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Surgeon General鈥檚 Marijuana Warning Omits Crucial Context

"Marijuana has a unique impact on the developing brain. It can prime your brain for addiction to other substances."

Surgeon General Jerome Adams, in remarks at a substance abuse conference

Speaking about a recent federal on marijuana, Dr. Jerome Adams, the surgeon general, on long-standing admonitions about the drug.

鈥淢arijuana has a unique impact on the developing brain. It can prime your brain for addiction to other substances,鈥 Adams said at a Washington, D.C., substance abuse conference held late in August and sponsored by , a recovery center network.

This is a reiteration of the old 鈥済ateway鈥 argument: the idea that marijuana is frequently an entree to using other, harder drugs. And the surgeon general鈥檚 emphasis comes just as many are loosening restrictions around its medicinal and adult recreational use.

But marijuana research is limited, and this particular hypothesis is fairly controversial. We decided to put Adams鈥 claim to the test. Is his central thesis 鈦犫 marijuana has a 鈥渦nique impact鈥 on developing brains and can 鈥減rime your brain for addiction鈥 鈦犫 accurate?

We contacted the surgeon general鈥檚 office, which directed us to statements from the National Institute on Drug Abuse. NIDA noted that marijuana may have a gateway effect, but that most people who use the drug don鈥檛 progress to other, harder substances; and that alcohol and nicotine appear to have a similar impact. But the surgeon general鈥檚 office was also unequivocal on a related point: 鈥淔rom a public health perspective, no amount of drug use is safe for the developing brain.鈥

So how fair is Adams鈥 statement? When we interviewed experts, the responses were all over the map 鈦犫 reflecting just how contested this issue is and how difficult it is to speak definitively about marijuana鈥檚 impact.

The Gateway Effect?

The idea that marijuana can 鈥減rime your brain for addiction鈥 has some basis: namely, the results of some studies conducted with rodents.

There are findings to suggest that early exposure to the drug may 鈥渟ensitize animals to the effects of other drugs,鈥 noted Joshua Isen, an assistant professor at the University of South Alabama, who researches adolescent marijuana use.

For instance, Adams鈥 office noted that preclinical studies indicate exposure to THC 鈦犫 marijuana鈥檚 main psychoactive compound 鈦犫 during a period roughly equivalent to adolescence in rats resulted in greater self-administration of heroin when the animals reach adulthood.

In addition, THC exposure yielded changes in their brains鈥 reward system 鈦犫 in other words, yes, priming the brain for the rewarding effects of opioids.

But, Isen said, it鈥檚 scientifically problematic to draw a line from the effects seen in rodents to what might happen to a human. Ethical considerations about human research make it more or less impossible to do a randomized controlled trial 鈦犫 the gold standard of scientific research 鈦犫 that would measure how marijuana does or doesn鈥檛 affect a developing brain.

鈥淲e should remain agnostic about the surgeon general鈥檚 claim,鈥 Isen argued.

Other experts suggested otherwise, saying that since animal research is the best we can get, it鈥檚 worth taking seriously 鈦犫 and it is fairly conclusive.

Jonathan Caulkins, a professor and drug policy researcher at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, took a more optimistic view of that research, arguing that the animal evidence is 鈥渧ery clear鈥 when it comes to marijuana鈥檚 neurological impact. He called it a fair basis for the surgeon general鈥檚 warning.

鈥淲hat we know is strong enough to say that exposure during adolescence when the brain is developing is a risk,鈥 said Susan Weiss, a scientific adviser to the NIDA director.

But how meaningful a risk 鈦犫 and how it compares with other drugs 鈦犫 is exceptionally tough to say, given the limitations on research. Studies on humans are limited because people who use marijuana at a young age may be exposed to other risk factors, such as peer influencers using harder drugs, or sociodemographic factors that might predispose them to abuse or addiction.

As Dr. Sue Sisley, an Arizona-based psychiatrist who tracks the state of marijuana research, put it: 鈥淚 don鈥檛 see very much good, rigorous data to confirm either way.鈥

What About Uniqueness?

In the narrowest sense, marijuana indeed has a 鈥渦nique鈥 effect on the brain. It elicits a response from what are called 鈥渆ndocannabinoid receptors.鈥 Other drugs don鈥檛 鈦犫 they interact with different brain receptors. So, certainly, marijuana affects development using a different (or 鈥渦nique鈥) neurological mechanism from the ones used by, say, nicotine or alcohol.

And, as best as science can tell us, marijuana harms developing brains, both Weiss and Sisley said. From a commonsense public health perspective, young people in particular should be exceptionally cautious when using the drug.

But 鈦犫 and this is important context 鈦犫 marijuana is not the only substance that has this potential 鈥減riming鈥 for subsequent addiction. The surgeon general鈥檚 office acknowledged this finding when we asked follow-up questions. That same context, though, is missing from Adams鈥 public statement.

鈥淚t seems that early exposure to many substances can make it likely someone will be addicted to other substances,鈥 Weiss said. She acknowledged that rodent studies do also suggest nicotine may have a priming effect, albeit via a different neurological route.

On a practical level, Isen said, while one could highlight the distinct scientific effect marijuana has, 鈥渢here is no evidence that marijuana has a uniquely deleterious effect on the developing brain 鈥 certainly not more than other substances such as alcohol.鈥

Our Ruling

Speaking about the risks associated with marijuana, the surgeon general said it 鈥渉as a unique impact on the developing brain鈥 and 鈥渃an prime your brain for addiction to other substances.鈥

The implications are tricky, and it鈥檚 important to note the significant limitations on marijuana research, as well as how it compares with other drugs. It may have its own, unique mechanism of 鈥減riming鈥 adult addiction.

Still, other substances have similar effects 鈦犫 even if they take a different brain path to get there. And since this idea about marijuana鈥檚 priming effect is central to Adams鈥 broader public health campaign, emphasizing that nicotine and alcohol also could function in this manner matters even more.

This statement is partially accurate, but it leaves out important details and context. We rate it Half True.

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