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Craving as a predictor of treatment outcomes in heavy drinkers with comorbid depressed mood
Authors:Jennifer M. Connolly  David J. Kavanagh  Amanda L. Baker  Frances J. Kay-Lambkin  Terry J. Lewin  Penelope J. Davis  Lake-Hui Quek
Affiliation:1. Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation and School of Psychology and Counselling, Queensland University of Technology, Australia;2. Centre for Brain and Mental Health Research, The University of Newcastle, Australia;3. National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, University of New South Wales, Australia;4. Hunter New England Mental Health, New South Wales Department of Health, Australia;5. School of Applied Psychology and Griffith Health Institute, Griffith University, Australia;6. Centre for Youth Substance Abuse Research, The University of Queensland, Australia
Abstract:Alcohol and depression comorbidity is high and is associated with poorer outcomes following treatment. The ability to predict likely treatment response would be advantageous for treatment planning. Craving has been widely studied as a potential predictor, but has performed inconsistently. The effect of comorbid depression on craving's predictive performance however, has been largely neglected, despite demonstrated associations between negative affect and craving. The current study examined the performance of craving, measured pre-treatment using the Obsessive subscale of the Obsessive Compulsive Drinking Scale, in predicting 18-week and 12-month post-treatment alcohol use outcomes in a sample of depressed drinkers. Data for the current study were collected during a randomized controlled trial (Baker, Kavanagh, Kay-Lambkin, Hunt, Lewin, Carr, & Connolly, 2010) comparing treatments for comorbid alcohol and depression. A subset of 260 participants from that trial with a Timeline Followback measure of alcohol consumption was analyzed. Pre-treatment craving was a significant predictor of average weekly alcohol consumption at 18 weeks and of frequency of alcohol binges at 18 weeks and 12 months, but pre-treatment depressive mood was not predictive, and effects of Baseline craving were independent of depressive mood. Results suggest a greater ongoing risk from craving than from depressive mood at Baseline.
Keywords:Craving   Prediction   Post-treatment   Alcohol   Depression   Comorbidity
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