Verlinden Justin J, Moloney Mairead E, Vsevolozhskaya Olga A, Whitehurst Lauren N, Weafer Jessica
Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky, 503 Library Dr, Lexington, KY 40508, United States.
Department of Informatics and Health Data Science, University of Miami, 1120 NW 14th St., Miami, FL 33136, United States.
Alcohol. 2025 Mar;123:1-9. doi: 10.1016/j.alcohol.2025.01.001. Epub 2025 Jan 4.
Insomnia is a risk factor for hazardous drinking, yet the mechanisms underlying this risk are not well characterized. Two factors that might contribute to the relationship between insomnia and drinking are stress and depression. Insomnia is strongly associated with increased stress and depression, which are, in turn, strongly linked to hazardous drinking. Here we conducted a preliminary investigation to determine whether perceived stress and depression indirectly explain the relationship between insomnia and hazardous drinking. Heavy drinkers with self-reported insomnia (n = 405: 270 women, 134 men, 1 non-binary) completed self-report measures of hazardous drinking, insomnia, perceived stress, and depression. Results from our primary cross-sectional parallel mediation model with insomnia as the predictor and hazardous drinking as the outcome showed that, when accounting for the influence of both perceived stress and depression, there was a partial indirect effect of insomnia on hazardous drinking through perceived stress, 95% CI [0.014, 0.205], but not depression, 95% CI [-0.080, 0.172]. In our competing cross-sectional parallel mediation model with hazardous drinking as the predictor and insomnia as the outcome, there was a partial indirect effect of hazardous drinking on insomnia through depression 95% CI [0.016, 0.059], but not perceived stress 95% CI: [-0.026, 0.011]. Results suggest that insomnia may be related to hazardous drinking through its effects on stress and that hazardous drinking may be related to insomnia through its effects on depression. These findings lay the groundwork for future longitudinal studies assessing the causal roles of stress and depression in the insomnia-AUD relationship.
失眠是危险饮酒的一个风险因素,然而这种风险背后的机制尚未得到充分阐明。可能导致失眠与饮酒之间关系的两个因素是压力和抑郁。失眠与压力增加和抑郁密切相关,而压力和抑郁又与危险饮酒紧密相连。在此,我们进行了一项初步调查,以确定感知到的压力和抑郁是否间接解释了失眠与危险饮酒之间的关系。有自我报告失眠问题的重度饮酒者(n = 405:270名女性、134名男性、1名非二元性别者)完成了关于危险饮酒、失眠、感知到的压力和抑郁的自我报告测量。我们以失眠为预测因素、危险饮酒为结果的主要横断面平行中介模型结果显示,在考虑感知到的压力和抑郁的影响时,失眠通过感知到的压力对危险饮酒存在部分间接效应,95%可信区间[0.014, 0.205],但通过抑郁不存在,95%可信区间[-0.080, 0.172]。在我们以危险饮酒为预测因素、失眠为结果的竞争性横断面平行中介模型中,危险饮酒通过抑郁对失眠存在部分间接效应,95%可信区间[0.016, 0.059],但通过感知到的压力不存在,95%可信区间[-0.026, 0.011]。结果表明,失眠可能通过其对压力的影响与危险饮酒相关,而危险饮酒可能通过其对抑郁的影响与失眠相关。这些发现为未来评估压力和抑郁在失眠 - 酒精使用障碍关系中的因果作用的纵向研究奠定了基础。