PREVENTION OF SUBSTANCE ABUSE: ALCOHOL & ILLICIT DRUGS

Substance abuse is a major public health problem in the United States. In the United States, approximately 52% of adults 18 years and older are current regular drinkers (at least 12 drinks in the past year). Alcohol dependence often coexists with other substance disorders as well as with mood, anxiety, and personality disorders. Underdiagnosis and treatment of alcohol abuse is substantial, both because of patient denial and lack of detection of clinical clues. Treatment rates for alcohol dependence have slightly declined over the last several years. Only a quarter of alcohol dependent patients have ever been treated.

As with cigarette use, clinician identification and counseling about alcoholism may improve the chances of recovery. About 10% of all adults seen in medical practices are problem drinkers. An estimated 15–30% of hospitalized patients have problems with alcohol abuse or dependence, but the connection between patients’ presenting complaints and their alcohol abuse is often missed. The CAGE test (Table 1–7) is both sensitive and specific for chronic alcoholism. However, it is less sensitive in detecting heavy or binge drinking in elderly patients and has been criticized for being less applicable to minority groups or to women.

The Alcohol Use Disorder Identification Test (AUDIT) consists of questions on the quantity and frequency of alcohol consumption, on alcohol dependence symptoms, and on alcohol-related problems (Table 1–7). The AUDIT questionnaire is a cost-effective and efficient diagnostic tool for routine screening of alcohol use disorders in primary care settings. Choice of therapy remains controversial. However, use of screening procedures and brief intervention methods (Table 1–8; see Chapter 25) can produce a 10–30% reduction in long-term alcohol use and alcohol-related problems. Brief advice and counseling without regular follow-up and reinforcement cannot sustain significant long-term reductions in unhealthy drinking behaviors.

Time restraints may prevent clinicians from screening patients and single-question screening tests for unhealthy alcohol use may help increase the frequency of screening in primary care settings. The National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism recommends the following singlequestion screening test: “How many times in the past year have you had X or more drinks in a day?” (X is 5 for men and 4 for women, and a response of >1 is considered positive.) The single-item screening test has been validated in primary care settings.

Several pharmacologic agents are effective in reducing alcohol consumption. In acute alcohol detoxification, standard treatment regimens use long-acting benzodiazepines, the preferred medications for alcohol detoxification, because they can be given on a fixed schedule or through “front-loading” or “symptom-triggered” regimens. Adjuvant sympatholytic medications can be used to treat hyperadrenergic symptoms that persist despite adequate sedation. Three drugs are FDA approved for treatment of alcohol dependence—disulfiram, naltrexone, and acamprosate. Disulfiram, an aversive agent, has significant adverse effects and consequently, compliance difficulties have resulted in no clear evidence that it increases abstinence rates, decreases relapse rates, or reduces cravings. Persons who receive short-term treatment with naltrexone have a lower chance of alcoholism relapse. Compared with placebo, naltrexone can lower the risk of treatment withdrawal in alcohol-dependent patients, and long-acting intramuscular formulation of naltrexone has been found to be well-tolerated and to reduce drinking significantly among treatment-seeking alcoholics over a 6-month period. In a randomized, controlled trial, patients receiving medical management with naltrexone, a combined behavioral intervention, or both, fared better on drinking outcomes, whereas acamprosate showed no evidence of efficacy with or without combined behavioral intervention. A depot formulation of naltrexone is available with good evidence for clinical efficacy. Topiramate is a promising treatment for alcohol dependence. A 6-month randomized trial of topiramate versus naltrexone revealed a greater reduction of alcohol intake and cravings in participants receiving topiramate. Topiramate’s side effect profile is favorable, and the benefits appear to increase over time. Clinicians should be aware that although topiramate appears to be an effective treatment for alcohol dependence, the manufacturer has not pursued FDA approval for this indication.

Use of illegal drugs—including cocaine, methamphetamine, and so-called “designer drugs”—either sporadically or episodically remains an important problem. Lifetime prevalence of drug abuse is approximately 8% and is generally greater among men, young and unmarried individuals, Native Americans, and those of lower socioeconomic status. As with alcohol, drug abuse disorders often coexist with personality, anxiety, and other substance abuse disorders. Abuse of anabolic-androgenic steroids has been associated with use of other illicit drugs, alcohol, and cigarettes and with violence and criminal behavior.

As with alcohol abuse, the lifetime treatment rate for drug abuse is low (8%). The recognition of drug abuse presents special problems and requires that the clinician actively consider the diagnosis. Clinical aspects of substance abuse are discussed in Chapter 25.

Currently, evidence does not support the use of carbamazepine, disulfiram, mazindol, phenytoin, nimodipine, lithium, antidepressants, or dopamine agonists in the treatment of cocaine dependence.

Buprenorphine has potential as a medication to ameliorate the symptoms and signs of withdrawal from opioids and has been shown to be effective in reducing concomitant cocaine and opiate abuse. The risk of overdose is lower with buprenorphine than methadone and is preferred for patients at high risk for methadone toxicity. Evidence does not support the use of naltrexone in maintenance treatment of opioid addiction. Rapid opioid detoxification with opioid antagonist induction using general anesthesia has emerged as an approach to treat opioid dependence. However, a randomized comparison of buprenorphine-assisted rapid opioid detoxification with naltrexone induction and clonidine-assisted opioid detoxification with delayed naltrexone induction found no significant differences in rates of completion of inpatient detoxification, treatment retention, or proportions of opioid-positive urine specimens, and the anesthesia procedure was associated with more potentially life-threatening adverse events. Finally, cognitive behavior therapy, contingency management, couples and family therapy, and other types of behavioral treatment have been shown to be effective
interventions for drug addiction.

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