To the Editor:
The interactions between cannabis use, use disorder and psychosis is an important topic that is worthy of systematic investigation. Therefore, we read with great interest our colleagues’ article ‘Which biological and self-report measures of cannabis use predict cannabis dependency and acute psychotic-like effects’, recently published in Psychological Medicine (Curran et al., Reference Curran, Hindocha, Morgan, Shaban, Das and Freeman2018). Within the framework of this otherwise well-conducted study, we respectfully suggest that accounting for the participants’ predisposition to psychosis in the study methodology would have strengthened the findings.
The investigators employed a series of clinical and biological measures in the context of participants’ (verified) naturalistic use and nonuse of cannabis, and found that: (1) cannabis intoxication increased the level of psychotic-like symptoms overall, and (2) evidence of greater recent delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC) exposure was associated with decreased psychotic-like effects of, but greater dependency, on cannabis. Essentially, while cannabis may have acute psychotic-like effects, more experience with cannabis is associated with lower psychotic-like effects but a greater likelihood of cannabis dependence. While this is a reasonable and well-supported conclusion, and the study had many methodological strengths, the investigators neglected to address a potential major factor in the acute psychotic-like effects of cannabis – namely, the predisposition to psychosis.
A substantial literature, employing a variety of methodologies and populations, has examined the psychotic-like sequelae of cannabis in the broad psychosis spectrum. Naturalistic/clinical studies have demonstrated that cannabis use is concurrently and prospectively associated with increases in psychotic-like experiences/symptoms in such individuals (e.g. Verdoux et al., Reference Verdoux, Gindre, Sorbara, Tournier and Swendsen2003; Henquet et al., Reference Henquet, Krabbendam, Spauwen, Kaplan, Lieb, Wittchen and van Os2004; Hides et al., Reference Hides, Dawe, Kavanagh and Young2006; Corcoran et al., Reference Corcoran, Kimhy, Stanford, Khan, Walsh, Thompson, Schobel, Harkavy-Friedman, Goetz, Colibazzi, Cressman and Malaspina2008; Henquet et al., Reference Henquet, van Os, Kuepper, Delespaul, Smits, Campo and Myin-Germeys2010). Further, placebo-controlled drug administration studies have shown, compared to healthy cannabis users, evidence consistent with a stronger psychotic-like effect of (or psychosis-associated neurochemical response to) active cannabis/Δ9-THC in individuals at genetic (Henquet et al., Reference Henquet, Rosa, Krabbendam, Papiol, Fananás, Drukker, Ramaekers and van Os2006), familial (Kuepper et al., Reference Kuepper, Ceccarini, Lataster, van Os, van Kroonenburgh, van Gerven, Marcelis, Van Laere and Henquet2013), clinical (Vadhan et al., Reference Vadhan, Corcoran, Bedi, Keilp and Haney2017), or realized (D'Souza et al., Reference D'Souza, Abi-Saab, Madonick, Forselius-Bielen, Doersch, Braley, Gueorguieva, Cooper and Krystal2005; Henquet et al., Reference Henquet, Rosa, Krabbendam, Papiol, Fananás, Drukker, Ramaekers and van Os2006; Kuepper et al., Reference Kuepper, Ceccarini, Lataster, van Os, van Kroonenburgh, van Gerven, Marcelis, Van Laere and Henquet2013) risk for a psychotic disorder. Finally, naturalistic studies have converged on these findings of differential effects (Henquet et al., Reference Henquet, van Os, Kuepper, Delespaul, Smits, Campo and Myin-Germeys2010; Spriggens and Hides, Reference Spriggens and Hides2015) and prospective cohort observation studies have provided further clinical significance (McHugh et al., Reference McHugh, McGorry, Yung, Lin, Wood, Hartmann and Nelson2017).
Although it could be argued that such populations were outside the scope of the Curran et al. (Reference Curran, Hindocha, Morgan, Shaban, Das and Freeman2018) study, individuals who have psychotic-like experiences are overrepresented in the cannabis-using population (van Os et al., Reference van Os, Linscott, Myin-Germeys, Delespaul and Krabbendam2008), and about 20% of individuals from our extensive database of nontreatment-seeking cannabis users endorsed having CHR-level psychotic-like experiences (unpublished data) on a screening questionnaire (Miller et al., Reference Miller, Chicchetti, Markovich, McGlashan and Woods2004). This suggests the presence of a subpopulation of, at minimum, psychosis-prone individuals within the larger population of nontreatment-seeking cannabis users. If it is possible for the investigators to identify these individuals within their study (perhaps by the baseline Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale measures), a series of interesting analyses could be accomplished. For example, the notion that cannabis’ psychotic-like effects are stronger in psychosis-predisposed individuals could be tested, and the similarities and differences in the interrelationships between previous cannabis exposure, dependency and psychotic-like effects, between these cannabis user subtypes could be assessed.
Author ORCIDs
Nehal P. Vadhan, 0000-0003-0162-4256.
Conflict of interest
None.