4 minute read

What are the health impacts of high-potency THC?

Next Article
CLASSIFIEDS

CLASSIFIEDS

Researchers have answers

BY JOHN INGOLD THE COLORADO SUN

Colorado public health experts have unveiled a rst-of-its-kind interactive research database containing hundreds of studies on the impacts of high-potency cannabis products — looking at the e ects on everything from mental health to cancer to pregnancy.

at is one of the most signi cant things to come out of a two-year research review by the Colorado School of Public Health.

e review was ordered up by the legislature in 2021 in response to the increasing number of high-concentration THC products dominating the state’s legal cannabis market. With the rise of those products came concerns over how they may be impacting health, especially among young people. (THC is, of course, the most famous psychoactive chemical in cannabis.)

Researchers termed the report a “scoping review” and described the research database as an “evidence map.”

“With funding from the state of Colorado, a valuable, public resource has been developed for public health and scienti c purposes,” Dr. Jonathan Samet, the school’s dean, said in a statement. “ e scoping review and evidence map are unique; it is the rst and most complete systematic assessment of the entire body of literature related to high-concentration cannabis.”

But what do those studies say? Eh, that’s a little less clear.

“Limited evidence” for most e ects e School of Public Health researchers found limited to no evidence in published studies for most commonly claimed e ects. Are adolescents and young adults especially vulnerable to adverse physical and mental health outcomes from using high-potency cannabis? ere’s a limited amount of evidence that they are. e review found moderate evidence — meaning slightly more robust but still not conclusive evidence — of only two impacts.

Do high-potency cannabis products help with pain? ere’s a limited amount of evidence that they do.

What about sleep? ere’s a limited amount of evidence that the products can both help and hurt sleep.

“ ere was a moderate amount of evidence that high-concentration THC can have adverse e ects on those with pre-existing conditions such as psychosis,” Greg Tung, an associate professor of health systems, management and policy at the School of Public Health, said in a statement. “But there are also studies that show bene cial outcomes from the use of high-concentration cannabis on other mental health conditions such as PTSD, anxiety, and depression.”

“It’s not an easy scientific question.”

In an interview, Samet said he wasn’t exactly surprised that the review didn’t come up with more conclusive answers.

One of the problems was the studies they had to work with. e research team at the Colorado School of Public Health screened roughly 66,000 studies and found 452 that were relevant to their questions about high-potency THC.

But what the team really wanted to examine was the e ects of the kind of high-THC products sold today in the cannabis marketplace. e studies looking at the e ects of THC spanned some ve decades, meaning the products in those studies varied greatly and were often quite di erent from what is sold today.

Another problem: Studies funded by the National Institutes of Health were constrained to using cannabis from the government’s o cial research pot farm at the University of

Mississippi. Cannabis from that facility is notoriously low quality.

“We learned there was a vast number of studies, potentially,” Samet said. “But that in fact there were not that many that directly addressed the policy questions we were interested in.”

It’s also not particularly easy to study e ects when there are so many other elements that can go into the equation besides potency.

For instance, Samet said the method of consumption could have an impact, as could the amount consumed and the tolerance of the consumer. Samet, who is both a pulmonary physician and an epidemiologist, compared the task of studying potent marijuana to another research topic he knows well, tobacco smoking. Before the proliferation of tobacco vaping, studying smoking was pretty easy. ere were only a handful of di erent consumption methods and a cigarette generally provided a tidy, standardized dose.

By contrast, trying to study cannabis today introduces a dizzying number of variables.

“It’s not an easy scienti c question,” Samet said. “It’s not easy to generate the data you would like.”

Thu 6/01

Laney Lou and the Bird Dogs: GoldenGrass Music Festival 2023 @ 7pm New Terrain Brewing Company, 16401 Table Mountain Pkwy, Golden

Daniella Katzir

Music: Daniella Katzir Band at Den‐ver Orchid Lounge @ 7pm Orchid Denver, 1448 Market St, Denver

Sat 6/03

Denver Makers Market @ Lakewood Casa Bonita Parking Lot @ 10am / Free

Rockin Block Party @ 5:30pm Heritage Lakewood Belmar Park, 801 South Yarrow Street, Lakewood. hca@lake wood.org, 303-987-7850

Soundularity: Intrinsic Collective: 360 Healing Music Journey @ 6:30pm

Intrinsic Collective, 922 Washing‐ton Ave suite 200, Golden CD Ghost @ 8pm Hi-Dive, 7 S Broadway, Denver

Drifting Roots with Weege @ 8pm HQ, 60 S Broadway, Denver

Mon 6/05

Finn O'Sullivan: Sofar Sounds @ 7:30pm Sofar Sounds, Denver

Julia Wolf @ 8pm Meow Wolf Denver | Convergence Station, 1338 1st St, Denver

Sunstoney @ 8pm

Oskar Blues Grill & Brew, 1624 Market St, Denver anees @ 8pm Ogden Theatre, 935 E. Colfax Ave., Denver

Somatoast @ 8:30pm

Cervantes' Masterpiece Ballroom & Other Side, 2637 Welton St, Denver

Fri 6/02

The Back Box Presents: Skysia with M�nity & Stoik @ 7pm

The Black Box, 314 E 13th Ave, Denver

VINCINT

@ 8pm

Meow Wolf Denver | Convergence Station, 1338 1st St, Denver

Denver Makers Market @ Casa Bonita, 6677 West Colfax Avenue, Denver. dmmvendors@gmail.com, 720-525-5645 veggi @ 1pm X Denver, 3100 Inca St, Denver

Giant Walking Robots @ 5:30pm Goosetown Station, 514 9th St, Golden

Fresh Fruit @ 8pm Oskar Blues Grill & Brew, 1624 Market St, Denver

Sun 6/04

Taylor Scott Band: Taylor Scott & Jon Wirtz duo @ 11am Gregory Plaza, Denver

FORGOTTEN SPACE @ 6pm So Many Roads Brewery, 918 W 1st Ave, Denver

Club Seating: Paramount TheatreStraight Up With Stassi Live @ 7pm / $49.50

Paramount Theatre, 1621 Glenarm, Denver

Tue 6/06

Kurt Travis @ 6pm

Marquis Theater, 2009 Larimer St, Denver

WHOKILLEDXIX @ 8pm

Cervantes' Masterpiece Ballroom & Other Side, 2637 Welton St, Denver

Wed 6/07

City Park Denver Public Art Sunset Tour @ 7pm Denver Arts and Venues, Varies Locations for Public Art Tours, Denver

NOT A TOY @ 7pm

Marquis Theater, 2009 Larimer St, Denver

Todd Day Wait @ 7:30pm

Skylark Lounge, 140 S Broadway, Denver

Spirit Mother @ 8pm Hi-Dive, 7 S Broadway, Denver

This article is from: