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Impact of Cannabis and Cannabis Legalization on US Atrial Septal Defect Rates

by  Albert Stuart Reece & Gary Kenneth Hulse - Division of Psychiatry, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Hwy., Crawley, WA 6009, Australia

School of Medical and Health Sciences, Edith Cowan University, 27 Joondalup Dr., Joondalup, WA 6027, Australia

  1. Xenobiot.202616(2), 43; https://doi.org/10.3390/jox16020043

Abstract

Atrial septal defect (ASD) affects 1:11.3 children in some US states; however, the antecedents of these trends are yet to be identified. A total of 1882 ASD rates (ASDRs) for 2003–2020 were sourced from the National Birth Defects Prevention Network reports. A total of 406,893 ASDs are reported. Substance (cigarettes, binge alcohol, cannabis, cannabinoids, analgesics, cocaine) exposure data were taken from the National Survey of Drug Use and Health. Income and ethnicity data were derived from the US Census. Adjustment was performed by mixed effects, survey and generalized additive regression. Causal analysis was by inverse probability weighting and E-values. Data were analyzed in RStudio. The highest ASDR of 884/10,000 live births was amongst Non-Hispanic Asians and Pacific Islanders in Nevada in 2016–2020. The 2005–2018 median ASDR rose >12-fold in Nevada and New Mexico, >6-fold in New York, and 4.2-fold nationally 1989–2020; it doubled in NY from 2012–2016 to 2016–2020. The average state ASDR rose supra-exponentially (p = 0.0075) and was associated with higher cannabis use states (p = Zero, Cohen’s D = 1.24), apparently driven by cannabis legalization (p = Zero). Estimated exposures to Δ9THC, cannabidiol and cannabigerol were implicated (from p = 2.67 × 10–68). Cannabis-legal states were compared with others (mean ASDR (C.I.) 178.15 (131.68, 224.62) vs. 74.28 (70.60, 77.96), p = Zero; O.R. 1.82 (1.81, 1.84), E-values 3.04 (lower C.I. 3.02), Cohen’s D 1.29 (0.96, 1.62)). Overall, 29/39 (74.4%) E-value estimates were >4; 39/39 (100%) were >1.25. Cannabis, cannabinoids and cannabis legalization are strong candidates for driving the US ASDR supra-exponentially. Estimates of many cannabinoids, including cannabidiol, Δ9THC, and cannabigerol, are implicated. The results are consistent with other large epidemiological studies. The importance of the results is magnified by the increasing legalization and penetration of cannabinoids into the US population. Since therapeutic abortion is not practiced for ASD, it may be used as a bellwether index of heritable transgenerational cannabinoid genotoxicity and epigenotoxicity associated with cannabinoid exposure.

Keywords: 

cannabiscannabinoidcongenitalanomaliescardiogenesisgenotoxicityepigenotoxicitytransgenerational inheritanceteratogenesismultigenerational

(Source: https://www.mdpi.com/2039-4713/16/2/43)