12 个 NCI 指定癌症中心接受治疗的癌症患者对大麻的看法、流行程度和使用模式。

Gary L Ellison, Kathy J Helzlsouer, Sonia M Rosenfield, Yun Kim, Rebecca L Ashare, Anne H Blaes, Jennifer Cullen, Neal Doran, Jon O Ebbert, Kathleen M Egan, Jaimee L Heffner, Richard T Lee, Erin A McClure, Corinne McDaniels-Davidson, Salimah H Meghani, Polly A Newcomb, Shannon Nugent, Nicholas Hernandez-Ortega, Talya Salz, Denise C Vidot, Brooke Worster, Dylan M Zylla
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:随着越来越多的州通过立法将医疗和娱乐使用大麻合法化,大麻使用的法律环境发生了巨大变化。在癌症患者中,大麻通常被用来改善癌症治疗的不良反应。关于癌症患者在治疗期间使用大麻的程度和类型以及对其益处和危害的认识,相关数据十分有限。这项多中心调查旨在评估居住在各州合法使用大麻的癌症患者使用大麻的情况:共有 12 个 NCI 指定的癌症中心在大麻合法使用状况各不相同的各州进行了调查,使用核心问卷评估最近确诊的癌症患者使用大麻的情况。数据收集时间为 2021 年 9 月至 2023 年 8 月,12 个癌症中心的数据汇总在一起。计算了核心调查指标的频率和 95% 的置信区间,并给出了抽取概率样本的 10 个地点的加权估计值:调查对象自确诊癌症以来使用大麻的总体比例为 32.9%(加权),各州的大麻合法化状况略有不同。认为使用大麻最常见的好处是止痛、改善睡眠、缓解压力和焦虑以及治疗副作用。报告的风险较少,包括无法驾驶、难以集中注意力、肺部损伤、成瘾和对就业的影响。大多数人报告称,与医疗服务提供者交谈感觉舒适,但总体而言,只有 21.5% 的人报告称曾与医疗服务提供者交谈过。在确诊后使用过大麻的人中,最常见的方式是食用、吸食、药片或酊剂,最常见的原因是睡眠障碍,其次是疼痛、压力和焦虑,60%-68%的人表示使用大麻后症状有所改善:这项具有地域多样性的调查表明,无论大麻的法律地位如何,患者都会使用大麻。解决癌症治疗期间使用大麻的益处和害处方面的知识差距对于加强患者与提供者之间的沟通至关重要。
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Perceptions, prevalence, and patterns of cannabis use among cancer patients treated at 12 NCI-Designated Cancer Centers.

Background: The legal climate for cannabis use has dramatically changed with an increasing number of states passing legislation legalizing access for medical and recreational use. Among cancer patients, cannabis is often used to ameliorate adverse effects of cancer treatment. Data are limited on the extent and type of use among cancer patients during treatment and the perceived benefits and harms. This multicenter survey was conducted to assess the use of cannabis among cancer patients residing in states with varied legal access to cannabis.

Methods: A total of 12 NCI-Designated Cancer Centers, across states with varied cannabis-access legal status, conducted surveys with a core questionnaire to assess cannabis use among recently diagnosed cancer patients. Data were collected between September 2021 and August 2023 and pooled across 12 cancer centers. Frequencies and 95% confidence intervals for core survey measures were calculated, and weighted estimates are presented for the 10 sites that drew probability samples.

Results: Overall reported cannabis use since cancer diagnosis among survey respondents was 32.9% (weighted), which varied slightly by state legalization status. The most common perceived benefits of use were for pain, sleep, stress and anxiety, and treatment side effects. Reported perceived risks were less common and included inability to drive, difficulty concentrating, lung damage, addiction, and impact on employment. A majority reported feeling comfortable speaking to health-care providers though, overall, only 21.5% reported having done so. Among those who used cannabis since diagnosis, the most common modes were eating in food, smoking, and pills or tinctures, and the most common reasons were for sleep disturbance, followed by pain and stress and anxiety with 60%-68% reporting improved symptoms with use.

Conclusion: This geographically diverse survey demonstrates that patients use cannabis regardless of its legal status. Addressing knowledge gaps concerning benefits and harms of cannabis use during cancer treatment is critical to enhance patient-provider communication.

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Correction to: Imaging modalities for measuring body composition in patients with cancer: opportunities and challenges. Correction to: A health equity framework to support the next generation of cancer population simulation models. Data quality in a survey of registered medical cannabis users with cancer: nonresponse and measurement error. Item response theory analysis of benefits and harms of cannabis use in cancer survivors. Overview of cancer patient perspectives on cannabis use during treatment.
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