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Cannabis use disorder and dissociation: A report from a prospective first-episode psychosis study.

V. Ricci, F. Ceci, F. di Carlo, A. Lalli, L. Ciavoni, A. Mosca, G. Sepede, A. Salone, D. Quattrone, S. Fraticelli, G. Maina, G. Martinotti

Drug and Alcohol Dependence October 1, 2021 DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2021.109118 via Semantic Scholar

Summary

AI-generated from the abstract

First-episode psychosis patients who also have cannabis use disorder show more severe positive symptoms, dissociative experiences, and worse overall functioning compared with patients who do not use cannabis, even when both groups receive comparable antipsychotic treatment. Over an eight-month follow-up, cannabis users continue to have higher levels of positive symptoms and dissociation, and their global functioning worsens, while functioning improves in non-users. The findings suggest that greater dissociation and positive symptoms at first episode and their persistence may characterize cannabis-associated psychosis and help explain the diverging trajectories in functioning.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Observational cohort Peer reviewed
Sample size 70
Population First-episode psychotic patients (FEPp) with and without cannabis use disorder, recruited in psychiatric inpatient facilities in Lazio and Piemonte, Italy
Duration 8-month follow-up
Keywords Medicine Psychology
Key finding First-episode psychosis patients using cannabis had higher levels of positive symptoms, dissociative experiences, and worse functioning than non-users, with functioning worsening over eight months in users while improving in non-users.

Abstract

BACKGROUND Cannabis is the most used recreational drug worldwide. Its use can increase the risk of developing psychotic disorders and exacerbate their course. However, the relationship between cannabis use and dissociative symptoms has been scarcely investigated. AIMS To examine differences in psychotic and dissociative symptoms, and in functioning in first-episode psychotic patients (FEPp) using cannabis compared with those not using cannabis. METHODS Between January 2014 and December 2019, seventy FEPp with cannabis use disorder (N = 35) and without it (N = 35) were recruited in psychiatric inpatient facilities in the Italian regions of Lazio and Piemonte. All subjects were assessed at FEP, after 4 and 8 months, using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS), the Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) scale and the Dissociative Experiences Scale - II (DES-II). Detailed information on the pattern of cannabis and other substance use were collected. RESULTS FEP using cannabis showed higher levels of positive symptomatology, dissociative experiences and worse functioning than their non-user counterpart, despite a comparable antipsychotic treatment. At an eight-month prospective evaluation, FEP using cannabis still showed higher levels of positive symptomatology and dissociation. Moreover, global functioning worsened over time in FEPp using cannabis, whereas it improved those not using it. DISCUSSION Our findings suggest that a greater degree of dissociation and positive symptoms at FEPp and their persistence over time may characterise cannabis-associated psychosis. Both these factors might explain the overall functioning worsening over time that we observed in the cannabis-user group compared to the functioning improvement in the non-user group.

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