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Cannabis is the most commonly used recreational drug in the Western Hemisphere. Cannabinoids exert biologic effects via cannabinoid receptors CB1 and CB2. In experimental models, these receptors have been shown to regulate liver fibrosis progression. Therefore, cannabis could have detrimental effects on the liver. In this cross-sectional study, researchers in France explored the effect of cannabis use on hepatic fibrosis progression in 270 patients with untreated hepatitis C virus (HCV) infections who were undergoing liver biopsy and who had known durations of infection (mean duration, 19 years).
The outcome variable — fibrosis progression rate (FPR) — was defined as the ratio of the fibrosis stage to the duration of infection in years (medi…