Most of the studies assessing Cannabis Use Disorder (CUD) and neurocognitive functions are cross-sectional without examining the longitudinal changes in neurocognitive function at a within-subject level with respect to the continuum of cannabis use behavior, or mainly studying on the acute cannabis effect. As for the Genome-wide Association studies, the population analyzed for addressing the underlying genetic susceptibility between neurocognitive functions and/or cannabis use or CUD were almost exclusively based on African- or European- American samples or other Caucasian subjects, and thus generalizability to Chinese or to the non-Caucasian population definitely demands more studies. With the upsweeping statistical figures of cannabis use in Hong Kong and Asia, and the substantial falls in the perceived risk and personal disapproval from using cannabis amongst young abusers, coinciding the global advocacy of de-criminalizing cannabis and the increased availability of recreational cannabis worldwide, it is reasonable to predict that there will be a further upsurge in numbers of all aged cannabis users in Hong Kong as in the other part of the world. Therefore, the SToP-C-PeCoG study proposed here as a prospective study in assessing the longer term changes in neurocognitive functions and the associated genetic risks for those repeated and active cannabis users without psychiatric co-morbidity is definitely warranted. The PeCoG study will not only provide the scientific evidence to further unveil the harmful effects on neurocognitive functions for those self-perceived "healthy" users, but also help to raise the public awareness and to improve the understandings to the long-term detrimental effects of cannabis amongst users and non-users. Furthermore, it will provide a chance to study the associated genetic risks for cannabis abusers, in particular in the Asian minority and Chinese, on CUD and poorer neurocognitive outcomes, with genetic vulnerability being generalizable to the local population in Asia. The current study hypothesises that cannabis abusers have neurocognitive function decline over time, and genetic vulnerability is associated with cannabis abusers who have poorer neurocognitive outcomes or with the severity of CUD.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
136
Venous blood will be obtained for later genome analysis
Queen Mary Hospital
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
Montreal Cognitive Assessment
Subject assessed with a maximum score of 30. Those who score 26 or below will consider to have mild cognitive impairment
Time frame: 18 months
Frontal Assessment Battery
Subject who scores 12 or below will be considered having frontal dysexcutive function
Time frame: 18 months
Wechsler Memory Scale
Subject will be assessed with the scale for their immediate, delayed, visual and auditory memory
Time frame: 18 months
Genome analysis
venous blood test will be done on consented subject for genome analysis for associated single nucleotide polymorphisms on 4 related chromosomes identified from literature associated with cannabis use disorder and neurocognitive impairment
Time frame: Each subject only need to have venous blood test once 1 day within their 18-months study period
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