大麻使用常规治疗慢性疼痛的混合方法分析。

Kevin F Boehnke, Laura Yakas, J Ryan Scott, Melissa DeJonckheere, Evangelos Litinas, Suzanne Sisley, Daniel J Clauw, David A Williams, Jenna McAfee
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:现有大麻产品的广泛异质性使得医生很难对患者进行适当的指导。在目前的研究中,我们的目标是描述自然的大麻使用习惯,并探索习惯与报告的吸食大麻益处之间的联系。方法:我们对美国和加拿大使用大麻进行症状管理的自我报告慢性疼痛成年人的n=1087份横断面调查结果进行了混合方法分析。首先,我们对一个开放式问题的回答进行了定性分析,该问题评估了典型的大麻使用习惯,包括给药途径、大麻素含量和时间。然后,我们根据吸入(吸烟、蒸发)和非吸入(如食物)将反应分为几类。最后,我们调查了亚组对大麻如何影响疼痛、整体健康和药物使用(例如,替代阿片类药物、苯二氮卓类药物)的看法。替代品被视为药物类别的计数,同时对疼痛和健康的反应进行持续分析,-2表示健康状况下降或疼痛增加,2表示健康状况改善或疼痛减少。结果:在给药途径、大麻素含量和使用时间方面,常规药物差异很大。总体而言,18.8%、36.2%和45%分别使用非吸入、吸入和非吸入+吸入途径。使用吸入途径的患者更年轻(平均年龄46.5[吸入]和49.2[非吸入+吸入]vs.56.3[吸入],F=36.1,p2=59.6,P结论:根据给药途径对医用大麻患者进行分组可能为未来检查医用大麻风险和益处的研究提供有用的类别。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
A mixed methods analysis of cannabis use routines for chronic pain management.

Background: The wide heterogeneity of available cannabis products makes it difficult for physicians to appropriately guide patients. In the current study, our objective was to characterize naturalistic cannabis use routines and explore associations between routines and reported benefits from consuming cannabis.

Methods: We performed a mixed methods analysis of n=1087 cross-sectional survey responses from adults with self-reported chronic pain using cannabis for symptom management in the USA and Canada. First, we qualitatively analyzed responses to an open-ended question that assessed typical cannabis use routines, including administration routes, cannabinoid content, and timing. We then sub-grouped responses into categories based on inhalation (smoking, vaporizing) vs. non-inhalation (e.g., edibles). Finally, we investigated subgroups perceptions of how cannabis affected pain, overall health, and use of medications (e.g., substituting for opioids, benzodiazepines). Substitutions were treated as a count of medication classes, while responses for both pain and health were analyzed continuously, with - 2 indicating health declining a lot or pain increasing a lot and 2 indicating that health improved a lot or pain decreased a lot.

Results: Routines varied widely in terms of administration routes, cannabinoid content, and use timing. Overall, 18.8%, 36.2%, and 45% used non-inhalation, inhalation, and non-inhalation + inhalation routes, respectively. Those who used inhalation routes were younger (mean age 46.5 [inhalation] and 49.2 [non-inhalation + inhalation] vs. 56.3 [inhalation], F=36.1, p<0.001), while a higher proportion of those who used non-inhalation routes were female (72.5% non-inhalation vs. 48.3% inhalation and 65.3% non-inhalation + inhalation, X2=59.6, p<0.001). THC-rich products were typically used at night, while CBD-rich products were more often used during the day. While all participants reported similarly decreased pain, participants using non-inhalation + inhalation administration routes reported larger improvements in health than the non-inhalation (mean difference = 0.32, 95% CI: 0.07-0.37, p<0.001) and inhalation subgroups (mean difference = 0.22, 95% CI: 0.07-0.37, p=0.001). Similarly, the non-inhalation + inhalation group had significantly more medication substitutions than those using non-inhalation (mean difference = 0.62, 95% CI: 0.33-0.90, p<0.001) and inhalation administration routes (mean difference = 0.45, 95% CI: 0.22-0.69, p<0.001), respectively.

Conclusions: Subgrouping medical cannabis patients based on administration route profile may provide useful categories for future studies examining the risks and benefits of medical cannabis.

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