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UK: Cannabis: Too much, too young?

Graham Lawton

New Scientist

Saturday 26 Mar 2005

---
AT THE end of Jim van Os's street in the pleasant Dutch city of Maastricht
there is a coffee shop. As with many such establishments in the
Netherlands, "coffee shop" is something of a euphemism: most of its
customers go there not to drink coffee but to buy and smoke dope. Van Os
isn't too keen on the place. He doesn't like the shady characters it
attracts. He doesn't like the fact that his children have to walk past it.
And most of all he doesn't like that fact that the place breaks the law and
sells marijuana to under-18s.

Van Os's fears are rooted in more than the usual parental angst. He is a
psychiatrist at the University of Maastricht who investigates the effect of
marijuana on people's brains - particularly adolescents' brains. And the
findings of his research make him worry about the effects of all this dope
smoking on the kids in his neighbourhood.

Over the past couple of years van Os and several others have been building
the case that, for some teenagers, smoking cannabis leads to serious mental
health problems in later life, including schizophrenia. Van Os claims that
marijuana is responsible for up to 13 per cent of schizophrenia cases in
the Netherlands. And with cannabis use among teenagers on the rise, the age
at first use falling , and the strength of cannabis on the up, he says the
figure can only increase.

It is a frightening conclusion, and one that is already starting to shape
the debate over the legal status of cannabis. In the UK, van Os's findings
have been seized upon by politicians, tabloid newspapers and mental-health
lobby groups who want drug laws tightened up. But their case is far from
made. Some researchers say there are potentially fatal flaws in the
research, and that it would be a serious mistake to change the law based on
an as-yet unproven theory. So who is right? The answer, it turns out, is
more complex than it first appears.

Compared with substances like heroin and crack cocaine, cannabis is seen by
many people as relatively harmless. Several European countries take a
lenient view of its use, and in the UK marijuana was downgraded from a
class B to a class C drug last year, meaning people caught with small
quantities are not usually arrested.

But doctors have long known that taking a lot of cannabis over a short
period can occasionally cause temporary symptoms of psychosis, one of the
hallmarks of schizophrenia (see "Psychosis explained"). The question of
whether the drug has long-term mental health consequences, however, is much
more contentious.

The first hints of possible long-term harm came from Jamaica in the 1960s,
where doctors noticed that Rastafarians who were heavy dope smokers seemed
unusually prone to psychotic illnesses. The suspicion grew in the 1980s,
when studies led by Robin Murray of the Institute of Psychiatry in London
showed that patients with schizophrenia or some other kind of psychosis,
were twice as likely as those without mental illness to be regular cannabis
users.

But it wasn't until a major Swedish study was published in 1987 that a link
between cannabis and long-term mental health problems was established. A
team from the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm analysed the records of all
the young men who had done national service in the Swedish army in 1969 and
1970 - 50,087 in total, representing about 97 per cent of the male
population aged 18 to 20. The records included details of the men's
experiences with drugs before being called up, including age at first use,
what they had taken and how often.

The team then checked out each man's medical history up to the mid-1980s.
They found that those who had smoked cannabis before being called up were
six times as likely to end up in hospital with schizophrenia as non-users.
This, the team concluded, provided clear evidence that smoking cannabis was
a risk factor for psychosis.

Case closed? Not at all. The study certainly showed a correlation between
cannabis use and psychosis, but, as many people pointed out, it by no means
proved that the former caused the latter. For one thing, the analysis
ignored several possible "confounding factors" - other differences between
users and non-users of cannabis that could be the real explanation for the
link with schizophrenia. For example, dope smokers could plausibly be more
likely to take other drugs such as LSD, which is a hallucinogen. Perhaps it
was these drugs that were actually causing schizophrenia. Another
possibility was that there was some hidden factor - possibly genetic - that
predisposed people both to smoking cannabis and developing psychosis.

More importantly, even if there were a causal relationship between cannabis
use and psychosis, the researchers failed to establish in which direction
it lay. Sure, it was possible that cannabis led to schizophrenia. But it
was just as likely that schizophrenia was causing people to smoke cannabis.
Perhaps they were "self-medicating" - taking the drug to alleviate their
symptoms.

The self-medication hypothesis has proved a popular one, and was virtually
orthodoxy in the 1980s. For one thing, patients with psychosis often report
that cannabis makes them feel better. And recent research suggests that one
of the chemical ingredients of cannabis, cannabidiol, exerts a powerful
antipsychotic effect. Indeed the UK firm GW Pharmaceuticals, which is
awaiting approval for an under-the-tongue cannabis spray for multiple
sclerosis patients, plans to investigate cannabidiol as a treatment for
schizophrenia.

But the idea that cannabis caused psychosis didn't go away. One prominent
sceptic of the self-medication idea was Don Linszen, a psychiatrist at the
University of Amsterdam, the Netherlands, who, as a mental-health
practitioner in the cannabis capital of Europe, was in daily contact with
dope-smoking schizophrenia patients. He noticed that the patients who used
cannabis usually fared much worse than those who didn't. Studies by Murray
and others confirmed Linszen's observations. If people with psychosis were
self-medicating, it wasn't working very well.
"The more cannabis the young people smoked, and the earlier they smoked it,
the worse their risk of psychosis"

Meanwhile, several research groups were busy setting up long-term studies
that followed large groups of young people over many years, keeping track
of their drug use as teenagers and testing them for signs of psychosis
later in life. They were similar in principle to the Swedish study, but
were carefully designed to avoid its mistakes, particularly on the question
of self-medication.

In the past couple of years results from a number of these studies have
been reported, and together they make a decent case that the Swedish
research got it right first time. "I don't think we can deny it any
longer," says epidemiologist Mary Cannon of the Royal College of Surgeons
in Ireland, based in Dublin. "Cannabis is part of the cause of schizophrenia."

Cannon helped carry out a study that followed 759 people born in Dunedin,
New Zealand, in 1972 and 1973 (British Medical Journal, vol 325, p 1212).
After carefully controlling for self-medication and other confounding
factors, the researchers found that those who had smoked cannabis three
times or more before the age of 15 were much more likely to suffer symptoms
of schizophrenia by the time they were 26 - they had a 10 per cent chance
compared with 3 per cent for the general population. The team concluded
that there is a vulnerable minority of teenagers for whom cannabis is
harmful. "We're not saying that cannabis is the major cause of
schizophrenia," says Murray, who led the study. "But it's a risk factor."

Similar results have recently come in from a Greek study as well as a
re-analysis of the original Swedish research. And late last year van Os and
his team brought out further results. They followed a group of nearly 2500
14 to 24-year-olds living in and around Munich, Germany, over four years.
After correcting for all the confounders they could think of, they found
that, overall, smoking cannabis as an adolescent moderately raised the risk
of developing signs of psychosis later on, from 16 per cent to 25 per cent.
But when they focused on individuals who were known to be susceptible to
psychosis - those who were showing signs of disturbed thought processes by
age 11 - they found a much stronger link. Susceptible individuals who
avoided cannabis had a 25 per cent chance of developing psychosis.
Susceptible individuals who smoked it had a 50 per cent risk. And the more
cannabis they smoked, and the earlier they smoked it, the worse the outcome.

According to van Os, Murray and others, there can no longer be any doubt
that there is a small but significant minority of people who have a
predisposition to psychosis and who would be well advised to steer clear of
cannabis.

This message is already starting to filter out into society. In the
Netherlands, the findings have fuelled a growing clamour for reform of the
laws regulating drug use. In the UK, the mental-health charity Sane has
called for the reclassification of cannabis to be reversed. And the British
government recently acknowledged the link in its strongest terms yet, when
it said in a press release that cannabis was an "important causal factor"
in mental illness.

But for some researchers, such pronouncements are premature. "I'm not
convinced," says Les Iversen, professor of pharmacology at the University
of Oxford and a member of the UK Home Office's Advisory Council on the
Misuse of Drugs. "I think the jury is still out on this one."
"Despite a steep rise in cannabis use among teenagers over the past 30
years, there has been no rise in schizophrenia"

He points out that epidemiological studies are notoriously bad at proving
cause and effect, in part because it is hard to identify all the
confounding factors. Scientists are particularly wary of such research when
the conclusions are based on small statistical differences - as in this
case. In the New Zealand study, the number of people who had smoked dope on
three occasions by the age of 15 was just 29, and only three went on to
develop psychosis. "I can't help thinking that the conclusion is rather
thin," says Iversen. "It makes you wonder. If they found another
confounder, where would that leave them?" Van Os himself admits that his
study does not eliminate all the confounding factors.

Iversen also points out problems with how psychosis is defined in each
study. Van Os's results, for example, seem to show that psychosis is
relatively common in cannabis smokers. But he chose a very broad definition
- a single psychotic symptom, such as hearing voices or a paranoid belief.
That's not the same as schizophrenia. About 20 per cent of the general
population live with these symptoms: only 1 in 20 of them ever require
treatment.

Iversen isn't the only doubter. Last year John Macleod of the University of
Birmingham, UK, carried out a systematic review of the 16 high-quality
long-term studies that have looked at cannabis and mental health and
concluded that there was "no strong evidence" of a link with psychosis (The
Lancet, vol 363, p 1579). "I'm not saying there is no causal association,
but at the moment, by the conventional standards of epidemiology, the
evidence is not particularly strong," he says.

There are other reasons to doubt the reality of a link. If it were genuine,
schizophrenia should be becoming more common as teenage cannabis
consumption goes up. But it isn't. In 2003 researchers at the University of
New South Wales in Sydney found that, despite a steep rise in cannabis use
among Australian teenagers over the past 30 years, there had been no rise
in the prevalence of schizophrenia.
In the genes

The only study to find a rise in schizophrenia was carried out in the inner
London district of Camberwell, where continual demographic changes make
interpreting the result almost impossible.

It seems the question of whether cannabis use can indeed lead to
schizophrenia will be unresolved for some time yet. One research avenue
that may shed further light on the matter is to look at whether genes are
involved. One of the members of Cannon's group, Avsahlom Caspi of King's
College London, is an authority on gene-environment interactions. A couple
of years ago he made a splash by showing that a genetic predisposition to
depression could interact with a traumatic experience such as bereavement
to trigger the illness (New Scientist, 26 July 2003, p 15). "We thought,
let's put this model to work on cannabis and psychosis," says Cannon.

She and her colleagues reanalysed the data from the New Zealand study, this
time adding in another variable - genetic predisposition to schizophrenia.
The gene they investigated, called COMT, encodes an enzyme
(catechol-O-methyl transferase) that breaks down a signalling chemical in
the brain called dopamine. COMT comes in two forms, one of which is
marginally more common in people with schizophrenia and is thought to be a
risk factor for the disease.

The results were crystal clear. The team found that in people with two
copies of the "normal" version of COMT, smoking cannabis had little effect
on their mental health. In people with one normal and one "bad" form of the
gene, smoking cannabis slightly increased their risk of psychosis. But for
people with two copies of the bad gene, cannabis spelled trouble: smoking
it as a teenager increased their likelihood of developing psychosis by a
factor of 10. The results have not yet been published, and Cannon warns
that they need replicating, but even so she says "this is a very large
effect, similar to the size of smoking and lung cancer. This is a very
significant finding." Case, perhaps, closed.

What should be done about it, however, remains an open question. Van Os
advocates that teenagers with a personal or family history of mental
illness be urged to steer clear of the drug. He also advocates legal
changes: governments should focus on keeping cannabis out of the hands of
teenagers and outlawing extra-strong varieties of cannabis, such as skunk
and white widow.

For Iversen though, this is still stretching the evidence. "What the data
show is that the risk applies to a small minority of young people who start
smoking cannabis at a very young age," he says. "Are we going to change the
law for the benefit of a vulnerable minority? A small minority of people
are vulnerable to liver damage if they drink even a small amount of
alcohol, but we haven't changed the law to protect them."

From issue 2492 of New Scientist magazine, 26 March 2005, page 44

Psychosis explained

WHAT IS PSYCHOSIS?

A symptom of mental health problems, not an illness in its own right.

WHAT DO THE SYMPTOMS INVOLVE?

Psychotic people often have delusional beliefs, such as that someone is
reading their mind or that they are immensely wealthy, powerful or famous.
Extreme disorganisation and auditory and visual hallucinations are also
common. Sufferers are usually unable to cope with daily life yet most are
unaware that their behaviour is abnormal.

WHAT CAUSES IT?

The main cause of psychosis is mental illness, principally schizophrenia
and manic depression but also depression and dementia. Symptoms can follow
infections, head injury, brain tumours, intoxication, poisoning and even
traumatic events. Some psychotic episodes have no obvious cause.

WHAT'S THE OUTLOOK?

Some people have only one episode, others struggle with psychosis their
entire life.

 

 

 

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