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Reductions in WHO risk drinking levels correlate with alcohol craving among individuals with alcohol use disorder.


ABSTRACT:

Background

Abstinence has historically been considered the preferred goal of alcohol use disorder (AUD) treatment. However, most individuals with AUD do not want to abstain and many are able to reduce their drinking successfully. Craving is often a target of pharmacological and behavioral interventions for AUD, and reductions in craving may signal recovery. Whether reductions in drinking during AUD treatment are associated with reductions in craving has not been well examined.

Methods

We conducted secondary analyses of data from three AUD clinical trials (N's= 1327, 346, and 200). Drinking reductions from baseline to the end of treatment were measured as changes in World Health Organization (WHO) risk drinking levels; alcohol craving was measured using validated self-report measures. Regression analyses tested whether drinking reductions were associated with end-of-treatment craving reductions; moderation analyses tested whether associations between drinking reduction and end-of-treatment craving differed across AUD severity.

Results

Reductions of at least 1 or at least 2 WHO risk drinking levels were associated with lower craving (all p's < 0.05). Results were substantively similar after removing abstainers at the end-of-treatment. Associations between drinking reductions and craving were generally not moderated by AUD severity.

Conclusions

Individuals with WHO risk drinking level reductions reported significantly lower craving, as compared to those who did not achieve meaningful reductions in drinking. The results demonstrate the utility of WHO risk drinking levels as AUD clinical trial endpoints and provide evidence that drinking reductions mitigate craving.

SUBMITTER: Tuchman FR 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10922776 | biostudies-literature | 2024 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Reductions in WHO risk drinking levels correlate with alcohol craving among individuals with alcohol use disorder.

Tuchman Felicia R FR   Hallgren Kevin A KA   Richards Dylan K DK   Aldridge Arnie A   Anton Raymond F RF   Aubin Henri-Jean HJ   Kranzler Henry R HR   Mann Karl K   O'Malley Stephanie S SS   Witkiewitz Katie K  

Alcohol, clinical & experimental research 20240111 2


<h4>Background</h4>Abstinence has historically been considered the preferred goal of alcohol use disorder (AUD) treatment. However, most individuals with AUD do not want to abstain and many are able to reduce their drinking successfully. Craving is often a target of pharmacological and behavioral interventions for AUD, and reductions in craving may signal recovery. Whether reductions in drinking during AUD treatment are associated with reductions in craving has not been well examined.<h4>Methods  ...[more]

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