Department of Psychiatry (BGO, MHP, SJO, DAK), Indiana University School of Medicine (IUSM), Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
Department of Neurology (BGO, CRC, DAK), IUSM, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2021 Jan;45(1):204-214. doi: 10.1111/acer.14497. Epub 2020 Dec 1.
The preference for immediate rewards and high sensation seeking are both potent risk factors for alcohol use disorder (AUD), but how they interact during intoxication is poorly understood. To model decision making linked to AUD risk, we tested heavy drinkers for impulsive choice (delay discounting with alcohol:money or money:money) and behavioral sensation seeking using a novel odor choice task. Laboratory tasks measured actual behavior with real contingencies. Our goals were to determine, in heavy drinkers, (i) alcohol's effects on delay discounting, and (ii) how AUD risk factors relate to delay discounting, and (iii) how delay discounting with alcohol choices compares with strictly monetary choices.
Thirty-five heavy drinkers (≥2 binges per month; age = 22.8 ± 2.2; 20 male; 5.8 ± 2.3 drinks/drinking day) performed cross-commodity discounting (CCD) of immediate alcohol vs. delayed money, a monetary delay discounting (DD), and behavioral sensation-seeking tasks. CCD and DD were performed while sober and during controlled alcohol infusion targeting 0.08 g/dl. The behavioral sensation-seeking task presented binary choices of odorants varying in intensity and novelty, and the risk of exposure to a malodorant.
CCD and DD behaviors were highly correlated across conditions, mean r = 0.64. Alcohol increased delayed reward preference in DD, p = 0.001, but did not alter mean CCD, p > 0.16. However, alcohol-induced changes in CCD correlated with behavioral sensation seeking, such that higher sensation seekers' immediate alcohol preference increased when intoxicated, p = 0.042; self-reported sensation seeking was uncorrelated, ps > 0.08. Behavioral sensation seeking also correlated with "want" alcohol following a priming dose targeting 0.035 g/dl, p = 0.021. CCD and DD did not correlate with self-reported drinking problems or other personality risk traits.
Alcohol increased impulsive alcohol choice in high sensation seekers, suggesting an interaction that may underlie impaired control of drinking, at least in a subset of heavy drinkers-consistent with models highlighting high novelty/sensation-seeking AUD subtypes. Discounting behavior overall appears to be a generalized process, and relatively stable across methods, repeated testing, and intoxication. These findings further support the utility of behavioral tasks in uncovering key behavioral phenotypes in AUD.
即时奖励偏好和高感觉寻求都是酒精使用障碍(AUD)的强烈风险因素,但在醉酒状态下它们如何相互作用尚不清楚。为了模拟与 AUD 风险相关的决策,我们使用一种新的气味选择任务,对重度饮酒者进行冲动选择(酒精:金钱或金钱:金钱的延迟折扣)和行为感觉寻求测试。实验室任务使用实际的应急措施来测量实际行为。我们的目标是确定在重度饮酒者中:(i)酒精对延迟折扣的影响,(ii)AUD 风险因素与延迟折扣的关系,以及(iii)与严格的金钱选择相比,酒精选择的延迟折扣。
35 名重度饮酒者(≥每月 2 次狂欢;年龄 22.8±2.2;20 名男性;5.8±2.3 份/饮酒日)进行了即时酒精与延迟金钱的跨商品折扣(CCD)、货币延迟折扣(DD)和行为感觉寻求任务。在清醒和受控的酒精输注(目标为 0.08g/dl)期间进行 CCD 和 DD。行为感觉寻求任务呈现了强度和新颖性不同的气味的二元选择,以及暴露于恶臭气味的风险。
在清醒和醉酒状态下,CCD 和 DD 行为在所有条件下都高度相关,平均 r=0.64。酒精在 DD 中增加了对延迟奖励的偏好,p=0.001,但并未改变平均 CCD,p>0.16。然而,酒精引起的 CCD 变化与行为感觉寻求有关,即当醉酒时,高感觉寻求者的即时酒精偏好增加,p=0.042;自我报告的感觉寻求与 p>0.08 无关。行为感觉寻求也与目标为 0.035g/dl 的先导剂量后的“想要”酒精相关,p=0.021。CCD 和 DD 与自我报告的饮酒问题或其他人格风险特征无关。
酒精在高感觉寻求者中增加了冲动的酒精选择,表明在至少一部分重度饮酒者中,这种相互作用可能会导致饮酒控制受损,这与强调高新奇/感觉寻求 AUD 亚型的模型一致。总体而言,折扣行为似乎是一个普遍的过程,并且在方法、重复测试和醉酒状态下相对稳定。这些发现进一步支持了行为任务在揭示 AUD 关键行为表型方面的效用。