Delineating developmental windows of vulnerability for cannabis exposure and assessing for causal relations between cannabis use, neurodevelopment, and behavior
openNIDA - National Institute on Drug Abuse
With the ongoing trend of cannabis legalization in the United States and across the world, there is a critical need
to better understand links between cannabis use, brain development, and cognitive-behavioral outcomes.
Despite growing public belief that cannabis use is relatively benign, there remains a dearth of large longitudinal
studies examining cannabis use and brain development in humans. We propose to leverage three large
multimodal neuroimaging datasets, spanning preadolescence to late adulthood: ABCD (n=11,880; ages 9-20
followed longitudinally), IMAGEN (n=2,400; ages 14-23, followed longitudinally), and ENIGMA-Addiction
(n=14,340; ages 12-80, from 118 studies). These large, rich datasets include measures of highly relevant
behaviors (co-occurring alcohol and tobacco use, physical activity, psychopathology) while affording
unparalleled statistical power. Leveraging these datasets, we will employ linear mixed-effects models to identify
developmental windows in which areas and/or networks of the brain are most vulnerable to cannabis exposure.
Similar analyses will be conducted for relevant behavioral trajectories (e.g., attention problems, internalizing
symptomatology). Focusing on rigor and replicability, nonparametric permutation testing will be employed in
imaging analyses, and we will explicitly test if findings in one dataset extend to others. We hypothesize that
developmental windows with the greatest degree of prefrontal age-related change will be periods of greatest
vulnerability to cannabis exposure. Using a range of methodologies (propensity score matching, cross-lagged
panel design, discordant twin analyses, Bayesian causal networks), this proposal will move beyond associational
analyses towards causal mechanisms. Such analyses are desperately needed to help bridge preclinical animal
models with human neuroimaging findings. Based on our prior imaging work as well as existing rodent models,
we hypothesize that early to middle adolescence, relative to other stages of development, will be associated with
greater evidence for causal relationships involving cannabis use, neurodevelopment, and behavior. We will also
examine the degree to which genetic liabilities for psychiatric conditions (e.g., ADHD, schizophrenia) qualify
observed cannabis-related outcomes. Using polygenic risk scores, we will test genetic interactions with age and
cannabis use. Similarly, we will examine how salient environmental and demographic factors linked to cannabis
use trajectories (e.g., early adversity, sex at birth) interact with age and cannabis use. We hypothesize that
cannabis’ hypothesized influence on neurodevelopment and behavior will be greatest for individuals with pre-
existing genetic liabilities for associated psychiatric symptomatology (e.g., ADHD, schizophrenia) and/or
established risk factors associated with the developmental trajectory to cannabis use disorder (e.g., early
adversity and trauma). Importantly, the proposed work is fundamental to developing impactful policy initiatives
as well as prevention and intervention efforts.
Up to $387K
health research