A groundbreaking multisite investigation recently published in the prestigious journal Nature Mental Health has illuminated the profound psychiatric risks associated with the combined consumption of cannabis and tobacco, particularly among individuals deemed at high clinical risk for psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia. This novel research, spearheaded by Dr. Heather Ward, an assistant professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences and the director of Neuromodulation Research at Vanderbilt Health, brings to light critical new data derived from the extensive North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study (NAPLS). The NAPLS initiative meticulously tracks individuals exhibiting subthreshold psychotic symptoms, providing a unique lens to observe early risk markers and their progression toward full-blown psychotic syndromes.
Dr. Ward’s team examined longitudinal data encompassing over 1,000 participants, focusing on those with prodromal symptoms indicative of an imminent psychotic episode. These prodromal phases are characterized by mild or preliminary psychotic-like experiences, which do not meet the full diagnostic criteria for psychosis but signify heightened vulnerability. The study’s central innovation lies in its granular analysis of substance use patterns—differentiating between exclusive cannabis use, exclusive tobacco use, their simultaneous usage termed ‘co-use,’ other substance use, and complete abstinence—charting how these usage patterns relate to both psychiatric symptomatology and the eventual conversion to psychosis over a two-year observational period.
Emerging epidemiological trends reported by the researchers reveal that while exclusive tobacco consumption has declined steadily over recent decades, cannabis use has concurrently surged, with a significant and troubling subset of young individuals engaging in co-use of both substances. This pattern is of paramount concern, as co-use has been vastly understudied despite its increasing prevalence, particularly in adolescent populations vulnerable to psychosis. The molecular pharmacodynamics underlying co-use suggest pharmacokinetic and neurobiological interactions, whereby tobacco smoking potentiates the bioavailability of Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), enhancing its psychoactive impact and potentially exacerbating neuropsychiatric outcomes.
In clinical terms, the study establishes that both cannabis and tobacco, when used in isolation, are associated with heightened baseline rates of anxiety, depressive symptoms, and attenuated psychotic experiences. However, it is the synergistic use of these substances that manifests a disproportionately amplified longitudinal risk. Notably, individuals engaged in heavy cannabis use accompanied by light tobacco use demonstrated an almost threefold increase in the likelihood of progressing to full-threshold psychotic disorders relative to their non-using counterparts. This delineates a critical window for intervention, emphasizing that co-use may not merely be an additive risk factor but rather a multiplicative agent in psychosis pathogenesis.
The neurobiological mechanisms hypothesized to underlie this increased risk involve complex interactions within the endocannabinoid and nicotinic acetylcholine receptor systems. Tobacco’s nicotine content modulates dopaminergic neurotransmission, an axis already implicated in psychotic disorders. Concurrently, cannabis’s active cannabinoids engage cannabinoid receptors impacting neuronal excitability and synaptic plasticity. The compounded effect of co-administration likely disrupts cortical-subcortical circuits integral to sensory gating and executive function, precipitating psychotic decompensation in predisposed individuals.
Dr. Ward underscores the dire public health implications of these findings, given that individuals with established psychosis are burdened by a dramatically reduced life expectancy—approximately 20 years less than the general populace—largely due to comorbid cardiovascular morbidity and oncological sequelae frequently linked to tobacco use. Cannabis usage further complicates clinical trajectories by correlating with more severe psychiatric symptomatology, impaired treatment responsiveness, increased hospitalizations, and potentially precipitating earlier onset of psychosis in those at risk.
Importantly, this research proposes that cessation or reduction of cannabis and tobacco use could be a pivotal modifiable factor in psychosis prevention strategies. While causality cannot be definitively established from current data, the strong associative risk signal invites rigorous clinical trials aimed at evaluating whether targeted interventions to reduce co-use can alter the natural history of psychosis emergence. This aligns with a broader precision psychiatry framework aiming to integrate behavioral, pharmacological, and neuromodulatory therapies tailored to individual risk profiles.
The study’s extensive support from multiple National Institutes of Health grants underscores the increasing recognition of substance use as a critical leverage point in the neurodevelopmental trajectories leading to psychotic disorders. Future research endeavors are planned to replicate these findings in diverse cohorts, enhancing generalizability and examining the neurobiological substrates through advanced imaging and biomarker studies.
In sum, the work led by Dr. Heather Ward advances the paradigm of psychosis risk assessment by quantifying the additive dangers of cannabis and tobacco co-use in high-risk youth. It calls clinicians, researchers, and public health stakeholders to intensify efforts to mitigate these modifiable risks, potentially forestalling the onset of debilitating psychotic illnesses and improving long-term outcomes for vulnerable populations.
Subject of Research: Cannabinoid and nicotine co-use effects on the development of psychotic disorders in high-risk individuals.
Article Title: Cannabis and tobacco co-use predicts psychosis in clinical high risk cohorts
News Publication Date: 12-May-2026
Web References:
10.1038/s44220-026-00648-y
Image Credits: Vanderbilt Health
Keywords: Cannabis, Tobacco, Co-use, Psychosis, Schizophrenia, Clinical High Risk, Substance Use, Neuromodulation, Psychotic Disorders, THC, Nicotine, Mental Health



