Cannabis use disorder and adverse cardiovascular outcomes: A population‐based retrospective cohort analysis of adults from Alberta, Canada

Author:

Bahji Anees1234ORCID,Hathaway Josh5,Adams Denise56,Crockford David13,Edelman E. Jennifer78ORCID,Stein Michael D.910,Patten Scott B.12

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry University of Calgary Calgary AB Canada

2. Department of Community Health Sciences University of Calgary Calgary AB Canada

3. Hotchkiss Brain Institute University of Calgary Calgary AB Canada

4. British Columbia Centre on Substance Use Vancouver BC Canada

5. Canadian Research Initiative in Substance (CRISM)–Alberta Health Services (AHS) Advances of Analytics in Substance Use Edmonton AB Canada

6. University of Alberta Edmonton AB Canada

7. Department of Internal Medicine Yale School of Medicine New Haven CT USA

8. Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS Yale School of Public Health New Haven CT USA

9. Behavioural Medicine and Addictions Research Department Butler Hospital Providence RI USA

10. Boston University School of Public Health Boston MA USA

Abstract

AbstractAimTo measure the association between cannabis use disorder (CUD) and adverse cardiovascular disease (CVD) outcomes.Design and SettingWe conducted a matched, population‐based retrospective cohort study involving five linked administrative health databases from Alberta, Canada.ParticipantsWe identified participants with CUD diagnosis codes and matched them to participants without CUD codes by gender, year of birth and time of presentation to the health system. We included 29 764 pairs (n = 59 528 individuals in total).MeasurementsCVD events were defined by at least one incident diagnostic code within the study period (1 January 2012–31 December 2019). Covariates included comorbidity, socio‐economic status, prescription medication use and health service use. Using mortality‐censored Poisson regression models, we computed survival analyses for time to incident CVD stratified by CUD status. In addition, we calculated crude and stratified risk ratios (RRs) across various covariates using the Mantel–Haenszel technique.FindingsThe overall prevalence of documented CUD was 0.8%. Approximately 2.4% and 1.5% of participants in the CUD and unexposed groups experienced an incident adverse CVD event (RR = 1.57; 95% confidence interval = 1.40–1.77). CUD was significantly associated with reduced time to incident CVD event. Individuals who appeared to have greater RRs for incident CVD were those without mental health comorbidity, who had not used health‐care services in the previous 6 months, who were not on prescription medications and who did not have comorbid conditions.ConclusionsCanadian adults with cannabis use disorder appear to have an approximately 60% higher risk of experiencing incident adverse cardiovascular disease events than those without cannabis use disorder.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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