Abstract

BackgroundSynthetic cannabinoids (SCs) are the largest class of novel psychoactive substances (NPS) and are associated with an increased risk of overdosing and adverse events such as psychosis. JWH-018 is one of the earliest SCs and still widely available in large parts of the world. Controlled studies to assess the safety and behavioural profiles of SCs are extremely scarce.AimThe current study was designed to assess the psychotomimetic effects of a moderate dose of JWH-018.MethodsTwenty-four healthy participants (10 males, 14 females) entered a placebo-controlled, double blind, within-subjects trial and inhaled vapour of placebo or 75μg/kg bodyweight JWH-018. To ascertain a minimum level of intoxication, a booster dose of JWH-018 was administered on an as-needed basis. The average dose of JWH-018 administered was 5.52 mg. Subjective high, dissociative states (CADSS), psychedelic symptoms (Bowdle), mood (POMS) and cannabis reinforcement (SCRQ) were assessed within a 4.5-h time window after drug administration.ResultsJWH-018 caused psychedelic effects, such as altered internal and external perception, and dissociative effects, such as amnesia, derealisation and depersonalisation and induced feelings of confusion.ConclusionOverall, these findings suggest that a moderate dose of JWH-018 induces pronounced psychotomimetic symptoms in healthy participants with no history of mental illness, which confirms that SCs pose a serious risk for public health.

Highlights

  • Trial NL5960: Safety profile and pharmacokinetics of a synthetic cannabinoid (JWH-018), https://www.trialregister.nl/trial/5960This article belongs to a Special Issue on Cannabis and CannabinoidsSmoking mixtures containing synthetic cannabinoids (SCs) are being sold as alternatives for cannabis since about 2008

  • JWH-018 is the only SC that has been studied in controlled clinical trials. These typically concerned small-scaled efforts designed to determine the safety profile and the minimum to moderate effective dose of this compound (Theunissen et al 2019; Theunissen et al 2018). These efforts have paved the way for the present up-scaled study in healthy volunteers that was designed to assess the psychotomimetic effects of a moderate dose of JWH-018 and to evaluate the implication for psychosis

  • Participants who were given a booster dose were not told that this was due to the low score on the subjective high scale but were made to believe that something went wrong during administration

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Summary

Conclusion

These findings suggest that a moderate dose of JWH-018 induces pronounced psychotomimetic symptoms in healthy participants with no history of mental illness, which confirms that SCs pose a serious risk for public health.

Introduction
Materials and methods
Participants
Design and treatments
Results
Discussion
Compliance with ethical standards
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