Affiliation:
1. Center for Alcohol and Addiction Studies Brown University School of Public Health Providence Rhode Island USA
2. Department of Psychiatry and Human Behavior Alpert Medical School of Brown University Providence Rhode Island USA
Abstract
AbstractBackgroundMost adolescents who drink alcohol also use cannabis, and adolescents who use both substances experience worse long‐term outcomes than adolescents who use only one or the other. Recent clinical trials with adolescents and emerging adults show that alcohol cues are associated with elevated cannabis craving in the natural environment but not in the laboratory, highlighting cross‐cue reactivity as a potential intervention target. This study extends this work to a younger sample of adolescents at an earlier stage of substance use to examine the generalizability of prior findings and inform etiological mechanisms.MethodsParticipants were 81 adolescents aged 15–17 years who endorsed past‐month alcohol and lifetime cannabis use. They completed a laboratory cue reactivity protocol where they rated their cannabis craving during alcohol cue and control conditions. They also completed 24 days of ecological momentary assessment where they reported multiple times per day on their cannabis craving and whether alcohol cues were visible.ResultsMixed models demonstrated lower cannabis craving following alcohol cue presentation in the laboratory compared to control cues, but higher cannabis craving during moments when alcohol was visible in daily life compared to moments when alcohol was not visible. Frequency of cannabis use at baseline was associated with greater cannabis craving in the laboratory and in daily life regardless of cue type or alcohol visibility, and cannabis craving following alcohol cue presentation in the laboratory was positively related to daily life cannabis craving across contexts.ConclusionsThis study adds to prior work suggesting that daily life cannabis craving is elevated when alcohol cues are visible. This cross‐cue reactivity may be one factor that drives and maintains alcohol and cannabis use in adolescence.
Funder
National Institutes of Health
Cited by
1 articles.
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