ADHD Symptoms and Cannabis Use: The Role of Cannabinoid Receptor 1 and Neural Response Inhibition

Fuente: PubMed "Cannabis"
medRxiv [Preprint]. 2026 Jul 1:2026.06.24.26356461. doi: 10.64898/2026.06.24.26356461.ABSTRACTBACKGROUND: Individuals with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are at increased risk for cannabis misuse, with increasing prevalence among young adults. Existing evidence suggests that cannabis can have therapeutic effects on ADHD symptoms, and continued use may be partly driven by perceived improvements in symptom-related deficits. To investigate the neural evidence for these associations, we integrated functional neuroimaging and Allen Human Brain Atlas transcriptomic data to assess neural correlates of ADHD in regions targeted by cannabinoids as predictors of cannabis use. We hypothesized that greater ADHD symptoms would lead to higher cannabis use frequency through associations of ADHD symptoms with functional deficits in cannabinoid receptor type 1 (CB1R; encoded by the CNR1 gene) expressing brain regions.METHODS: We tested 466 college students (ages 18-19) with varying ADHD symptom severity and cannabis use, self-reported at baseline and three yearly-follow up questionnaires. ADHD-related neural deficits were tested in a subset of 144 participants using an fMRI stop-signal task at baseline. Growth mixture modelling categorized participants with similar cannabis use into three latent classes. The covariance between the CNR1 gene expression map and differences in stop-signal task activation were tested as a mediator linking ADHD symptoms and cannabis use.RESULTS: Greater ADHD symptoms significantly predicted reduced activation within CNR1-expressing regions, which predicted higher-use cannabis class membership.CONCLUSIONS: Our results add support for the self-medication hypothesis for higher rates of cannabis use among individuals with greater ADHD symptoms, which may be mechanistically linked through CB1R-enriched attention and inhibitory networks, highlighting neural targets for prevention and treatment.PMID:42428127 | PMC:PMC13345498 | DOI:10.64898/2026.06.24.26356461