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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2021 Jan 1.
Published in final edited form as: Am J Addict. 2019 Oct 2;29(1):9–26. doi: 10.1111/ajad.12963

Table 1:

Cannabis and the onset of mood and anxiety disorders organized by symptom/disorder type

Author, year Participants N Follow
up (yr)
Cannabis
Use
Outcome Adjustment Variables Relevant Findings NOS

MANIA SYMPTOMS AND BIPOLAR DISORDERS
Marwaha et al. 2018 Avon UK 1991 birth cohort 3,370 5 CU frequency (age 17) Hypomania symptoms (HCL-32) (age 22) Family adversity index, history of abuse, alcohol use, drug use, psychotic symptoms, depression history Adolescent CU associated with f hypomania symptoms at age 22; dose dependent: >2x/wk (OR = 2.87 (1.68 – 4.91); any CU (OR=1.82 (1.45 – 2.28)) 7
Ratheesh et al. 2015 Youth ↑risk BD (BAR) 52 1 CUD BD-1, BD −2 (DSM IV-TR) N/A 25% with CUD and 17% without CUD developed BD (OR=1.7 (0.2–18.1). Outcome rate (4/52) too small to achieve significance 5
Tjissen et al. 2010 Munich 1994 (age 14–17) represent. 543 8.3 Lifetime CU > 5 uses Mania symptoms Munich-CIDI (DSM IV) Age, sex, SES, family history of mood episodes, exposure to trauma, loss of a parent, alcohol use, personality style Any CU associated with f mania symptoms (OR= 4.26 (1.42–12.76) p=0.010) 9
Henquet et al. 2006 Dutch adult represent. 4,815 3 CU frequency Mania, psychosis symptoms (CIDI) Age, sex, ethnicity, education, marital status, neuroticism, lifetime drug use, last year alcohol use, baseline depression/ mania Any CU associated with f mania symptoms after adjusting for covariates: daily CU (AOR 3.43 (1.42–8.26), monthly CU (AOR 2.23 (0.82–6.07) 8

DEPRESSION SYMPTOMS AND DEPRESSIVE DISORDERS
Schoeler et al. 2018 London males born in 1953 411 40 CU frequency at age 14, 18, 32, 48 Lifetime diagnosis of MDD (DSM-IV) Alcohol, cigarette and other illicit drug use; psychiatric illness; childhood anxiety, conduct problems and behaviour and emotional problems CU onset <18 yrs associated with f lifetime MDD (AOR= 2.41 (1.22–4.76) p= 001) and ↑ time to MDD for low risk users (HR=2.09 (1.16–3.74)) and high risk users (HR = 8.69 (2.07–36.5)) 8
Wilkinson et al. 2016 US (1994) adolescents age 12–18 11,995 12 30-day CU frequency Depression symptoms (CES- D) Race, ethnicity, educational attainment of parents and respondent, age, sex CU in earlier waves was not significantly associated with depressive symptoms in later waves 7
Womack et al. 2016 Pittsburgh males from low SES families 264 11 Age 17, 20, 22: past year CU >2– 3x/week Age 17; 20, 22: Depressive symptoms (BDI) Caregiver BDI score, parent income, ethnicity, highest level of education age 22, youth antisocial behaviour, tobacco and alcohol use age 17, youth IQ, adult court records Significant positive association between adolescent CU and mild depression at age 22 (B=0.493 SE=0.207, p<0.05). 6
Baggio et al. 2014 Switzerland male conscripts 5,223 1.25 CU frequency; trajectory; CUD Depression symptoms (WHO-MDI) Age at first CU, language (German, English) Only CUD was associated with increase in depression symptoms (B=0.087, P<0.001) 4
Otten & Engels 2013 Netherlands adolescents +/− 5-HTTLP R allele 306 4 Lifetime CU; CU frequency in past month Depression symptoms (DML) Personality scores, alcohol use, tobacco use, parental education, parenting practices CU associated with later depression symptoms in the presence of the short allele (B =0.34 (b=0.10), P<0.001), but not in its absence (B=−1.379 (b=−0.14), P=0.51) 7
Rasic et al. 2013 Nova Scotia Grade 10 students 1,582 2 Past 30 day CU Depression (CES- D >24 females; >22 males) Alcohol use, other illicit drug use, living situation, school marks, age, gender Adolescents with CU have f odds of depression (AC)R=1.10 (1.01–1.19), p<0.05); higher odds in those with heavier CU (AOR = 1.16(1.04–1.29), P<0.05) 5
Manrique-Garcia et al. 2012 Sweden male conscripts (1969–1970) 45,087 35 Total number lifetime CU Depression (ICD-8. 9. 10) Personality disorder, IQ, disturbed behaviour in childhood, social adjustment, popularity, relationships, alcohol use, smoking, early adulthood SES, urbanicity Heavy CU (> 50 uses) does not f risk of depression after adjusting for confounders (AHR= 0.9 (0.5–1.6)) 9
Marmorstein & Iacono 2011 Minnesota Twin Family Study 1,252 5 CU frequency (age 17);’ CUD Age 17. 20. 24: MDD Diagnosis (DSM III-R) Gender; baseline MDD, AUD, nicotine dependence; psychosocial risks (not graduating high school by age 20, period of unemployment >6 months), crime Adolescent CUD associated with f odds of later MDD (AOR=2.62 (1.22–5.65). Relationship partially mediated by psychosocial failure (AOR = 2.54 (1.40–4.60), p<0.05). 9
Harder et al. 2008 Mid-Atlantic cohort (1985– 2001) 1,494 7 CUD before age 17 MDE (DSM-IV) between ages 19– 24 Demographics, SES, other drug use, childhood disturbances of psychological well being, parental monitoring, behavioural intervention status variables, pre exposure depression/anxiety Early CUD not associated with MDE (OR=1.33 (0.76–2.23), p=0.32), when propensity scores used to adjust for confounders 9
Pederson 2008 Norway 14 year olds (1992) 2,902 13 Past 12 month CU quantity at age 14. 16. 21. 27 Depressed mood (Kandel and Davies score >9) Parent SES, parental monitoring and support, parental substance use, pubertal development, student academics, school completion, conduct problems, alcohol intoxication, alcohol problems unemployment, daily smoking No significant association found between early or late CU and later depression symptoms when adjusting for confounders (AOR = 0.9 (0.4–2.5)) 7
Georgiades & Boyle 2007 Ontario birth cohorts (1966– 1979) 3,294 18 Past year CU frequency 12 month prevalence MDD (CIDI-SF) Family SES, family functioning, sex, grade failure, other medical condition, general health status, externalizing and internalizing symptom scales, tobacco use CU in adulthood alone (AOR=2.58 (1.67– 3.99), p<0.001) or adolescence + adulthood (AOR=4.45 (2.05–9.66), p<0.001), associated with ↑ MDD diagnosis, but not adolescence alone (AOR=1.48 (0.65–3.40), p > 0.5) 7
Harder et al. 2006 US 1979 birth cohort 12,686 4 Past year CU at age 19 Depression (CES- Dscore>16) age 23 Age, sex, aptitude, survey weight, general health limitations, region of residence, criminal activity, residence age 14, cigarette use, excessive alcohol use, hard drugs use CU was not associated with depression when compared to non users weighted for other depression risk factors (AOR= 1.51 (0.64– 3.54)) 7
Patton et al. 2002 Australia Victoria adolescents Age 15–21 1,601 7 Highest CU frequency over a 6 month period Depression and anxiety symptoms (CIS-R >12); Teenage depression, anxiety, alcohol use, tobacco use, other illicit drugs, antisocial behaviour, parental separation, parental education, sex, age, rural vs urban residence, parental education Weekly CU associated with j depression/anxiety symptoms in females (AOR=1.9 (1.1–3.3) p=0.01); but not males (AOR = 0.47 (0.17–1.3)) 8
Bovasso et al. 2001 Baltimore sstudents (1980) 1,920 15 CUD(DSM III-R) Depression symptoms (DIS DSMIII-R) Demographic variables, stressful life events and chronic illnesses, baseline depression symptoms, mental health treatment, psychiatric disorder, substance abuse/dependence CUD associated with j depression symptoms (OR=4.49 (1.51–13.26)) p<0.01) 9

ANXIETY SYMPTOMS AND DISORDERS
Duperrouzel et al. 2018 Miami adolescents 250 1 Past month CU frequency at baseline Depression and anxiety symptoms (DASS-21) Gender, alcohol use, nicotine use, and history of mood disorder People with CU had a more gradual decline in anxiety symptoms over time (b=0.28, p=0.024) 6
Feingold et al. 2016 US adult represent. 34,653 3 Past year CU frequency AD (DSM IV- TR) AUD, SUD, sex, race, education level, household income, marital status, age, region, other DSM diagnosis Daily CU associated with later SAD after controlling for all confounders (AOR=1.98 (0.99–3.94)) 8
Bechtold et al. 2015 Pittsburgh adolescent males 506 22 CU onset (early, late); CU chronicity AD (DSM IV) Past year substance use age 36, SES age 36, health insurance, health status, mental and physical health age 14 CU groups did not differ in lifetime diagnoses of anxiety disorders 7
Zvolensky et al. 2008 Oregon adolescents 1,790 10 Lifetime CU or CUD DSM IV diagnosis panic attack or panic disorder Life time history drug dependence, daily cigarette smoking status CU not associated with developing panic attack (AOR 1.3 (0.55–3.2)); PD (AOR = 1.0 (0.34–3.2)) after adjusting for cigarette smoking 7

PTSD
Lee et al. 2018 African American, Puerto Rican East Harlem students 674 22 No CU, chronic CU, moderate CU, early vs late quitters PTSD symptoms at age 36 (PCL-S) Gender, race/ethnicity, alcohol use, cigarette use, other illicit drug use, delinquency, low self control, depressive symptoms age 14, victimization, sexual assault age 19 People with CU and exposed to trauma more likely to have PTSD symptoms: Chronic (AOR= 4.27 (1.28–14.20), p<0.05); Late quitters (AOR= 6.67 (1.62–27.44); p<0.01); Moderate users (AOR= 3.32 (1.0710.34); p< 0.05); but not early quitters (AOR = 1.75 (0.36–8.44)) 7

MULTIPLE SYMPTOMS OR DISORDERS
Guttmann-ova et al. 2017 Seattle youth 808 20 Age of CU, Regular CU (weekly), Duration of CU Generalized and social anxiety; Depression symptom count (DIS-IV) Adolescent tobacco and alcohol use, gender, ethnicity, childhood poverty, early environmental risk, baseline psychopathology All CU groups, except adolescent limited regular users, had ↑ symptoms of GAD than non-users after controlling for all confounders. No significant association was found between CU and depression symptoms. 8
Danielsson et al. 2016 Sweden adult represent. 8,598 3 Lifetime CU Anxiety symptoms (SPRAS) Depression symptoms (MDI) Substance use, sex, age, education, childhood adverse circumstances, ethnicity, place of upbringing Baseline CU was not associated with later depression (RR=0.99 (0.82–1.17)) or anxiety (RR = 1.09 (0.98 – 1.20)) symptom scores after adjusting for all confounders 7
Scholes-Balog et al. 2016 Australia grade 5 youth represent. 927 12 No CU; CU by age 12 or 19 Depression and anxiety symptoms (K-10) Alcohol, cigarette and other substance use, gender, parent education, school grades and antisocial behaviour (age 12) CU (mean 1–2x/year) not significantly associated with depression and anxiety symptom scores 6
Gage et al. 2015 Avon UK 1991 birth cohort 1,791 2 CU frequency (age 16) AD or MDD (ICD 10)(age 18) Alcohol and illicit drug use, family history depression, maternal education, urban living, childhood IQ, personality traits, victimization, conduct disorder, depression/ anxiety age 16 CU frequency was not significantly associated with ↑ odds of AD (AOR = 0.96 (0.75–1.24) or MDD (AOR = 1.3 (0.98 – 1.72), p=0.065) by age 18 after adjusting for confounders 7
Feingold et al. 2015 US adult represent. 43,093 3 CU frequency over last 12 months BD-1, BD-2 MDD (DSM IV-TR) Sex, age, education, income, marital status, urbanity, alcohol use, other substance use, other psychiatric disorder Past year CU not associated with increased incidence of BD (AOR 1.17 (0.65–2.11) or MDD (AOR = 0.58 (0.22–1.51)) after adjusting for confounders 8
Degenhardt et al. 2013 Victoria, Australia adolescents 1,388 15 CU frequency (age 16) AD (ICD 10) (age 29) Alcohol, nicotine, and illicit drug use, age, education level, nationality, adolescent anxiety/depression Weekly CU in adolescence did not affect odds of MDD (OR = 1.2 (0.73–2.0), p = 0.6) or AD (OR = 1.4 (0.84–2.5)) by age 29 8
Van Laar et al. 2007 Holland adult represent (1996) 5618 total 3 CU frequency AD, MDD, dysthymia, BD (DSM III-R) AUD/SUD, age, gender, education, urbanicity, employment, partner status, neuroticism, parental psych history, childhood trauma, life time psychiatric disorder Any baseline CU associated with ↑ MDD (AOR = 1.68 (1.11–2.55), p < 0.05), but not dysthymia (AOR = 1.55 (0.67–3.58), p >0.05), BD (AOR = 5.38 (1.93–14.9) p< 0.01), or any AD (AOR = 1.27 (0.77–2.12) 8
Hayatbakhsh et al. 2007 Australia 1981 birth cohort 2,854 7 CU frequency (age 21); Age first CU Depression and anxiety symptoms (YASR) Age 14 smoking/alcohol use, gender, maternal factors, family income Frequent CU ↑ mood and anxiety symptoms at 21 years with early onset (OR=3.0 (1.8–5.2)) and late onset (OR = 2.3 (1.5–3.6) users 8
Fergusson et al. 1996 New Zealand birth cohort (1977) 1,265 2 Any CU (age 14) AD, MDD, or dysthymia age 16 (DSM III-R) Substance use age 12; family social position, functioning, substance abuse; childhood behaviour problems, cognitive ability, truancy, plan to enter university, peer affiliations, conduct problems CU by age 15 not associated with ↑ depressive disorder (AOR=1.4 (0.7–2.4)) or AD (AOR = 1.2 (0.5–2.8)) after adjusting for confounding variables 8