Severe outcomes following pediatric cannabis intoxication: a prospective cohort study of an international toxicology surveillance registry
Neta Cohen, Mathew Mathew, Jeffrey Brent, Paul M. Wax, Adrienne L. Davis, Cherie Obilom, Michele M. Burns, Joshua Canning, Kevin Baumgartner, Andrew Koons, Timothy J. Wiegand, Bryan Judge, Christopher Hoyte, James Chenoweth, Blake Froberg, Henry C. Farrar, Jennifer Carey, Robert G. Hendrickson, Michael Hodgman, E. Martin Caravati, Michael Christian, Brian Wolk, Steven A. Seifert, Yedidia Bentur, Michael Levine, Lynn A. Farrugia, David Vearrier, Alicia B. Minns, Joseph M. Kennedy, Ron I. Kirschner, Kim Aldy, Suzanne Schuh, Sharan Campleman, Shao Li, Daniel T. Myran, Lisa Feng, Stephen B. Freedman, Yaron Finkelstein
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: An increasing number of jurisdictions have legalized recreational cannabis for adult use. The subsequent availability and marketing of recreational cannabis has led to a parallel increase in rates and severity of pediatric cannabis intoxications. We explored predictors of severe outcomes in pediatric patients who presented to the emergency department with cannabis intoxication. METHODS: In this prospective cohort study, we collected data on all pediatric patients (<18 years) who presented with cannabis intoxication from August 2017 through June 2020 to participating sites in the Toxicology Investigators Consortium. In cases that involved polysubstance exposure, patients were included if cannabis was a significant contributing agent. The primary outcome was a composite severe outcome endpoint, defined as an intensive care unit admission or in-hospital death. Covariates included relevant sociodemographic and exposure characteristics. RESULTS: < 0.001). As all children 10 years and younger ingested edibles, a dedicated multivariable analysis could not be performed (unadjusted odds ratio 3.3; 95% confidence interval: 1.6-6.7). CONCLUSIONS: Severe outcomes occurred for different reasons and were largely associated with the patient's age. Young children, all of whom were exposed to edibles, were at higher risk of severe outcomes. Teenagers with severe outcomes were frequently involved in polysubstance exposure, while psychosocial factors may have played a role.