大麻と精神保健処方の関連を探る公共政策研究(Public Policy Study Probes Link Between Cannabis, Mental Health Prescriptions)

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2024-10-25 ジョージア工科大学

ジョージア工科大学の研究によると、合法的な大麻アクセスがメンタルヘルス処方薬の利用に複雑な影響を与えることがわかった。医療および娯楽用大麻が合法の州では、抗不安薬ベンゾジアゼピンの処方が減少したが、抗うつ薬と抗精神病薬の処方が増加した。特に抗不安薬の減少は有益と考えられる一方、抗うつ薬等の増加が示す影響については不明で、さらなる研究が必要とされる。

<関連情報>

大麻取締法と精神疾患治療薬の利用 Cannabis Laws and Utilization of Medications for the Treatment of Mental Health Disorders

Ashley C. Bradford, PhD; Felipe Lozano-Rojas, PhD; Hailemichael Bekele Shone, PhD; et al
JAMA Network Open  Published:September 5, 2024
DOI:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2024.32021

大麻と精神保健処方の関連を探る公共政策研究(Public Policy Study Probes Link Between Cannabis, Mental Health Prescriptions)

Key Points

Question Is access to cannabis, via medical or recreational legalization, associated with changes in dispensing of prescription medications to treat mental health disorders in a commercially insured population?

Findings This cross-sectional study of 9 438 716 commercially insured patients found statistically significant reductions in benzodiazepine dispensing after increases in both medical and recreational cannabis access. However, evidence suggests increases in other types of psychotropic dispensing.

Meaning This study suggests that cannabis laws may be significantly associated with the population-level use of prescription drugs to treat mental health disorders, although the associations vary by drug class and state.

Abstract

Importance Mental health disorders are prevalent yet undertreated health conditions in the US. Given perceptions about the potential effect of cannabis on individuals with mental health disorders, there is a need to understand the association of cannabis laws with psychotropic use.

Objective To investigate the association of medical and recreational cannabis laws and dispensary openings with the dispensing of psychotropic medications used to treat mental health disorders in the US.

Design, Setting, and Participants This cross-sectional study of 10 013 948 commercially insured patients used a synthetic control method to examine the association of cannabis policies with prescribing. Data on all patients dispensed prescriptions for each of the 5 classes of psychotropic medications from January 1, 2007, to December 31, 2020, were extracted from Optum’s deidentified Clinformatics Data Mart Database. Statistical analysis was performed from September 2022 to November 2023.

Exposures The 4 exposure variables measured were whether medical or recreational cannabis laws were in effect and whether medical or recreational cannabis dispensaries were open in each state and calendar quarter.

Main Outcome and Measures One measure of the extensive margins of dispensing and 2 measures of the intensive margins of dispensing were constructed for 5 medication classes (benzodiazepines, antidepressants, antipsychotics, barbiturates, and sleep medications).

Results The primary sample (the benzodiazepine sample) included 3 848 721 patients (mean [SD] age, 46.1 [11.4] years; 65.4% women; 53.7% aged 35-54 years). Medical cannabis laws were associated with a 12.4% reduction in the benzodiazepine fill rate (average treatment effect on the treated [ATT], –27.4; 95% CI, –14.7 to 12.0; P = .001), recreational cannabis laws were associated with a 15.2% reduction in the fill rate (ATT, -32.5; 95% CI, -24.4 to 20.1; P = .02), and medical cannabis laws were associated with a 1.3% reduction in the mean number of benzodiazepine fills per patient (ATT, –0.02; 95% CI, -0.02 to 0.02; P = .04). Medical dispensaries were associated with a 3.9% reduction in mean days’ supply per benzodiazepine fill (ATT, -1.7; 95% CI, -0.8 to 0.6; P = .001), while recreational dispensaries were associated with a 6.2% reduction (ATT, -2.4; 95% CI, -1.0 to 0.9; P < .001). Medical cannabis laws were associated with a 3.8% increase in antidepressant fills (ATT, 27.2; 95% CI, -33.5 to 26.9; P = .048), and medical dispensaries were associated with an 8.8% increase (ATT, 50.7; 95% CI, -32.3 to 28.4; P = .004). The mean number of antipsychotic medication fills per patient increased by 2.5% (ATT, 0.06; 95% CI, -0.04 to 0.05; P = .02) after medical cannabis laws and by 2.5% (ATT, 0.06; 95% CI, -0.04 to 0.04; P = .02) after medical dispensary openings. Findings for the other drug classes showed substantial heterogeneity by state and direction of association.

Conclusions and Relevance This cross-sectional study of commercially insured patients suggests that there may have been meaningful heterogeneous associations between cannabis policy and state and between cannabis policy and drug class (eg, decreases in dispensing of benzodiazepines but increases in dispensing of antidepressants and antipsychotics). This finding suggests additional clinical research is needed to understand the association between cannabis use and mental health. The results have implications for patient substance use and mental health–related outcomes.

医療・健康
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