A Retrospective Analysis of Cannabidiol (CBD) Use in a Concussion Cohort
Daniel Rafie1, Phillip Rosenbaum2, Kevin Bickart1, Neal Bhathela1, Josh Chung2, Christopher Giza2, Meeryo Choe2
1UCLA, Depts of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Steve Tisch BrainSPORT Program, 2UCLA, Depts of Pediatrics and Neurosurgery
Objective:

To perform a retrospective cohort study describing Cannabidiol (CBD) use in a concussion clinic.

Background:

People report using CBD for a range of symptoms, many of which overlap with post-concussion symptoms. CBD use has not been assessed in a concussed population. We performed a retrospective cohort study to describe CBD use in a concussion clinic. We hypothesized CBD use would be more likely in patients with psychiatric diagnoses, headaches, cannabis use, and greater post-concussion symptoms and concussion chronicity. We assessed whether cannabis use could account for any of the findings.   

Design/Methods:

We reviewed medical notes from 567 selected patients aged >=18 from 07/26/2018 to 07/27/2021 and extracted self-reported CBD use and demographics, medical history, and post-concussion symptoms (via Graded Symptom Checklist (GSC)). We used descriptive and non-parametric statistics to test our hypotheses.


Results:

CBD users made up 11% of the cohort and did not differ on demographic variables (e.g., age, sex, injury acuity) from non-users. After adjusting for age, sex, injury acuity, and cannabis use, CBD users had a 3.48 (1.80, 6.75) (p < 0.001) and 1.99 (1.04, 3.99) (p = 0.04) times higher odds of reporting cannabis use and a psychiatric diagnosis, respectively, but no difference in headaches (p = 0.61). CBD users relative to non-users reported greater total post-concussion symptoms (CBD users GSC = 58.59, Non-users GSC = 45.73, p = 0.04), which was driven by cognitive (p=0.03) and physical (p=0.05) symptoms. Despite the correlation between cannabis and CBD use, cannabis use did not correlate with greater post-concussion symptoms. 


Conclusions:

This study is the first to describe CBD use in concussed patients. CBD use was more common in concussed patients with premorbid psychiatric diagnoses and greater post-concussive symptoms, and this was not influenced by cannabis use. Prospective studies are necessary to assess the safety and efficacy of CBD in concussion.  

10.1212/WNL.0000000000202813