a significant degree between study groups
and is also highly associated with cognitive function. For example, on the Rey
Auditory Verbal Learning Test, where Solowij et al demonstrated the largest cannabis-associated
deficits, both increased age and male sex have been shown to be associated with
poorer performance, [16] but the effect sizes shown in Table 3 of the study were
not adjusted for either age or sex. Solowij
and colleagues are aware of these limitations, and show ( in Table 4 of their
article ) that even after adjusting for age ( but not for sex ), longer duration
of cannabis use is associated with deficits on several key performance measures,
although at a more modest level of significance. However, 47% of the long-term
cannabis users also had a history of regular use of, dependence on, or treatment
for alcohol or other drugs besides cannabis, introducing another possible confounder.
Given
the minefield of possible confounding, should naturalistic studies of drug users
be presumed untrustworthy or be abandoned entirely? As Solowij and colleagues
point out, retrospective designs are the most efficient way to assess the long-term
cognitive effects of cannabis consumption. Prospective designs would be extremely
expensive, time-consuming, and in some cases unethical. Thus, despite all of their
limitations, retrospective studies remain an important tool for answering these
important questions. In
conclusion, currently available scientific evidence shows that almost certainly,
some cognitive deficits persist for hours or days after acute intoxication with
cannabis has subsided. The consensus across studies is strong enough to discount
the likelihood that this finding can be explained by any combination of confounders.
But whether these deficits increase with increasing years of cannabis exposure
remains uncertain. On this question, the numerous potential confounding variables
make it difficult to determine whether cognitive impairments are attributable
to cannabis use or due to other factors. Even if lifetime duration of cannabis
use is associated with greater impairment after 17 hours of abstinence, the data
are insufficient to know whether greater impairment would be present a week or
a month later. Despite the important contributions of this new study, we must
still live with uncertainty. Author/Article
Information Author
Affiliation: Biological Psychiatry Laboratory, McLean Hospital, Harvard Medical
School, Belmont, Mass. Corresponding
Author and Reprints: Harrison G. Pope, Jr, MD, Biological Psychiatry Laboratory,
McLean Hospital, 115 Mill St, Belmont, MA 02478 ( pope@mclean.harvard.edu ). Editorials
represent the opinions of the authors and THE JOURNAL and not those of the American
Medical Association. Financial
Disclosure: This work was supported in part by grant DA10346 from the National
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