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Journal Article

Citation

Roos CR, Maisto SA, Witkiewitz K. Addiction 2017; 112(9): 1547-1557.

Affiliation

Center on Alcoholism, Substance Abuse, and Addictions, University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, NM.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/add.13841

PMID

28388836

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND AIMS: There is inconsistent evidence that alcohol-specific coping is a mechanism of change in cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for alcohol use disorder (AUD). Our primary aim was to test whether baseline dependence severity moderates the mediational effect of CBT on drinking outcomes via coping.

DESIGN: Secondary data analysis of Project MATCH (1), a multi-site alcohol treatment trial in which participants, recruited in outpatient and aftercare arms, were randomized to three treatments: CBT, motivational enhancement therapy (MET) and twelve-step facilitation (TSF). SETTING: Nine research sites in the United States. PARTICIPANTS: 1063 adults with AUD. MEASUREMENTS: The primary outcomes were percent days abstinent and percent heavy drinking days at the one-year follow-up. Coping was assessed with the Processes of Change Questionnaire (2). Dependence severity was measured with the Alcohol Dependence Scale (3).

FINDINGS: Among the full available sample (across treatment arms), there were no significant moderated mediation effects. Double moderated mediation analyses indicated that several moderated mediation effects were moderated by treatment arm (all p < .05). In the outpatient arm, there were several significant moderated mediation effects (all p < .05), but no significant moderated mediation effects in the aftercare arm. For outpatient clients with high baseline dependence severity, end-of-treatment coping mediated the positive treatment effects of CBT, as compared with both MET and TSF, on one-year drinking outcomes (all p < .05). Coping did not mediate treatment effects of CBT among those with low or moderate dependence severity.

CONCLUSIONS: In the Project MATCH outpatient sample, whether or not coping mediated the effects of cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT) for alcohol use disorder was conditional on dependence severity. End-of-treatment coping mediated the positive treatment effects of CBT on one-year drinking outcomes among outpatient clients when dependence severity was high, but not when dependence severity was low or moderate.

This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

Alcohol Treatment; Alcohol Use Disorder; Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy; Coping; Mechanisms of Behavior Change; Moderated Mediation

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