Effect of cannabis consumption on characteristics and evolution of thromboangitis obliterans

Author:

Bergère Guillaume12,Toquet Claire3,Hoffmann Clément4,Bressollette Luc4,Raimbeau Alizée12,Durant Cécile12,Artifoni Mathieu12,Gautier Giovanni12,Hersant Jeanne1,Connault Jérôme12,Pistorius Marc-Antoine12,Espitia Olivier12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of internal and vascular medicine, CHU de Nantes, France

2. UNAV, Nantes vascular access unit, CHU de Nantes, France

3. Department of pathology, CHU de Nantes, Nantes, France

4. Department of vascular medicine, EA 3878 GETBO, CHU de Brest, France

Abstract

Summary: Background: Thromboangiitis obliterans (TAO) is a distal non atherosclerotic thrombotic vasculitis affecting tobacco smokers. The role of cannabis co-exposure remains controversial. The study aims to assess how cannabis consumption influences clinical presentation and outcome of TAO in tobacco smokers. Patients and methods: TAO patients, according to Papa’s criteria, were included in a retrospective bicentric study between the 1st January 2003 and the 1st march 2020. Clinical characteristics, arterial involvement at TAO diagnosis, vascular event and amputations during follow-up were analyzed according to cannabis consumption. Results: Seventy-three patients with TAO patients were included. Forty-five patients were in Tobacco group (T) and 28 in Tobacco and cannabis group (T&C). Tobacco exposure was less important in T&C group than in T group (19.4±11.3 vs 31.6±16.6 pack-years) (p=0.005) and patients in T&C group were younger at TAO diagnosis than in T group (p=0.008). Patients in T&C group presented more claudication (33.3% vs 8.9%, p=0.01) and less upper limbs resting ischemia (25.9% vs 51.1%, p=0.04) than patients in the T group. No differences were found between groups with regard to arterial distribution. Amputation rate for patients who had at least one major or minor amputation did not differ between T and T&C group (25% vs 14.8%, p=0.38). Conclusions: Cannabis consumption was associated with a younger age of TAO onset. However, it does not affect amputation-free survival, Tobacco exposure is less important in T&C patients; data of this bicentric study suggest that cannabis could be a cofactor of tobacco which accelerates TAO onset.

Publisher

Hogrefe Publishing Group

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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