Optimizing antipsychotic dosing for relapse prevention in cannabis-induced psychosis: A nationwide cohort study




Mustonen, Antti; Niemelä, Solja; Denissoff, Alexander; Di Forti, Marta; Tanskanen, Antti; Mittendorfer-Rutz, Ellenor; Tiihonen, Jari; Taipale, Heidi

PublisherElsevier

2026

 Psychiatry Research

116966

358

0165-1781

1872-7123

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2026.116966

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psychres.2026.116966

https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/508966533



Background

Cannabis-induced psychosis (CIP) carries a high risk of relapse. Research has shown that antipsychotic medications are effective in relapse prevention after first diagnosed CIP. Given that antipsychotics carry the potential for dose-related adverse effects, understanding the optimal dose is critical. Therefore, we conducted a dose–response analysis to evaluate the real-world effectiveness of oral antipsychotics in preventing relapse after CIP.

Methods

We used data from linkage of administrative and health care registers from Sweden to identify all individuals with first diagnosis of CIP (ICD-10 F12.5). We modelled oral antipsychotic exposure (aripiprazole, clozapine, risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine, antipsychotic polytherapy, other oral antipsychotics) as time-dependent using validated PRE2DUP-method. Dose–response association of antipsychotic exposure and outcome were examined across three predefined daily dose (DDD) categories (<0.6, 0.6–<1.4, ≥1.4) using within-individual models in a stratified Cox-regression analysis. The primary outcome was hospitalization for any psychotic episode, defined as schizophrenia-spectrum disorder (F20–F29) or substance-induced psychosis (F1x.5) as the main diagnosis.

Results

We identified 1,772 individuals aged 16-64 years with first-time CIP between 2006 and 2021. Antipsychotic polytherapy was associated with reduced risk of psychosis hospitalization across all dose ranges (HRs=0.54–0.65). Clozapine (0.6–<1.4 DDDs/day), olanzapine (≥0.6 DDDs/day), aripiprazole (0.6–<1.4 DDDs/day), risperidone (<0.6 DDDs/day), and other oral antipsychotics (0.6–<1.4 DDDs/day) were effective, while quetiapine showed no significant benefit.

Conclusions

Findings indicate dose-dependent real-world effectiveness of antipsychotics in CIP, with most agents performing best at 0.6–<1.4 DDDs/day. These results support optimizing dosing of oral antipsychotic medications for relapse prevention after CIP to balance efficacy and adverse effects.


This study was funded by the Swedish Research Council (2024-03340) and Juho Vainio Foundation. We utilised data from the REWHARD consortium supported by the Swedish Research Council (grant number 2021-00154). The funders of the study had no role in study design, data collection, data analysis, data interpretation, or writing of the report.


Last updated on 10/02/2026 01:48:42 PM