Background: Cancer survivors are at increased risk for cardiometabolic comorbidities following cancer treatment which may be further exacerbated by cannabis and alcohol use. We aimed to examine the direct relationships of cannabis, alcohol, and the co-use of both substances with cardiometabolic risk factors and to explore disparities by race/ethnicity and sex.
Methods: Cross-sectional data were extracted from adult cancer survivors in the "All of Us" from 2018-2022. Cannabis use was defined as occasional or frequent/regular cannabis use (vs never) in the past three months and hazardous alcohol intake (AUDIT-C >3 for females, AUDIT-C >4 for males) vs non-hazardous in the past year, respectively. Co-use was defined as participants who engaged in regular cannabis and hazardous alcohol intake. We identified binary cardiovascular, immune, and metabolic systems biomarkers, with high values defined by clinically established cutoffs or >75th percentile. We used multivariable logistic regression adjusting for socio-demographic and clinical factors.
Results: In our sample (N=7,054), 7.6% were Hispanic, 6.2% were Black, and 86.2% were White cancer survivors. Less than 5% of Hispanic and White survivors reported substance co-use compared to 7% of Black survivors. Compared to never users, co-users were 1.58(95% CI=1.14-2.19) more likely to have high blood pressure. No significant associations were found between co-use and immune biomarkers or sex differences.
Conclusion: Co-use of cannabis and hazardous alcohol may worsen high blood pressure in survivors, who are at higher risk for cardiometabolic comorbidities.
Impact: The study investigates substance use and cardiometabolic biomarkers, urging more research on their effects on cancer survivors.