Associations of alcohol and cannabis use with change in posttraumatic stress disorder and depression symptoms over time in recently trauma-exposed individuals
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Published:2023-06-13
Issue:
Volume:
Page:1-12
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ISSN:0033-2917
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Container-title:Psychological Medicine
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Psychol. Med.
Author:
Hinojosa Cecilia A.ORCID, Liew Amanda, An Xinming, Stevens Jennifer S., Basu Archana, van Rooij Sanne J. H., House Stacey L., Beaudoin Francesca L., Zeng Donglin, Neylan Thomas C., Clifford Gari D., Jovanovic Tanja, Linnstaedt Sarah D., Germine Laura T., Rauch Scott L., Haran John P., Storrow Alan B., Lewandowski Christopher, Musey Paul I., Hendry Phyllis L., Sheikh Sophia, Jones Christopher W., Punches Brittany E., Kurz Michael C., Swor Robert A., Hudak Lauren A., Pascual Jose L., Seamon Mark J., Datner Elizabeth M., Chang Anna M., Pearson Claire, Peak David A., Merchant Roland C., Domeier Robert M., Rathlev Niels K., Sergot Paulina, Sanchez Leon D., Bruce Steven E., Miller Mark W., Pietrzak Robert H., Joormann Jutta, Pizzagalli Diego A., Sheridan John F., Harte Steven E., Elliott James M., Kessler Ronald C., Koenen Karestan C., McLean Samuel A., Ressler Kerry J., Fani Negar
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Several hypotheses may explain the association between substance use, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and depression. However, few studies have utilized a large multisite dataset to understand this complex relationship. Our study assessed the relationship between alcohol and cannabis use trajectories and PTSD and depression symptoms across 3 months in recently trauma-exposed civilians.
Methods
In total, 1618 (1037 female) participants provided self-report data on past 30-day alcohol and cannabis use and PTSD and depression symptoms during their emergency department (baseline) visit. We reassessed participant's substance use and clinical symptoms 2, 8, and 12 weeks posttrauma. Latent class mixture modeling determined alcohol and cannabis use trajectories in the sample. Changes in PTSD and depression symptoms were assessed across alcohol and cannabis use trajectories via a mixed-model repeated-measures analysis of variance.
Results
Three trajectory classes (low, high, increasing use) provided the best model fit for alcohol and cannabis use. The low alcohol use class exhibited lower PTSD symptoms at baseline than the high use class; the low cannabis use class exhibited lower PTSD and depression symptoms at baseline than the high and increasing use classes; these symptoms greatly increased at week 8 and declined at week 12. Participants who already use alcohol and cannabis exhibited greater PTSD and depression symptoms at baseline that increased at week 8 with a decrease in symptoms at week 12.
Conclusions
Our findings suggest that alcohol and cannabis use trajectories are associated with the intensity of posttrauma psychopathology. These findings could potentially inform the timing of therapeutic strategies.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
2 articles.
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