학술논문

Type A/Type B Alcoholism Predicts Differential Response to Topiramate in a Smoking Cessation Trial in Dually Diagnosed Men.
Document Type
article
Source
Journal of studies on alcohol and drugs. 78(2)
Subject
Humans
Alcoholism
Tobacco Use Disorder
Fructose
Diagnosis
Dual (Psychiatry)
Double-Blind Method
Smoking
Smoking Cessation
Adult
Middle Aged
Outpatients
Male
Craving
Topiramate
Clinical Trials and Supportive Activities
Brain Disorders
Tobacco
Alcoholism
Alcohol Use and Health
Substance Abuse
Prevention
Clinical Research
Behavioral and Social Science
Tobacco Smoke and Health
Evaluation of treatments and therapeutic interventions
6.1 Pharmaceuticals
Stroke
Cardiovascular
Cancer
Respiratory
Good Health and Well Being
Public Health and Health Services
Psychology
Language
Abstract
ObjectiveBabor's A/B typology characterizes alcohol-dependence subtypes, which differ across multiple defining variables; however, differences in cigarette smoking and cessation between these subtypes have not been previously investigated. Topiramate reduces heavy drinking and has separately been found to help non-alcohol-dependent individuals quit smoking. This study tested the hypothesis that topiramate's effects on smoking would be moderated by alcohol-dependence subtype, and explored craving as a mediator of this response.MethodOne hundred twenty-nine abstinent alcohol-dependent outpatient male smokers participated in this 12-week, randomized controlled trial comparing topiramate (maximum dosage 200 mg/day) with placebo, both with brief counseling, for smoking cessation. Participants were followed for 24 weeks following end of treatment.ResultsOf the 125 participants with sufficient subtyping data, k-means cluster analysis categorized 52 (42%) as Type A alcoholics and 73 (58%) as Type B. Types A and B did not differ on baseline smoking characteristics, urges to smoke, or smoking consequence scores. Longitudinal mixed-effects regression indicated that the effect of treatment on smoking was moderated by the Type × Time interaction. Specifically, during the nontreatment follow-up phase, Type B's treated with topiramate had relative suppressed levels of smoking compared with placebo-treated Type B's. This moderating effect of the Type × Time interaction was mediated by intention to smoke and craving related to relief of negative affect.ConclusionsType B alcoholics demonstrated suppressed levels of smoking in response to topiramate treatment as compared with placebo, but only during the nontreatment follow-up phase. This effect was mediated, in part, through intention to smoke and craving to smoke to relieve negative affect. Our findings extend other studies demonstrating a differential medication response by alcoholism subtype.