Obsessive, Compulsive, and Anxiety Spectrum Research Program, Institute of Psychiatry, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.
Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
CNS Spectr. 2019 Dec;24(6):597-604. doi: 10.1017/S1092852918001554.
We assessed self-reported drives for alcohol use and their impact on clinical features of alcohol use disorder (AUD) patients. Our prediction was that, in contrast to "affectively" (reward or fear) driven drinking, "habitual" drinking would be associated with worse clinical features in relation to alcohol use and higher occurrence of associated psychiatric symptoms.
Fifty-eight Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) alcohol abuse patients were assessed with a comprehensive battery of reward- and fear-based behavioral tendencies. An 18-item self-report instrument (the Habit, Reward and Fear Scale; HRFS) was employed to quantify affective (fear or reward) and non-affective (habitual) motivations for alcohol use. To characterize clinical and demographic measures associated with habit, reward, and fear, we conducted a partial least squares analysis.
Habitual alcohol use was significantly associated with the severity of alcohol dependence reflected across a range of domains and with lower number of detoxifications across multiple settings. In contrast, reward-driven alcohol use was associated with a single domain of alcohol dependence, reward-related behavioral tendencies, and lower number of detoxifications.
These results seem to be consistent with a shift from goal-directed to habit-driven alcohol use with severity and progression of addiction, complementing preclinical work and informing biological models of addiction. Both reward-related and habit-driven alcohol use were associated with lower number of detoxifications, perhaps stemming from more benign course for the reward-related and lack of treatment engagement for the habit-related alcohol abuse group. Future work should further explore the role of habit in this and other addictive disorders, and in obsessive-compulsive related disorders.
我们评估了自我报告的饮酒动机及其对酒精使用障碍(AUD)患者临床特征的影响。我们的预测是,与“情感驱动”(奖励或恐惧)饮酒相反,“习惯性”饮酒与与饮酒相关的更差临床特征以及更高的相关精神症状发生率相关。
58 名符合《精神障碍诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)酒精滥用标准的患者接受了一套全面的奖励和恐惧驱动的行为倾向评估。采用 18 项自我报告量表(习惯、奖励和恐惧量表;HRFS)来量化酒精使用的情感(恐惧或奖励)和非情感(习惯性)动机。为了描述与习惯、奖励和恐惧相关的临床和人口统计学特征,我们进行了偏最小二乘法分析。
习惯性饮酒与反映在多个领域的酒精依赖严重程度显著相关,并且在多个环境下的解毒次数也较少。相比之下,奖励驱动的饮酒与单一的酒精依赖领域、奖励相关的行为倾向以及解毒次数较少有关。
这些结果似乎与从目标导向到习惯驱动的饮酒转变一致,这种转变与成瘾的严重程度和进展有关,补充了临床前工作并为成瘾的生物学模型提供了信息。奖励相关和习惯驱动的饮酒都与解毒次数较少有关,这可能源于奖励相关的疾病病程较良性,以及习惯相关的酒精滥用组缺乏治疗参与。未来的研究应进一步探讨习惯在这种和其他成瘾障碍以及强迫症相关障碍中的作用。