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Published Online: 9 October 2024

Association of Cannabis Use Reduction With Improved Functional Outcomes: An Exploratory Aggregated Analysis From Seven Cannabis Use Disorder Treatment Trials to Extract Data-Driven Cannabis Reduction Metrics

Publication: American Journal of Psychiatry

Abstract

Objective:

This exploratory analysis sought to determine whether decreases in cannabis use are associated with improvements in cannabis-related problems and functional outcomes, and if so, what percentage decrease is associated with improvement.

Methods:

Data were aggregated from seven cannabis use disorder treatment trials conducted in the United States (N=920; ages 13 years and older; mean age, 25 years; 30% female, 27% Black, 11% Hispanic/Latinx). Outcome measures included the patient-reported Marijuana Problems Scale (MPS), Health-Related Quality of Life scale (HRQOL), and Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index and the clinician-rated Clinical Global Impressions (CGI) severity and improvement scales (CGI-S and CGI-I). Generalized estimating equations tested the association between changes in 4-week cannabis use and improvements in functional outcomes. Classification and regression tree (CART) models were developed to determine what reductions in cannabis use could be used as classifiers of improvement.

Results:

Decreases in the amount and frequency of cannabis use were significantly associated with improvements in MPS severity and total scores as well as improvements on the CGI-I and in sleep quality, but not improvements on the HRQOL. CART models performed best for CGI-I scores (72%–75% correct classification), while other outcome measures did not perform as well (40%–62% correct classification). CART models showed improvements on the CGI at 74% reduction in use amounts and 47% reduction in use days.

Conclusions:

Reductions in cannabis use (∼50% reduction in use days and ∼75% reduction in use amounts) were associated with clinician-assessed improvement, which suggests that cannabis use reduction may yield benefit among individuals with cannabis use disorder. These exploratory results extract a data-driven metric to inform future studies, clinicians, patients, and policy recommendations.

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Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
Go to American Journal of Psychiatry
American Journal of Psychiatry
Pages: 988 - 996
PubMed: 39380374

History

Received: 26 June 2023
Revision received: 16 November 2023
Revision received: 12 January 2024
Accepted: 5 February 2024
Published online: 9 October 2024
Published in print: November 01, 2024

Keywords

  1. Cannabis Use Disorder
  2. Functional Outcomes
  3. Substance-Related and Addictive Disorders
  4. Addiction Psychiatry

Authors

Details

Erin A. McClure, Ph.D. [email protected]
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (McClure, Tomko, Gray, McRae-Clark), Hollings Cancer Center (McClure), and Department of Public Health Sciences (Neelon, Baker), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston; Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center, Charleston (McRae-Clark).
Brian Neelon, Ph.D.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (McClure, Tomko, Gray, McRae-Clark), Hollings Cancer Center (McClure), and Department of Public Health Sciences (Neelon, Baker), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston; Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center, Charleston (McRae-Clark).
Rachel L. Tomko, Ph.D.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (McClure, Tomko, Gray, McRae-Clark), Hollings Cancer Center (McClure), and Department of Public Health Sciences (Neelon, Baker), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston; Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center, Charleston (McRae-Clark).
Kevin M. Gray, M.D.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (McClure, Tomko, Gray, McRae-Clark), Hollings Cancer Center (McClure), and Department of Public Health Sciences (Neelon, Baker), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston; Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center, Charleston (McRae-Clark).
Aimee L. McRae-Clark, Pharm.D.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (McClure, Tomko, Gray, McRae-Clark), Hollings Cancer Center (McClure), and Department of Public Health Sciences (Neelon, Baker), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston; Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center, Charleston (McRae-Clark).
Nathaniel L. Baker, M.S.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences (McClure, Tomko, Gray, McRae-Clark), Hollings Cancer Center (McClure), and Department of Public Health Sciences (Neelon, Baker), Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston; Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center, Charleston (McRae-Clark).

Notes

Send correspondence to Dr. McClure ([email protected]).
Presented in part at the annual meeting of the College on Problems of Drug Dependence, Denver, June 17–21, 2023.

Competing Interests

Dr. Gray has served as a consultant for Indivior and Jazz Pharmaceuticals and has received research support from Aelis Farma. Dr. Tomko has served as a consultant for the American Society of Addiction Medicine. Dr. McRae-Clark has served as a consultant for Indivior and has received research support from Pleo Pharma. The other authors report no financial relationships with commercial interests.

Funding Information

Supported by NIDA grant R21 DA052661 (principal investigators, Dr. McClure and Mr. Baker). Additional support, through institutional infrastructure, was provided by grant UL1TR001450 from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (principal investigators, Kathleen T. Brady and Patrick A. Flume). Individual studies used in this aggregated analysis were supported by NIDA grants UG1 DA013727, R01 DA026777, R01 DA042114, R01 DA026782, R21 DA034089, UG3 DA043231, and UH3 DA043231.

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