Abstract

Addiction is a mental illness in which psychiatric conditions imply a prominent burden. Psychopathological symptoms in substance use disorder (SUD) patients are usually viewed as being assignable to the sphere of a personality trait or of comorbidity, leaving doubts about the presence of a specific psychopathology that could only be related to the toxicomanic process. Our research group at the University of Pisa has shed light on the possible definition of a specific psychopathological dimension in SUDs. In heroin use disorder patients, performing an exploratory principal component factor analysis (PCA) on all the 90 items included in the SCL-90 questionnaire led to a five-factor solution. The first factor accounted for a depressive “worthlessness and being trapped” dimension; the second factor picked out a “somatic symptoms” dimension; the third identified a “sensitivity–psychoticism” dimension; the fourth a “panic–anxiety” dimension; and the fifth a “violence–suicide” dimension. These same results were replicated by applying the PCA to another Italian sample of 1,195 heroin addicts entering a Therapeutic Community Treatment. Further analyses confirmed the clusters of symptoms, independently of demographic and clinical characteristics, active heroin use, lifetime psychiatric problems, kind of treatment received, and, especially, other substances used by the patient such as alcohol or cocaine. Moreover, these clusters were able to discriminate patients affected by addiction from those affected by psychiatric diseases such as major depressive disorder. Our studies seem to suggest the trait-dependent, rather than the state-dependent, nature of the introduced psychopathology dimensions of SUDs.

Highlights

  • Substance use disorder (SUD) individuals show an incredibly high comorbidity concomitance with mental illness, especially with anxiety, impulse control, and mood-related disorders [1, 2]

  • From a theoretical point of view, four possible explanations can be put forward: the first is that the manifestation of addiction may be facilitated by the presence of a mental disorder; the second is that SUDs elicit the onset of other mental disorders; the third is that the underlying causes of substance use and other psychiatric disorders may be the same; and the fourth is that factors linked to sampling, Psychopathology of Addiction selection of instruments for diagnosis, investigation, and analysis could have led to an incorrect estimation of comorbidity

  • Even if the existing literature has explored the correlations between substance use and different areas of psychopathology, and put forward hypotheses about the mechanisms that trigger substance use and/or psychopathology, there is a broad gray, much less studied area dedicated to inquiring whether the symptoms often reported by SUD patients have to be considered as merely a comorbidity, or whether they belong directly and intrinsically to addiction per se [11]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Substance use disorder (SUD) individuals show an incredibly high comorbidity concomitance with mental illness, especially with anxiety, impulse control, and mood-related disorders [1, 2]. Our studies show that even if the presence of lifetime psychiatric problems appears to be correlated with the severity of psychopathology (as documented by the SCL-90 scores), it does not seem to be related to its quality: the “panic–anxiety” and “somatic” dimensions are the only factors that discriminated patients belonging to the PC-HA from the NPC-HA group. None of the other three domains were able to predict the allocation of subjects to the NPC-HA or PC-HA group, so their persistence as components of the SCL-90-defined structure of opioid use disorder may be considered independent of the presence of lifetime psychiatric problems [63]. Gender, and severity of psychopathological symptoms were observed, according to SCL90 criteria, the best predictor of being a heroin-addicted SUD subject remains a prominent psychopathology

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