`Endocannabinoid System & Adolescent Health: 15-Year REAL 2.0`

Clinical Takeaway

A 15-year Canadian cohort study tracked adolescents into early adulthood to examine how early risk factors like body image concerns and disordered eating contribute to later eating disorders, mental health conditions, and substance use problems. The study highlights that psychosocial vulnerabilities identified in adolescence can have lasting effects on multiple health outcomes simultaneously. Clinicians should consider early screening for body image and disordered eating as part of routine adolescent care to help prevent downstream multimorbid conditions.

#6 Research on Eating and Adolescent Lifestyle (REAL) 2.0: 15-year follow-up study of eating disorders and weight-related trajectories, mental health and substance use health from early adolescence to early adulthood-a Canadian cohort profile.

Citation: Obeid Nicole et al.. Research on Eating and Adolescent Lifestyle (REAL) 2.0: 15-year follow-up study of eating disorders and weight-related trajectories, mental health and substance use health from early adolescence to early adulthood-a Canadian cohort profile.. BMJ open. 2026. PMID: 41526025.

Study type: Journal Article  |  Topic area: Pediatrics  |  CED Score: 12

Design: 0 Journal: 3 N: 4 Recency: 3 Pop: 3 Human: 1 Risk: -2

Why This Matters
This 15-year longitudinal study provides critical evidence on how adolescent psychosocial risk factors, particularly disordered eating and body image disturbance, predict the development of eating disorders, weight-related conditions, and comorbid mental health and substance use disorders in young adulthood. Understanding these long-term trajectories enables clinicians to identify high-risk adolescents who require early intervention to prevent progression to severe, costly multimorbid conditions. The Canadian cohort data addresses a significant knowledge gap in how developmental eating and weight concerns evolve into adult psychopathology, informing prevention and treatment strategies for this vulnerable population.

Quality Gate Alerts:

  • Preclinical only

Methodological Considerations:

  • Cross-sectional design — causal inference not possible

Abstract: PURPOSE: Few studies have examined how psychosocial risk and protective factors in adolescence shape mental health outcomes and other multimorbid conditions in adulthood, particularly among Canadian youth. The Research on Eating and Adolescent Lifestyle (REAL) 2.0 study was a 15-year follow-up cohort study designed to investigate how early etiological factors, including body image and disordered eating symptoms in adolescence, contribute to the development of eating, weight-related concerns, mental health and substance use health problems in early adulthood. In this paper, we describe the REAL 2.0 cohort’s demographic and clinical characteristics alongside an overview of the study procedures, laying the groundwork for collaboration on future learnings with this unique data. PARTICIPANTS: The cross-sectional REAL study initially surveyed middle and high school students from 2004 to 2010 (n=3043) across 43 schools in the Ottawa, Canada region. Of those, respondents in grade 7 or 9 (n=1197 from 25 of the 43 original schools) were asked to participate in a longitudinal arm of the study that consisted of yearly follow-ups. From the longitudinal cohort, there were 278 participants (29.1% male; Mage=28.6) from those who consented to be re-contacted (n=912), who completed the REAL 2.0 survey electronically (30.4%), providing comprehensive data on demographic, clinical, eating and weight-related behaviour, psychological, social, environmental and substance use health factors in adulthood. FINDINGS TO DATE: 9.4% of REAL 2.0 participants met DSM-5 criteria for an eating disorder, while 17.6% met criteria for disordered eating. Moderate to severe anxiety was reported by 28% of participants, while 21.6% experienced moderate to severe depressive symptoms. Regarding substance use, 16.9% engaged in hazardous drinking, 16.9% used cannabis daily or almost daily, and 4.3% reported daily tobacco use. FUTURE PLANS: REAL 2.0 has the potential to answer multiple research questions about s

Clinical Perspective

🧠 While the REAL 2.0 study provides valuable longitudinal data on how adolescent eating behaviors and body image concerns track into adulthood, clinicians should note that this cohort profile does not yet present cannabis-specific outcomes or mechanistic data linking cannabis use to the eating or mental health trajectories being examined. The study’s Canadian context and 15-year follow-up period offer meaningful insights into natural history, but without detailed substance use subanalyses or temporality data, we cannot infer whether cannabis use represents a risk factor, consequence, or confounding variable in the eating disorder and mental health pathways described. Of particular relevance to cannabis medicine practitioners, adolescent substance use patterns often cluster with disordered eating and mood symptoms, yet distinguishing independent effects requires careful statistical adjustment for comorbid psychopathology and sociodemographic factors that the abstract does not detail. When counseling young patients about cannabis use in the context of body image concerns or emerging eating pathology, practitioners should await publication of the full results and

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