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Diagnostic Criteria for Identifying Individuals at High Risk of Progression From Mild or Moderate to Severe Alcohol Use Disorder
- Miller, Alex P;
- Kuo, Sally I-Chun;
- Johnson, Emma C;
- Tillman, Rebecca;
- Brislin, Sarah J;
- Dick, Danielle M;
- Kamarajan, Chella;
- Kinreich, Sivan;
- Kramer, John;
- McCutcheon, Vivia V;
- Plawecki, Martin H;
- Porjesz, Bernice;
- Schuckit, Marc A;
- Salvatore, Jessica E;
- Edenberg, Howard J;
- Bucholz, Kathleen K;
- Meyers, Jaquelyn L;
- Agrawal, Arpana;
- Hesselbrock, Victor;
- Foroud, Tatiana;
- Liu, Yunlong;
- Kuperman, Samuel;
- Pandey, Ashwini K;
- Bierut, Laura J;
- Rice, John;
- Tischfield, Jay A;
- Hart, Ronald P;
- Almasy, Laura;
- Goate, Alison;
- Slesinger, Paul;
- Scott, Denise M;
- Bauer, Lance O;
- Nurnberger, John I;
- Wetherill, Leah;
- Xuei, Xiaoling;
- Lai, Dongbing;
- O'Connor, Sean J;
- Chan, Grace;
- Chorlian, David B;
- Zhang, Jian;
- Barr, Peter B;
- Pandey, Gayathri;
- Mullins, Niamh;
- Anokhin, Andrey P;
- Hartz, Sarah;
- Saccone, Scott;
- Moore, Jennifer C;
- Aliev, Fazil;
- Pang, Zhiping;
- Merikangas, Alison;
- Chin, Hemin;
- Parsian, Abbas
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2810438No data is associated with this publication.
Abstract
Importance
Current Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (Fifth Edition) (DSM-5) diagnoses of substance use disorders rely on criterion count-based approaches, disregarding severity grading indexed by individual criteria.Objective
To examine correlates of alcohol use disorder (AUD) across count-based severity groups (ie, mild, moderate, mild-to-moderate, severe), identify specific diagnostic criteria indicative of greater severity, and evaluate whether specific criteria within mild-to-moderate AUD differentiate across relevant correlates and manifest in greater hazards of severe AUD development.Design, setting, and participants
This cohort study involved 2 cohorts from the family-based Collaborative Study on the Genetics of Alcoholism (COGA) with 7 sites across the United States: cross-sectional (assessed 1991-2005) and longitudinal (assessed 2004-2019). Statistical analyses were conducted from December 2022 to June 2023.Main outcomes and measures
Sociodemographic, alcohol-related, psychiatric comorbidity, brain electroencephalography (EEG), and AUD polygenic score measures as correlates of DSM-5 AUD levels (ie, mild, moderate, severe) and criterion severity-defined mild-to-moderate AUD diagnostic groups (ie, low-risk vs high-risk mild-to-moderate).Results
A total of 13 110 individuals from the cross-sectional COGA cohort (mean [SD] age, 37.8 [14.2] years) and 2818 individuals from the longitudinal COGA cohort (mean baseline [SD] age, 16.1 [3.2] years) were included. Associations with alcohol-related, psychiatric, EEG, and AUD polygenic score measures reinforced the role of increasing criterion counts as indexing severity. Yet within mild-to-moderate AUD (2-5 criteria), the presence of specific high-risk criteria (eg, withdrawal) identified a group reporting heavier drinking and greater psychiatric comorbidity even after accounting for criterion count differences. In longitudinal analyses, prior mild-to-moderate AUD characterized by endorsement of at least 1 high-risk criterion was associated with more accelerated progression to severe AUD (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR], 11.62; 95% CI, 7.54-17.92) compared with prior mild-to-moderate AUD without endorsement of high-risk criteria (aHR, 5.64; 95% CI, 3.28-9.70), independent of criterion count.Conclusions and relevance
In this cohort study of a combined 15 928 individuals, findings suggested that simple count-based AUD diagnostic approaches to estimating severe AUD vulnerability, which ignore heterogeneity among criteria, may be improved by emphasizing specific high-risk criteria. Such emphasis may allow better focus on individuals at the greatest risk and improve understanding of the development of AUD.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.