Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 235 E. Cameron Avenue, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 USA.
Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, 235 E. Cameron Avenue, Chapel Hill, NC 27514 USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend. 2019 Apr 1;197:87-94. doi: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2019.01.002. Epub 2019 Feb 5.
Research examining directionality of the relationship between depressive symptoms and substance use following treatment entry is limited. Furthermore, substances differ in their neurobiological effects on mood. The relationship between depression and substance use following treatment entry may be moderated by dependence on specific substances. The study tested (a) lagged effects between depressive symptoms and substance use frequency following substance use treatment entry through a 1-year post-treatment follow-up and (b) if substance dependence type moderates these effects.
Participants (N = 263) entering residential treatment were assessed for DSM-IV substance dependence, depressive symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory), and percentage of substance use days at post-treatment, 1-, 3-, 6- and 12-month follow-up assessments (time t to t). Linear mixed effects models tested lagged effects between depressive symptoms and substance use frequency and the impact of substance type (i.e., dependence on alcohol, cannabis, opioid, cocaine, hallucinogen/PCP) on this relationship.
After controlling for concurrent effects, substance type moderated each longitudinal relationship. Depressive symptoms significantly predicted substance use frequency at the subsequent follow-up assessment, only among individuals with pre-treatment opioid dependence (B = 5.55, SE = 0.89, z = 6.21, p < 0.01). Substance use frequency significantly predicted depressive symptoms at the subsequent follow-up assessment, but not among individuals with cannabis dependence at pre-treatment (B = 1.01, SE = 0.22, t (524) = 4.49, p < 0.01).
The directionality of depression-substance use comorbidity may differ based on the substance of dependence at pre-treatment. Opioid users may especially benefit from treating both depression and substance use.
研究检查治疗开始后抑郁症状和物质使用之间关系的方向性是有限的。此外,物质在对情绪的神经生物学影响方面存在差异。治疗开始后抑郁症状和物质使用频率之间的关系可能受到对特定物质依赖的调节。该研究测试了(a)通过治疗后 1 年的随访,治疗开始后抑郁症状和物质使用频率之间的滞后效应,以及(b)物质依赖类型是否调节这些效应。
进入住院治疗的参与者接受了 DSM-IV 物质依赖、抑郁症状(贝克抑郁量表)和治疗后、1 个月、3 个月、6 个月和 12 个月随访评估时的物质使用天数的评估(时间 t 到 t)。线性混合效应模型测试了抑郁症状和物质使用频率之间的滞后效应,以及物质类型(即依赖酒精、大麻、阿片类药物、可卡因、致幻剂/PCP)对这种关系的影响。
在控制同期影响后,物质类型调节了每种纵向关系。在治疗前存在阿片类药物依赖的个体中,抑郁症状显著预测了随后的随访评估中的物质使用频率(B=5.55,SE=0.89,z=6.21,p<0.01)。物质使用频率显著预测了随后的随访评估中的抑郁症状,但在治疗前存在大麻依赖的个体中没有(B=1.01,SE=0.22,t(524)=4.49,p<0.01)。
根据治疗前依赖的物质,抑郁-物质使用共病的方向性可能不同。阿片类药物使用者可能特别受益于同时治疗抑郁和物质使用。