Dash Genevieve F, Gizer Ian R, Slutske Wendy S
Department of Psychological Sciences, University of Missouri, Columbia, MO, USA.
Center for Tobacco Research and Intervention and Department of Family Medicine and Community Health, University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA.
Drug Alcohol Depend Rep. 2022 Dec;5. doi: 10.1016/j.dadr.2022.100123. Epub 2022 Nov 22.
Prescription opioid misuse (POM) is often implicated in heroin initiation, despite evidence that POM does not predict heroin initiation any better than other drug use. Additionally, prescription misuse and illicit use behaviors tend to respectively "cluster" together. This study aimed to test a series of theory-driven factor models to explore how POM and heroin use are situated within the broader constellation of drug use that typically occurs alongside opioid (mis)use.
36,309 individuals from NESARC-III (56.31% female; mean age=45.63 [SD=17.53]) reported their lifetime (mis)use of prescription opioids, prescription stimulants, prescription sedatives, heroin, cannabis, cocaine/crack, illicit stimulants (e.g., methamphetamine), club drugs, hallucinogens, and inhalants, and were administered a DSM-5 substance use disorder (SUD) assessment. Bifactor, correlated factors, and one-factor confirmatory factor models were fit using all drug use/SUD variables and subsequently compared.
POM was most strongly correlated with prescription sedative misuse; heroin use was most strongly correlated with cocaine/crack use. All factor models fit the data well. Highly correlated factors and patterns of factor loadings suggested that POM and heroin use were most parsimoniously captured within a general factor alongside all other forms of drug use. This was also the case for SUD. Additional analyses testing an alternate factor structure provided further support for unidimensionality.
POM and heroin use, as well as prescription- and heroin-based SUDs, were neither separable nor distinctly associated. Future research should account for other drug use more comprehensively rather than isolating POM as a primary risk factor in heroin use and use disorder.
尽管有证据表明处方阿片类药物滥用(POM)并不比其他药物使用更能预测海洛因成瘾,但处方阿片类药物滥用常被认为与海洛因成瘾有关。此外,处方药物滥用和非法使用行为往往分别“聚集”在一起。本研究旨在测试一系列理论驱动的因素模型,以探讨POM和海洛因使用如何在通常与阿片类药物(滥用)同时发生的更广泛的药物使用体系中存在。
来自国家酒精与相关疾病流行病学调查三期(NESARC-III)的36309名个体(56.31%为女性;平均年龄=45.63[标准差=17.53])报告了他们一生当中对处方阿片类药物、处方兴奋剂、处方镇静剂、海洛因、大麻、可卡因/快克、非法兴奋剂(如甲基苯丙胺)、俱乐部药物、致幻剂和吸入剂的(滥用)情况,并接受了《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版(DSM-5)物质使用障碍(SUD)评估。使用所有药物使用/SUD变量拟合双因素、相关因素和单因素验证性因素模型,随后进行比较。
POM与处方镇静剂滥用的相关性最强;海洛因使用与可卡因/快克使用的相关性最强。所有因素模型都很好地拟合了数据。高度相关的因素和因素负荷模式表明,POM和海洛因使用在一个与所有其他形式药物使用相关的一般因素中得到了最简约的体现。SUD也是如此。测试替代因素结构的进一步分析为单维性提供了进一步支持。
POM和海洛因使用,以及基于处方和海洛因的SUD,既不可分离也没有明显关联。未来的研究应该更全面地考虑其他药物使用情况,而不是将POM作为海洛因使用和使用障碍的主要危险因素单独看待。