University of Pittsburgh, Department of Psychiatry, USA; University of New Mexico, Center on Alcohol, Substance use, And Addictions, USA.
University of Pittsburgh, Department of Psychiatry, USA.
Addict Behav. 2022 Sep;132:107348. doi: 10.1016/j.addbeh.2022.107348. Epub 2022 May 6.
Given the significant heterogeneity of alcohol use disorder (AUD) and the increasing priority to understand individual profiles of AUD, pursuing symptom-level examinations of AUD is important. Disturbances in sleep and circadian rhythms have demonstrated robust associations with alcohol consumption and AUD, yet little research has examined these associations at the symptom- or problem-levels and research to date has focused on one or two sleep/circadian characteristics. We sought to investigate the associations between (a) specific AUD symptoms and (b) domains of alcohol-related problems, and multiple sleep characteristics, collected at a daily level in the naturalistic environment. Young adult drinkers were recruited from the community (N = 159, M = 23.9, 58.5% female, 6.3% Asian, 35.9% Black or African American, 51.6% White, 5.0% multiracial) and completed a baseline visit as well as up to 18 days of naturalistic assessment. Several sleep/circadian characteristics, including eveningness, later midsleep timing, and shorter total sleep time, were consistently associated with the hazardous use symptom, above and beyond alcohol consumption. Eveningness (beta[SE] = 0.21[0.00], p <.01) was a significant predictor of the alcohol-related problem domain of role interference. Exploratory analyses did not find significant associations between sleep/circadian characteristics and cannabis-related problems. The relationship between sleep/circadian characteristics and AUD and related problems may be driven by a narrower set of symptoms, such as hazardous use and role interference. This may be due to shared mechanistic dysfunction in domains such as reward processing or cognitive control. Thus, these alcohol-related symptoms and problems may be addressed through transdiagnostic treatment approaches that target these underlying mechanisms.
鉴于酒精使用障碍(AUD)的显著异质性,以及越来越需要了解 AUD 的个体特征,对 AUD 的症状水平进行研究很重要。睡眠和昼夜节律紊乱与饮酒和 AUD 有很强的关联,但很少有研究在症状或问题水平上研究这些关联,而且迄今为止的研究都集中在一两个睡眠/昼夜节律特征上。我们试图调查(a)特定的 AUD 症状和(b)与酒精相关问题的各个领域,以及在自然环境中以日常水平收集的多个睡眠特征之间的关联。从社区招募了年轻成年饮酒者(N=159,M=23.9,58.5%为女性,6.3%为亚洲人,35.9%为黑人和非裔美国人,51.6%为白人,5.0%为多种族裔),并完成了基线访问以及长达 18 天的自然评估。几个睡眠/昼夜节律特征,包括夜间倾向、较晚的中睡时间和较短的总睡眠时间,与危险使用症状相关,超过了饮酒量。夜间倾向(β[SE] = 0.21[0.00],p<.01)是角色干扰酒精相关问题领域的显著预测因子。探索性分析未发现睡眠/昼夜节律特征与大麻相关问题之间存在显著关联。睡眠/昼夜节律特征与 AUD 及其相关问题之间的关系可能是由更窄的一组症状驱动的,例如危险使用和角色干扰。这可能是由于奖励处理或认知控制等领域的共同机制功能障碍。因此,这些与酒精相关的症状和问题可能通过针对这些潜在机制的跨诊断治疗方法来解决。