Predictors of substance use during treatment for addiction: A network analysis of ecological momentary assessment data
Background and aims Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) studies have previously demonstrated a prospective influence of craving on substance use in the following hours. Conceptualizing substance use as a dynamic system of causal elements could provide valuable insights into the interaction of crav...
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Published in | Addiction (Abingdon, England) Vol. 120; no. 1; pp. 48 - 58 |
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Main Authors | , , , , , , , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
England
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
01.01.2025
John Wiley and Sons Inc |
Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background and aims
Ecological momentary assessment (EMA) studies have previously demonstrated a prospective influence of craving on substance use in the following hours. Conceptualizing substance use as a dynamic system of causal elements could provide valuable insights into the interaction of craving with other symptoms in the process of relapse. The aim of this study was to improve the understanding of these daily life dynamic inter‐relationships by applying dynamic networks analyses to EMA data sets.
Design, setting and participants
Secondary analyses were conducted on time‐series data from two 2‐week EMA studies. Data were collected in French outpatient addiction treatment centres. A total of 211 outpatients beginning treatment for alcohol, tobacco, cannabis, stimulants and opiate addiction took part.
Measurements
Using mobile technologies, participants were questioned four times per day relative to substance use, craving, exposure to cues, mood, self‐efficacy and pharmacological addiction treatment use. Multi‐level vector auto‐regression models were used to explore contemporaneous, temporal and between‐subjects networks.
Findings
Among the 8260 daily evaluations, the temporal network model, which depicts the lagged associations of symptoms within participants, demonstrated a unidirectional association between craving intensity at one time (T0) and primary substance use at the next assessment (T1, r = 0.1), after controlling for the effect of all other variables. A greater self‐efficacy at T0 was associated with fewer cues (r = −0.04), less craving (r = −0.1) and less substance use at T1 (r = −0.07), and craving presented a negative feedback loop with self‐efficacy (r = −0.09).
Conclusions
Dynamic network analyses showed that, among outpatients beginning treatment for addiction, high craving, together with low self‐efficacy, appear to predict substance use more strongly than low mood or high exposure to cues. |
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Bibliography: | Fuschia Serre and Christophe Gauld contributed equally to this study. ObjectType-Article-1 SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1 ObjectType-Feature-2 content type line 14 content type line 23 |
ISSN: | 0965-2140 1360-0443 1360-0443 |
DOI: | 10.1111/add.16658 |