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Do Anxiety Symptoms Mediate the Association Between Cannabis Use Frequency and Psychotic-Like Experiences in Emerging Adult Undergraduates?

OBJECTIVE: Cannabis is commonly used by Canadian emerging adults (ages 18–25 years), many of whom attend post-secondary institutions. Frequent cannabis use is linked with psychotic-like experiences (PLEs); however, the exact nature of this association remains unclear. Anxiety symptoms may mediate th...

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Autores principales: Bernusky, Haley C. R., Tibbo, Philip G., Conrod, Patricia J., Yunus, Fakir Md., Keough, Matthew T., Thompson, Kara D., Krank, Marvin D., Hadwin, Allyson F., Stewart, Sherry H.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10590089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37194263
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/07067437231176900
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author Bernusky, Haley C. R.
Tibbo, Philip G.
Conrod, Patricia J.
Yunus, Fakir Md.
Keough, Matthew T.
Thompson, Kara D.
Krank, Marvin D.
Hadwin, Allyson F.
Stewart, Sherry H.
author_facet Bernusky, Haley C. R.
Tibbo, Philip G.
Conrod, Patricia J.
Yunus, Fakir Md.
Keough, Matthew T.
Thompson, Kara D.
Krank, Marvin D.
Hadwin, Allyson F.
Stewart, Sherry H.
author_sort Bernusky, Haley C. R.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Cannabis is commonly used by Canadian emerging adults (ages 18–25 years), many of whom attend post-secondary institutions. Frequent cannabis use is linked with psychotic-like experiences (PLEs); however, the exact nature of this association remains unclear. Anxiety symptoms may mediate this association, as they are prevalent in emerging adults and have been independently linked with both cannabis use and PLEs. Past work found that anxiety mediated the association between cannabis use frequency and attenuated positive psychotic symptoms (further along the psychosis continuum than PLEs), however this research had yet to be validated in the Canadian population, and trait rather than state anxiety (frequency of anxiety symptoms) was studied. Thus, our primary objective was to examine if anxiety symptoms mediated the association between cannabis use frequency and PLEs in Canadian emerging adult undergraduates. Despite known sex differences in cannabis use, expression of anxiety, and PLEs, past work did not evaluate the potential impact of biological sex on the anxiety-mediated model, and thus is the secondary objective of the present study. METHODS: 1,266 first-/second-year emerging adult undergraduates from five Canadian universities provided cross-sectional, self-report survey data in fall 2021 semester. Validated measures of cannabis use frequency, anxiety, and PLEs were administered. RESULTS: Path analyses supported mediation from cannabis use to PLEs through anxiety (b  =  0.07, P < 0.001, 95% bootstrap CI [0.03, 0.10]). No direct effect was found (P  =  0.457), suggesting that the cannabis-to-PLEs association was mediated by anxiety. Mediation did not depend on biological sex (i.e., bootstrapped 95% CIs crossed zero). CONCLUSIONS: Anxiety symptoms mediated the association between cannabis use and PLEs in emerging adults regardless of their biological sex. Assuming replication in prospective research, results highlight anxiety as an important intervention target in frequent cannabis-using emerging adults, to potentially prevent development/worsening of PLEs, and in turn psychotic illness.
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spelling pubmed-105900892023-10-22 Do Anxiety Symptoms Mediate the Association Between Cannabis Use Frequency and Psychotic-Like Experiences in Emerging Adult Undergraduates? Bernusky, Haley C. R. Tibbo, Philip G. Conrod, Patricia J. Yunus, Fakir Md. Keough, Matthew T. Thompson, Kara D. Krank, Marvin D. Hadwin, Allyson F. Stewart, Sherry H. Can J Psychiatry Original Research OBJECTIVE: Cannabis is commonly used by Canadian emerging adults (ages 18–25 years), many of whom attend post-secondary institutions. Frequent cannabis use is linked with psychotic-like experiences (PLEs); however, the exact nature of this association remains unclear. Anxiety symptoms may mediate this association, as they are prevalent in emerging adults and have been independently linked with both cannabis use and PLEs. Past work found that anxiety mediated the association between cannabis use frequency and attenuated positive psychotic symptoms (further along the psychosis continuum than PLEs), however this research had yet to be validated in the Canadian population, and trait rather than state anxiety (frequency of anxiety symptoms) was studied. Thus, our primary objective was to examine if anxiety symptoms mediated the association between cannabis use frequency and PLEs in Canadian emerging adult undergraduates. Despite known sex differences in cannabis use, expression of anxiety, and PLEs, past work did not evaluate the potential impact of biological sex on the anxiety-mediated model, and thus is the secondary objective of the present study. METHODS: 1,266 first-/second-year emerging adult undergraduates from five Canadian universities provided cross-sectional, self-report survey data in fall 2021 semester. Validated measures of cannabis use frequency, anxiety, and PLEs were administered. RESULTS: Path analyses supported mediation from cannabis use to PLEs through anxiety (b  =  0.07, P < 0.001, 95% bootstrap CI [0.03, 0.10]). No direct effect was found (P  =  0.457), suggesting that the cannabis-to-PLEs association was mediated by anxiety. Mediation did not depend on biological sex (i.e., bootstrapped 95% CIs crossed zero). CONCLUSIONS: Anxiety symptoms mediated the association between cannabis use and PLEs in emerging adults regardless of their biological sex. Assuming replication in prospective research, results highlight anxiety as an important intervention target in frequent cannabis-using emerging adults, to potentially prevent development/worsening of PLEs, and in turn psychotic illness. SAGE Publications 2023-05-17 2023-11 /pmc/articles/PMC10590089/ /pubmed/37194263 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/07067437231176900 Text en © The Author(s) 2023 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) which permits any use, reproduction and distribution of the work without further permission provided the original work is attributed as specified on the SAGE and Open Access page (https://us.sagepub.com/en-us/nam/open-access-at-sage).
spellingShingle Original Research
Bernusky, Haley C. R.
Tibbo, Philip G.
Conrod, Patricia J.
Yunus, Fakir Md.
Keough, Matthew T.
Thompson, Kara D.
Krank, Marvin D.
Hadwin, Allyson F.
Stewart, Sherry H.
Do Anxiety Symptoms Mediate the Association Between Cannabis Use Frequency and Psychotic-Like Experiences in Emerging Adult Undergraduates?
title Do Anxiety Symptoms Mediate the Association Between Cannabis Use Frequency and Psychotic-Like Experiences in Emerging Adult Undergraduates?
title_full Do Anxiety Symptoms Mediate the Association Between Cannabis Use Frequency and Psychotic-Like Experiences in Emerging Adult Undergraduates?
title_fullStr Do Anxiety Symptoms Mediate the Association Between Cannabis Use Frequency and Psychotic-Like Experiences in Emerging Adult Undergraduates?
title_full_unstemmed Do Anxiety Symptoms Mediate the Association Between Cannabis Use Frequency and Psychotic-Like Experiences in Emerging Adult Undergraduates?
title_short Do Anxiety Symptoms Mediate the Association Between Cannabis Use Frequency and Psychotic-Like Experiences in Emerging Adult Undergraduates?
title_sort do anxiety symptoms mediate the association between cannabis use frequency and psychotic-like experiences in emerging adult undergraduates?
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10590089/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37194263
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/07067437231176900
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