Substance use outcomes from the Child/Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Extended Long‐term Study (CAMELS)

Author:

Rabner Jonathan1ORCID,Olino Thomas M.1ORCID,Albano Anne Marie2,Keeton Courtney P.3,Sakolsky Dara45,Birmaher Boris45,Piacentini John6,Peris Tara S.6,Compton Scott N.7,Gosch Elizabeth8,Ginsburg Golda S.9,Pinney Elizabeth L.10,Kendall Philip C.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology and Neuorscience Temple University Philadelphia PA USA

2. Department of Psychiatry New York State Psychiatric Institute, Columbia University Medical Center New York NY USA

3. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences The Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore MD USA

4. Department of Psychiatry University of Pittsburgh Pittsburgh PA USA

5. Western Psychiatric Institute & Clinic University of Pittsburgh Medical Center Pittsburgh PA USA

6. Department of Psychiatry and Biobehavioral Sciences University of California Los Angeles School of Medicine Los Angeles CA USA

7. Department of Psychiatry Duke University Medical Center Durham NC USA

8. Department of Psychology Philadelphia College of Osteopathic Medicine Philadelphia PA USA

9. Department of Psychiatry University of Connecticut Health Center Farmington CT USA

10. Department of Psychology Binghamton University Binghamton NY USA

Abstract

BackgroundSubstance use problems and anxiety disorders are both highly prevalent and frequently cooccur in youth. The present study examined the benefits of successful anxiety treatment at 3–12 years after treatment completion on substance use outcomes (i.e. diagnoses and lifetime expected use).MethodsThe sample was from the Child/Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Extended Long‐term Study (CAMELS), a naturalistic follow‐up study to the Child/Adolescent Anxiety Multimodal Study (CAMS) which randomized youth to cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT; Coping cat), medication (sertraline), their combination, or pill placebo. The first CAMELS visit occurred an average of 6.5 years following CAMS randomization. Participants were 319 youth (65.4% of the CAMS sample), aged 7–17 years at CAMS baseline assessment with a mean age of 17.6 years (range: 11–26 years) at the time of the first CAMELS follow‐up. Substance use outcomes included diagnoses as well as lifetime substance use (i.e. alcohol and tobacco use).ResultsEleven of 319 (3.4%) CAMELS participants were diagnosed with a substance use disorder at the initial follow‐up visit. When compared to the population lifetime rate of 11.4%, the rate of diagnoses in the posttreated sample was significantly lower. Additionally, rates of lifetime alcohol use were lower than population rates at the initial and final follow‐up visits. Rates of lifetime tobacco use were similarly lower than lifetime population rates at the initial visit (driven by significantly lower rates in the CBT treatment condition), but higher by the final visit. Furthermore, treatment remission (but not treatment response) was associated with a lower rate of substance use diagnoses at the initial follow‐up visit, although rates of lifetime alcohol and tobacco use did not differ by treatment outcome.ConclusionsAnxiety treatments confer a beneficial impact on problematic substance use (i.e. diagnoses) as well as on expected substance use (i.e. alcohol and tobacco use) for on average, a period of 6.5 years.

Funder

National Institute of Mental Health

Publisher

Wiley

Reference47 articles.

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