Skip to main content
eScholarship
Open Access Publications from the University of California

UCLA

UCLA Previously Published Works bannerUCLA

Distress Tolerance and Craving for Cigarettes Among Heavy Drinking Smokers.

Abstract

Objective

Heavy drinking smokers experience significant difficulties with smoking cessation. Craving is closely tied to relapses during cessation attempts, and alcohol consumption increases cigarette craving among heavy drinking smokers. To date, however, few moderators of the relationship between craving and relapse have been identified. Individuals' capacity for distress tolerance predicts smoking cessation outcomes and may be connected to craving. Relatedly, pharmacotherapies like varenicline and naltrexone reduce cigarette and alcohol cravings, respectively. No studies have examined the interrelationships among distress tolerance, craving, and pharmacotherapy effects. This study therefore examines distress tolerance as a moderator of the relationship between overnight abstinence-induced cigarette craving and subsequent alcohol- and cigarette-induced changes in craving among heavy drinking smokers. This study also examines the impact of varenicline and naltrexone on these relationships.

Method

A total of 120 non-treatment-seeking heavy drinking smokers were randomized and titrated to one of the following conditions: (a) placebo, (b) varenicline, (c) naltrexone, or (d) varenicline + naltrexone. Participants then completed a laboratory paradigm after overnight abstinence that included consumption of alcohol (target .06 g/dl breath alcohol concentration) and one cigarette. Craving was assessed as abstinence-induced (Time 1), alcohol-induced (Time 2), and cigarette-induced (Time 3).

Results

Within varenicline + naltrexone, low distress tolerance individuals exhibited higher increases from abstinence- to alcohol-induced cigarette craving relative to high distress tolerance individuals. Across medications, low distress tolerance individuals reported flatter decreases from abstinence- to cigarette-induced cigarette craving relative to high distress tolerance individuals.

Conclusions

Distress tolerance may differentially predict alcohol-induced cigarette craving when titrated to pharmacotherapy, as well as moderate decreases in craving after cigarette consumption. Future exploration of the identified interactive effects could elucidate specific conditions in which cravings are more proximally related to abstinence-induced smoking.

Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.

Main Content
For improved accessibility of PDF content, download the file to your device.
Current View