학술논문

Alcohol, tobacco, and marijuana consumption is associated with increased odds of same-day substance co- and tri-use
Document Type
article
Source
Subject
Substance Misuse
Drug Abuse (NIDA only)
Cannabinoid Research
Brain Disorders
Alcoholism
Alcohol Use and Health
Tobacco
Tobacco Smoke and Health
Cancer
Mental health
Good Health and Well Being
Adult
Alcohol Drinking
Comorbidity
Ecological Momentary Assessment
Female
Humans
Male
Marijuana Use
Substance-Related Disorders
Tobacco Smoking
Young Adult
Alcohol
Marijuana
Co-use
Polydrug abuse
Sex differences
Medical and Health Sciences
Psychology and Cognitive Sciences
Substance Abuse
Language
Abstract
BackgroundLittle is known about event-level patterns of marijuana co- or tri-use with alcohol and tobacco. Thus, the study goal was to examine patterns of same-day alcohol, cigarette, and marijuana co- and tri-use at the individual level in non-treatment-seeking alcohol users.MethodsParticipants (N = 551) completed an in-person interview for alcohol, cigarette, and marijuana use over the previous 30 days, and the event-level substance use patterns of n = 179 participants who reported using each of these substances at least once per month were analyzed.ResultsThe use of alcohol, marijuana, or cigarettes independently increased the probability of subsequent, simultaneous co-use of one of the two remaining substances. The co-use of alcohol with cigarettes and marijuana with cigarettes produced generally additive effects on the odds of same day tri-use of marijuana and alcohol, respectively. Conversely, the co-use of alcohol and marijuana produced sub-additive effects on likelihood of cigarette use. Sex moderated several of the observed patterns of co- and tri-use: the relationship between alcohol or cigarette use predicting marijuana co-use was stronger in men, whereas the observed additive relationships between drug co-use leading to tri-use was stronger in women.ConclusionsThe presented results may aid in the understanding of how simultaneous co-use of marijuana with alcohol and/or tobacco relates to the etiology, maintenance, and treatment of comorbid and trimorbid substance use disorder. Replication and extension of the results in treatment seeking populations using more fine-grained analysis approaches, e.g. ecological momentary assessment, is needed.