Objective
To identify risk profiles associated with patterns of problematic
cannabis use in early adulthood.
Method
Data came from 1,229 participants in the Great Smoky Mountains Study,
a prospective 20-year cohort study from 1993–2015 that is
representative of western North Carolina with yearly assessments conducted
from ages 9 to 16, and assessments at ages 19, 21, 26, and 30. Patterns of
problematic cannabis use (i.e., DSM-5 cannabis use disorder
or daily use) in early adulthood included 1) non-problematic use in
late-adolescence (ages 19–21) and early adulthood (ages
26–30); 2) limited problematic use in late adolescence only; 3)
persistent problematic use in late adolescence and early adulthood; and 4)
delayed problematic use in early adulthood only. Multi-nominal logistic
regression models examined pairwise associations between these patterns and
risk factors in childhood (ages 9–16) and late adolescence (ages
19–21). Risk factors included psychiatric disorders (e.g., anxiety,
depressive), other substance use (smoking, alcohol, illicit drugs), and
challenging social factors (e.g., low socioeconomic status, family
functioning, peers). Sex and race/ethnicity (white, black, American Indian)
interactions were tested.
Results
The persistent pattern (6.7% of sample) was characterized by
more anxiety disorders across development and more DSM-5
CUD symptoms during late adolescence compared to the limited pattern
(13.3%), which, in turn, had more childhood family instability and
dysfunction. The delayed pattern (3.7%) was characterized by more
externalizing disorders, maltreatment, and peer bullying in childhood
compared to non-problematic users. There were no significant sex/race
interactions.
Conclusion
Problematic cannabis use patterns during early adulthood have
distinctive risk profiles, which may be useful in tailoring targeted
interventions.