Abstract

Cannabis has been implicated as both a potential cause and adverse prognostic factor in psychotic disorders. Investigating the contributory role of cannabis toward the overall burden of psychotic illnesses may represent an important step toward psychosis prevention and treatment. The current study samples consecutive admissions (N = 246) to two community based first-episode psychosis services to characterize timing of cannabis use relative to psychosis and attenuated symptom onset, differences between those with and without cannabis exposure, and the association of age at first cannabis exposure with clinical and demographic variables. Both cannabis exposure (78%) and cannabis use disorders (47%) were highly prevalent at admission. In 94% of participants, cannabis use preceded the onset of both attenuated and full-threshold psychosis symptoms by several years. Earlier age at first exposure to cannabis was associated with younger age at prodrome and psychosis onset, worse premorbid functioning, and greater severity of cannabis use disorder at admission. The timing of first exposure to cannabis may have individual prognostic as well as public health significance. Documenting the prevalence and impact of cannabis use in early psychosis samples, as well as the overall incidence of psychotic disorders, will be of vital public health significance as the United States enacts cannabis legalization and cannabis products become more widely available.

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