Transitions to polysubstance use: Prospective cohort study of adolescents in Australia

Author:

Black Nicola1,Noghrehchi Firouzeh2ORCID,Yuen Wing See3ORCID,Aiken Alexandra3,Clare Philip J.34ORCID,Chan Gary5ORCID,Kypri Kypros6ORCID,McBride Nyanda7ORCID,Bruno Raimondo8,Slade Tim9ORCID,Boland Veronica3ORCID,Mattick Richard3,Peacock Amy38ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Medicine, Health and Human Sciences Macquarie University Sydney Australia

2. Biomedical Informatics and Digital Health The University of Sydney Camperdown Australia

3. National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre University of New South Wales Kensington Australia

4. Prevention Research Collaboration The University of Sydney Camperdown Australia

5. National Centre for Youth Substance Use Research The University of Queensland Brisbane Australia

6. School of Medicine and Public Health University of Newcastle Newcastle Australia

7. National Drug Research Institute Curtin University Shenton Park Australia

8. School of Psychological Sciences University of Tasmania Hobart Australia

9. The Matilda Centre for Research in Mental Health and Substance Use The University of Sydney Camperdown Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackground and aimsAdolescent polysubstance use has been associated with adverse social and health outcomes. Our aim was to measure rates and transitions to polysubstance use during adolescence and identify factors associated with initiation and discontinuation of polysubstance use.DesignProspective cohort study. Multistate Markov modelling was used to estimate rates and identify correlates of transitions between substance use states.Setting and participantsAdolescent‐parent dyads (n = 1927; adolescents in grade 7, age ≈13 years) were recruited from Australian schools during 2010/11 (Wave 1). Adolescents were surveyed annually until 2016/17 (n = 1503; age ≈19 years; Wave 7) and parents were surveyed annually until 2014/15 (Wave 5).MeasurementsAlcohol, tobacco, cannabis and 3,4‐methylenedioxymethamphetamine (MDMA) use outcomes were collected at Waves 3–7. Potential confounders were collected at Waves 1–6 and consisted of sex, anxiety and depression symptoms and externalizing problems, parental monitoring, family conflict and cohesion, parental substance use and peer substance use. Covariates were age and family socioeconomic status.FindingsFew adolescents engaged in polysubstance use at earlier waves (Wave 3: 5%; Wave 4: 8%), but proportions increased sharply across adolescence (Waves 5–7: 17%, 24%, 36%). Rates of transitioning to polysubstance use increased with age, with few (<9%) adolescents transitioning out. More externalizing problems (odds ratio [OR] = 1.10; 99.6% confidence interval [CI] = 1.07–1.14), parental heavy episodic drinking (OR = 1.22; 99.6% CI = 1.07–1.40), parental illicit substance use (OR = 3.56; 99.6% CI = 1.43–8.86), peer alcohol use (OR = 5.68; 99.6% CI = 1.59–20.50) and peer smoking (OR = 4.18; 99.6% CI = 1.95–8.81) were associated with transitioning to polysubstance use.ConclusionsPolysubstance use in Australia appears to be rare during early adolescence but more common in later adolescence with low rates of transitioning out. Externalizing problems and greater parental and peer substance use are risk factors for adolescent polysubstance use that may be suitable intervention targets.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Australian Research Council

National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre

Publisher

Wiley

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