Characteristics of women concordant and discordant for urine drug screens for cannabis exposure and self-reported cannabis use during pregnancy

IF 2.6 3区 医学 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES
Ryan Bogdan , Shelby D. Leverett , Anna M. Constantino-Petit , Nicole Lashley-Simms , David B. Liss , Emma C. Johnson , Shannon N. Lenze , Rachel E. Lean , Tara A. Smyser , Ebony B. Carter , Christopher D. Smyser , Cynthia E. Rogers , Arpana Agrawal
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background

Increasing cannabis use among pregnant people and equivocal evidence linking prenatal cannabis exposure to adverse outcomes in offspring highlights the need to understand its potential impact on pregnancy and child outcomes. Assessing cannabis use during pregnancy remains a major challenge with potential influences of stigma on self-report as well as detection limitations of easily collected biological matrices.

Objective

This descriptive study examined the concordance between self-reported (SR) cannabis use and urine drug screen (UDS) detection of cannabis exposure during the first trimester of pregnancy and characterized concordant and discordant groups for sociodemographic factors, modes of use, secondhand exposure to cannabis and tobacco, and alcohol use and cotinine positivity.

Study design

The Cannabis Use During Development and Early Life (CUDDEL) Study is an ongoing longitudinal study that recruits pregnant individuals presenting for obstetric care, who report lifetime cannabis use as well as using (n = 289) or not using cannabis (n = 169) during pregnancy. During the first trimester pregnancy visit, SR of cannabis use and a UDS for cannabis, other illicit drugs and nicotine are acquired from eligible participants, of whom 333 as of 05/01/2023 had both.

Results

Using available CUDDEL Study data on both SR and UDS (n = 333; age 26.6 ± 4.7; 88.6% Black; 45.4% below federal poverty threshold; 56.5% with paid employment; 89% with high school education; 22% first pregnancy; 12.3 ± 3.6 weeks gestation), we classified pregnant individuals with SR and UDS data into 4 groups based on concordance (k = 0.49 [95% C.I. 0.40–0.58]) between SR cannabis use and UDS cannabis detection during the first trimester: 1) SR+/UDS+ (n = 107); 2) SR-/UDS- (n = 142); 3) SR+/UDS- (n = 44); 4) SR-/UDS+ (n = 40). Those who were SR+/UDS- reported less frequent cannabis use and fewer hours under the influence of cannabis during their pregnancy. Those who were SR-/UDS+ were more likely to have joined the study at a lower gestational age with 62.5% reporting cannabis use during their pregnancy prior to being aware that they were pregnant. Of the 40 SR-/UDS+ women, 14 (i.e., 35%) reported past month secondhand exposure, or blunt usage. In the subset of individuals with SR and UDS available at trimester 2 (N = 160) and 3 (N = 140), concordant groups were mostly stable and > 50% of those in the discordant groups became concordant by the second trimester. Classifying individuals as exposed or not exposed who were SR+ and/or UDS+ resulted in minor changes in group status based on self-report at screening.

Conclusion

Overall, there was moderate concordance between SR and UDS for cannabis use/exposure during pregnancy. Instances of SR+/UDS- discordancy may partially be attributable to lower levels of use that are not detected on UDS. SR-/UDS+ discordancy may arise from recent use prior to knowledge of pregnancy, extreme secondhand exposure, deception, and challenges with completing questionnaires. Acquiring both self-report and biological detection of cannabis use/exposure allows for the examination of convergent evidence. Classifying those who are SR+ and/or UDS+ as individuals who used cannabis during their first trimester after being aware of their pregnancy resulted in only a minor change in exposure status; thus, relying on self-report screening, at least in this population and within this sociocultural context likely provides an adequate approximation of cannabis use during pregnancy.

尿液药物筛查大麻暴露和自述孕期使用大麻情况一致和不一致的女性特征
背景越来越多的孕妇使用大麻,而且产前大麻暴露与后代不良结局之间的联系证据不明确,这突出表明有必要了解大麻对妊娠和儿童结局的潜在影响。这项描述性研究考察了妊娠头三个月自我报告(SR)的大麻使用情况与尿液药物筛查(UDS)检测的大麻暴露之间的一致性,并根据社会人口学因素、使用方式、二手大麻和烟草暴露、酒精使用和可替宁阳性来描述一致性组和不一致组。研究设计发育和早期生活中使用大麻研究(CUDDEL)是一项正在进行的纵向研究,该研究招募了前来接受产科护理的孕妇,这些孕妇报告了终生使用大麻的情况,以及在怀孕期间使用(289 人)或不使用大麻(169 人)的情况。结果利用 CUDDEL 研究现有的 SR 和 UDS 数据(n = 333;年龄 26.6 ± 4.7;88.6% 为黑人;45.4% 低于联邦贫困线;56.我们根据妊娠头三个月 SR 大麻使用和 UDS 大麻检测之间的一致性(k = 0.49 [95% C.I.0.40-0.58]),将有 SR 和 UDS 数据的孕妇分为 4 组:1)SR+/UDS+;2)SR+/UDS+;3)SR+/UDS+;4)SR+/UDS+;5)SR+/UDS+;6)SR+/UDS+;7)SR+/UDS+;8)SR+/UDS+;9)SR+/UDS+;10)SR+/UDS+:1) SR+/UDS+ (n = 107);2) SR-/UDS- (n = 142);3) SR+/UDS- (n = 44);4) SR-/UDS+ (n = 40)。SR+/UDS- 者报告在怀孕期间使用大麻的频率较低,受大麻影响的时间较少。SR-/UDS+ 更有可能是在较低的妊娠期加入研究的,62.5% 的人报告在知道自己怀孕之前就在怀孕期间使用过大麻。在 40 名 SR-/UDS+ 妇女中,有 14 人(即 35%)报告在过去一个月中接触过二手大麻或使用过钝器。在怀孕两个月(N = 160)和三个月(N = 140)时有 SR 和 UDS 的个体子集中,一致的组别大多是稳定的;在不一致的组别中,50% 的个体在怀孕两个月时变得一致。根据筛查时的自我报告,将 SR+ 和/或 UDS+ 的个人划分为暴露或未暴露组,导致组别状态发生轻微变化。SR+/UDS- 不一致的部分原因可能是 UDS 未检测到较低水平的使用。SR-/UDS+ 不一致的原因可能是在知道怀孕之前最近使用过、极度的二手接触、欺骗以及填写问卷时遇到困难。同时获得自我报告和生物检测的大麻使用/暴露情况,可以对趋同证据进行检查。将 SR+ 和/或 UDS+ 患者归类为在知道自己怀孕后的前三个月使用过大麻的人,只会导致接触状况发生轻微变化;因此,依靠自我报告筛查,至少在这一人群和这一社会文化背景下,很可能能够充分近似地反映孕期的大麻使用情况。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.60
自引率
10.30%
发文量
48
审稿时长
58 days
期刊介绍: Neurotoxicology and Teratology provides a forum for publishing new information regarding the effects of chemical and physical agents on the developing, adult or aging nervous system. In this context, the fields of neurotoxicology and teratology include studies of agent-induced alterations of nervous system function, with a focus on behavioral outcomes and their underlying physiological and neurochemical mechanisms. The Journal publishes original, peer-reviewed Research Reports of experimental, clinical, and epidemiological studies that address the neurotoxicity and/or functional teratology of pesticides, solvents, heavy metals, nanomaterials, organometals, industrial compounds, mixtures, drugs of abuse, pharmaceuticals, animal and plant toxins, atmospheric reaction products, and physical agents such as radiation and noise. These reports include traditional mammalian neurotoxicology experiments, human studies, studies using non-mammalian animal models, and mechanistic studies in vivo or in vitro. Special Issues, Reviews, Commentaries, Meeting Reports, and Symposium Papers provide timely updates on areas that have reached a critical point of synthesis, on aspects of a scientific field undergoing rapid change, or on areas that present special methodological or interpretive problems. Theoretical Articles address concepts and potential mechanisms underlying actions of agents of interest in the nervous system. The Journal also publishes Brief Communications that concisely describe a new method, technique, apparatus, or experimental result.
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