Berger Lisa, Brondino Michael, Fisher Michael, Gwyther Robert, Garbutt James C
From the Center for Applied Behavioral Health Research, University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee (LB, MB); the Department of Family Medicine (MF, RG), the Bowles Center for Alcohol Studies (RG, JCG), and the Department of Psychiatry (JCG), University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
J Am Board Fam Med. 2016 Jan-Feb;29(1):37-49. doi: 10.3122/jabfm.2016.01.150143.
In a recent study conducted in a family medicine setting, the medication acamprosate was found not to be efficacious in the treatment of alcohol dependence, but a drinking goal of abstinence was found to have positive effects on alcohol use outcomes. The purpose of this secondary analysis was to further understand which patients with an alcohol use disorder may be most successfully treated in a primary care setting.
The study was exploratory and used a trajectory-based approach based on data from the acamprosate treatment trial of 100 participants (recruited mostly by advertisement) who were randomly assigned to receive either acamprosate or a matching placebo. Post hoc trajectories of alcohol use before treatment were identified to examine whether trajectory classes and their interactions with treatment arm (acamprosate or placebo), pretreatment drinking goal (abstinence or a reduction), and time predicted alcohol use outcomes.
Three distinct trajectory classes were identified: frequent drinkers, nearly daily drinkers, and consistent daily drinkers. Consistent daily drinkers with a goal of abstinence significantly improved over time on the primary outcome measure of percent days abstinent when compared with frequent and nearly daily drinkers. In addition, all participants with a goal of abstinence, regardless of trajectory class, significantly reduced their percentage of heavy drinking days over time.
Patients with an alcohol use disorder who have a drinking goal of abstinence, in particular consistent daily drinkers, may maximally benefit from alcohol use disorder treatment, including the use of medication, in a primary care setting.
在最近一项针对家庭医学环境开展的研究中,发现阿坎酸在治疗酒精依赖方面并无疗效,但戒酒的饮酒目标被发现对饮酒结果有积极影响。这项二次分析的目的是进一步了解哪些酒精使用障碍患者在初级保健环境中可能得到最成功的治疗。
该研究具有探索性,采用基于轨迹的方法,数据来自对100名参与者(大多通过广告招募)进行的阿坎酸治疗试验,这些参与者被随机分配接受阿坎酸或匹配的安慰剂。确定治疗前酒精使用的事后轨迹,以检查轨迹类别及其与治疗组(阿坎酸或安慰剂)、治疗前饮酒目标(戒酒或减少饮酒量)以及时间之间的相互作用是否能预测酒精使用结果。
确定了三种不同的轨迹类别:频繁饮酒者、几乎每日饮酒者和持续每日饮酒者。与频繁饮酒者和几乎每日饮酒者相比,以戒酒为目标的持续每日饮酒者在戒酒天数百分比这一主要结局指标上随时间推移有显著改善。此外,所有以戒酒为目标的参与者,无论轨迹类别如何,随着时间的推移,重度饮酒天数的百分比都显著降低。
有戒酒饮酒目标的酒精使用障碍患者,尤其是持续每日饮酒者,在初级保健环境中可能从酒精使用障碍治疗(包括药物治疗)中最大程度地获益。