Abstract

Smoking lapses (i.e., returns to smoking after quitting) often occur following alcohol consumption with observational data suggesting greater quantities of alcohol lead to greater risk. However, a causal dose-dependent effect of alcohol consumption on smoking lapse behavior has not been established, and the mechanisms that might account for such an effect have not been tested. In a within-subjects design, we examined the effects of low- (0.4g/kg) and high-dose (0.8g/kg) alcohol, relative to placebo, on smokers' ability to resist initiating smoking after acute smoking abstinence. Participants were 100 heavy alcohol drinkers, smoking 10-30 cigarettes per day. Across three separate days, participants consumed placebo, low-dose, or high-dose alcohol following 3h of smoking abstinence and, 35min later, were offered the opportunity to smoke while resisting smoking was monetarily reinforced proportional to the amount of time delayed. Consistent with a dose-response effect, participants smoked 3.35min (95% confidence intervals (CI) [-7.09, 0.40], p = .08) earlier following low-dose alcohol and 6.36min (95% CI [-9.99, -2.73], p = .0006) earlier following high-dose alcohol compared to drinking a placebo beverage. Effects of dose on smoking behavior were partially mediated by increases in urge to smoke. There was no evidence that alcohol's effects on urge to smoke or ability to resist smoking were mediated through its stimulating or sedating effects. Alcohol can reduce the ability to resist smoking in a dose-dependent fashion, in part, due to its effect on increasing the intensity of smoking urges.

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