Abstract

BackgroundThe current study examined the predictors of the onset of alcohol use as well as predictors of remission and relapse, both from heavy drinking and from alcohol dependence. Similarities and differences in both clinical and psychosocial predictors across the transitions were examined.MethodsA sample of men from the Vietnam Era Twin Registry (N = 1769) completed an assessment of lifetime drinking history, which allowed age markers for starting and stopping different drinking patterns. The men also completed various assessments regarding personality, alcohol motives, and psychiatric diagnoses. Survival analyses were used to examine the predictors of the three transitions of onset, remission, and relapse for the phenotypes of heavy drinking and of alcohol dependence, censoring the individuals who had not yet experienced an event.ResultsAs expected, predictors of onset for drinking, heavy drinking, and alcohol dependence were largely consistent and included externalizing symptomology, nicotine dependence, and cotwin history of drinking as risk factors. Predictors of remission from heavy drinking, somewhat similarly to remission from alcohol dependence, included the risk factor of externalizing disorders but also, as predicted, included more risk and protective factors in the psychosocial realm that were not predictors of onset. Contrary to our prediction, relapse to heavy drinking and alcohol dependence were predicted largely by unique psychosocial risk and protective factors including social and coping motives.ConclusionCurrent findings extend the findings of past research to remission and relapse in the later decades of life and have implications for treatment of alcohol use problems.

Highlights

  • The current study examined the predictors of the onset of alcohol use as well as predictors of remission and relapse, both from heavy drinking and from alcohol dependence

  • Sample characteristics This sample of 1769 Children of Alcoholics study (COA)/Twins as Parents study (TAP) male-male twin veterans had a mean age of 51.8 years (SD = 2.9, range 43–63), had 13.7 (SD = 1.8) years of education on average, and had a mean household income of about $54,000 per year

  • This high-risk sample had a substantial family history of heavy alcohol use in that 49% reported that their father, 11% that their mother, and 48% that their twin brother had a history of excessive drinking

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Summary

Introduction

The current study examined the predictors of the onset of alcohol use as well as predictors of remission and relapse, both from heavy drinking and from alcohol dependence. Researchers and clinicians agree that the course of alcohol dependence is better characterized as a widely varying process with varying consequences than as a uniform pattern of steadily declining health and functioning. The drinking course of these veterans with alcohol dependence over a 25-year period involved an average of 4.2 drinking phases each lasting an average of 8.22 years, with both increases and decreases in severity and consequences. Differences in pattern, severity, and consequences appear to be the rule, not the exception To capture this variation, a developmental view of alcohol dependence has gained increasing support [9], and the National Institute for Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA) [10, 11] has emphasized examination of alcohol use disorders within a developmental, lifespan

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