A new study links cannabis use to an increased risk of serious illness for people with COVID-19.
As COVID-19 started spreading in late 2019, scientists rushed to answer a critical question: Who is most at risk?
They quickly recognized that a handful of characteristics—including age, smoking history, high body mass index (BMI), and the presence of other diseases such as diabetes—made people infected with the virus much more likely to become seriously ill and even die.
But one suggested risk factor remains unconfirmed more than four years later: cannabis use. Evidence has emerged over time indicating both protective and harmful effects.
The new findings, published in JAMA Network Open, point decisively to the latter.
The study analyzed the health records of 72,501 people seen for COVID-19 at health centers in a major Midwestern health care system during the first two years of the pandemic.
The researchers found that people who reported using any form of cannabis at least once in the year before developing COVID-19 were significantly more likely to need hospitalization and intensive care than were people with no such history. This elevated risk of severe illness was on par with that from smoking.
“There’s this sense among the public that cannabis is safe to use, that it’s not as bad for your health as smoking or drinking, that it may even be good for you,” says senior author Li-Shiun Chen, a professor of psychiatry at Washington University in St. Louis.
“I think that’s because there hasn’t been as much research on the health effects of cannabis as compared to tobacco or alcohol. What we found is that cannabis use is not harmless in the context of COVID-19. People who reported ‘yes’ to current cannabis use, at any frequency, were more likely to require hospitalization and intensive care than those who did not use cannabis.”
Cannabis use was different than tobacco smoking in one key outcome measure: survival. While smokers were significantly more likely to die of COVID-19 than nonsmokers—a finding that fits with numerous other studies—the same was not true of cannabis users, according to the study.
“The independent effect of cannabis is similar to the independent effect of tobacco regarding the risk of hospitalization and intensive care,” Chen says. “For the risk of death, tobacco risk is clear but more evidence is needed for cannabis.”
For the study, the researchers analyzed de-identified electronic health records of people who were seen for COVID-19 at BJC HealthCare hospitals and clinics in Missouri and Illinois between February 1, 2020, and January 31, 2022. The records contained data on demographic characteristics such as sex, age, and race; other medical conditions such as diabetes and heart disease; use of substances including tobacco, alcohol, cannabis, and vaping; and outcomes of the illness—specifically, hospitalization, intensive-care unit (ICU) admittance, and survival.
COVID-19 patients who reported that they had used cannabis in the previous year were 80% more likely to be hospitalized and 27% more likely to be admitted to the ICU than patients who had not used cannabis, after taking into account tobacco smoking, vaccination, other health conditions, date of diagnosis, and demographic factors.
For comparison, tobacco smokers with COVID-19 were 72% more likely to be hospitalized and 22% more likely to require intensive care than were nonsmokers, after adjusting for other factors.
These results contradict some other research suggesting that cannabis may help the body fight off viral diseases such as COVID-19.
“Most of the evidence suggesting that cannabis is good for you comes from studies in cells or animals,” Chen says. “The advantage of our study is that it is in people and uses real-world health care data collected across multiple sites over an extended time period. All the outcomes were verified: hospitalization, ICU stay, death. Using this data set, we were able to confirm the well-established effects of smoking, which suggests that the data are reliable.”
The study was not designed to answer the question of why cannabis use might make COVID-19 worse. One possibility is that inhaling marijuana smoke injures delicate lung tissue and makes it more vulnerable to infection, in much the same way that tobacco smoke causes lung damage that puts people at risk of pneumonia, the researchers say. That isn’t to say that taking edibles would be safer than smoking joints. It is also possible that cannabis, which is known to suppress the immune system, undermines the body’s ability to fight off viral infections no matter how it is consumed, the researchers note.
“We just don’t know whether edibles are safer,” says first author Nicholas Griffith, a medical resident at Washington University. Griffith was a medical student at Washington University when he led the study.
“People were asked a yes-or-no question: ‘Have you used cannabis in the past year?’ That gave us enough information to establish that if you use cannabis, your health care journey will be different, but we can’t know how much cannabis you have to use, or whether it makes a difference whether you smoke it or eat edibles.
“Those are questions we’d really like the answers to. I hope this study opens the door to more research on the health effects of cannabis.”