Cannabis use disorder

From IDWiki

Background

  • Cannabis refers to the plants within the Cannabaceae family (marijuana), which includes Cannabis indica and C. sativa
  • Cannabis products are being prescribed for adjunctive management of chronic pain
  • Some people who use cannabis can develop a substance use disorder

Pathophysiology

  • The primary psychoactive chemical is tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)
    • THC content of cannabis has increased from 3% in the 1970s to 12% mroe recently
  • Half-life with occasional use is 1.3 days, but with frequent use increases to 5 to 13 days due to sequestration in fat

Risk Factors

  • Younger age
  • Male sex
  • Lower socioeconomic status
  • Early onset of cannabis use
  • Other substance use concerns, including nicotine, alcohol, cocaine, and opioids
  • Family history of substance use disorders
  • Concurrent mental health disorders

Clinical Manifestations

Acute intoxication

  • Positive effects include relaxation, euphoria, heightened perception, sociability, sensation of time slowing, increased appetite, and decreased pain
  • Negative effects include paranoia, dry mouth, tachycardia (especially with alcohol coingestion), anxiety, drowsiness, impaired short-term memory, poor attention, and decreased coordination and balance
  • Essentially impossible to overdose

Cannabis hyperemesis syndrome

  • Complicates as much as 30% of chronic, daily cannabis use
  • Causes severe cyclic nausea and vomiting, resolution with cannabis cessation, abdominal pain
  • Symptoms improve with hot showers or baths
  • Minor features include age less than 50 years, weight loss more than 5 kg, morning symptoms, normal bowel habits, and a negative diagnostic evaluation
  • The only treatment is abstinence from cannabis

Withdrawal

  • Occurs in about a third of people after heavy, prolonged use
  • Requires three or more of the following, within 1 week of cessation
    • Irritability, anger, or aggression
    • Nervousness or anxiety
    • Sleep difficulty (insomnia, disturbing dreams)
    • Decreased appetite or weight loss
    • Restlessness
    • Depressed mood
    • At least one of: abdominal pain, shakiness/tremors, sweating, fever, chills, or headache

Diagnosis

  • Uses the diagnostic criteria for any substance use disorder
  • Heavy use is detectable for up to 30 days in urine
    • Indirect exposure (e.g. second-hand) will generally not generate a positive urine test

Management

Screening

  • The CUDIT-R tool is a self-screening questionnaire

Treatment

  • Cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) and motivational enhancement therapy (MET) increases abstinence, decreases frequency of use, decreases severity of dependence, and decreases severity of cannabis-related problems
  • There are no proven and approved pharmacologic interventions
  • The following have been investigations
    • Gabapentin 1200 mg daily may decrease use
    • Cannabis replacement therapy with dronabinol or nabiximols may decrease withdrawal and increase retention in treatment programs, but not statistically significant
    • The following have been studied and found to not be useful: SSRIs, antidepressants, mixed-action antidepressants, atypical antidepressants, anxiolytics, and norepinephrine reuptake inhibitors
    • Mixed results for N-acetyl cysteine and naltrexone

Pain management

  • One observational study suggests that cannabis use is not opioid sparing, does not reduce pain scores, and decreases activity scores 1
    • However, it is still under active research for chronic non-cancer pain
  • Avoid prescribing cannabis products to patients with substance use disorders without the involvement of an addiction medicine specialist

Prevention

  • Prevention strategies include delaying onset of cannabis use, not driving while intoxicated, and avoiding smoked cannabis

References

  1. ^  Gabrielle Campbell, Wayne D Hall, Amy Peacock, Nicholas Lintzeris, Raimondo Bruno, Briony Larance, Suzanne Nielsen, Milton Cohen, Gary Chan, Richard P Mattick, Fiona Blyth, Marian Shanahan, Timothy Dobbins, Michael Farrell, Louisa Degenhardt. Effect of cannabis use in people with chronic non-cancer pain prescribed opioids: findings from a 4-year prospective cohort study. The Lancet Public Health. 2018;3(7):e341-e350. doi:10.1016/s2468-2667(18)30110-5.