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Association between formal thought disorder and cannabis use: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Mathilde Argote, Guillaume Sescousse, Jérôme Brunelin, É. Fakra, Mikail Nourredine, Benjamin Rolland

Schizophrenia September 29, 2022 DOI: 10.1038/s41537-022-00286-0 via OpenAlex

Summary

AI-generated from the abstract

Formal thought disorder (FTD) is a multidimensional syndrome occurring along the psychosis continuum. A meta-analysis of 19 studies including 1840 cannabis users and 3351 non-cannabis users found that cannabis users had higher severity of FTD (standardized mean difference = 0.21). This increase was present regardless of disorder severity: in healthy individuals, patients with first-episode psychosis, and patients with schizophrenia. Between-group differences were not significant. Cannabis use appears to be associated with increased FTD severity all along the psychosis continuum, consistent with its known effect on positive symptoms.

Study at a glance

Characteristics Meta-analysis Peer reviewed
Sample size 5,191
Population Individuals along the psychosis continuum (healthy individuals, patients with first-episode psychosis, patients with schizophrenia)
Topics Cannabis CBD
Keywords Psychosis Meta-analysis Psycinfo Psychiatry Schizophrenia object-oriented programming
Citations 7
Key finding Cannabis use is associated with increased formal thought disorder severity across the psychosis continuum.

Abstract

Formal thought disorder (FTD) is a multidimensional syndrome mainly occurring along the psychosis continuum. Cannabis use is known to increase symptoms of psychosis, particularly positive symptoms. However, the impact of cannabis use on FTD in individuals presenting symptoms along the psychosis continuum remains unclear. To address this knowledge gap, we conducted a meta-analysis examining the association between cannabis use and FTD in those individuals. We hypothesized that cannabis would worsen FTD. We conducted a systematic search of the PubMed, ScienceDirect, PsycINFO, Web of Science, Embase and Google Scholar databases up to July 2022. The results were collated through a random-effects model using the statistical software R. Reference lists of included studies were searched for additional relevant publications. Nineteen studies were included, totalling 1840 cannabis users and 3351 non-cannabis users. The severity of FTD was found to be higher in cannabis users (SMD = 0.21, 95%CI [0.12-0.29], p = 0.00009). Subgroup analyses revealed that FTD severity was increased among cannabis users, regardless of the disorder severity: healthy individuals (SMD = 0.19, 95%CI [0.05-0.33], p = 0.02); patients with first-episode psychosis (SMD = 0.21, 95%CI [0.01-0.41], p = 0.04); patients with schizophrenia (SMD = 0.25, 95%CI [0.11-0.38], p = 0.005). Between-group differences were not significant. In line with its already known effect on positive symptoms in psychosis, cannabis use appears to be associated with increased FTD severity all along the psychosis continuum. Future research should consider potential confounding variables such as other substance use disorders and explore how FTD dimensions are impacted by cannabis use.

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