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Marijuana Smoke and Cancer Risk |
Question Does smoking marijuana cause cancer? Answer Carolyn Vachani RN, MSN, AOCN, OncoLink's Nurse Educator, responds: This is an interesting question. There are a few things we know about marijuana smoke:
Despite all of this, the research studies done to date have not found an increase risk of cancer in marijuana smokers. Most of the studies were very small, and many were poorly designed, making them not very reliable. It is difficult to do a study accurately when you are asking people to self-report their marijuana smoking habits, particularly when the substance in question is illegal in most countries. Some researchers have proposed conducting studies in countries where marijuana is legal, but this has yet to be done. The other factor is that, unlike cigarette smokers, most marijuana smokers do not smoke chronically or in the volume that cigarette smokers do, so focusing on the groups that are chronic marijuana users may be more helpful in studies. The bottom line is, researchers agree that there is most likely some cancer-causing effect to smoking marijuana, but they have yet to quantify this with clinical studies. |
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