Alcohol use and cannabis craving in daily life: Sex differences and associations among young adults.

IF 3 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE Alcohol (Hanover, York County, Pa.) Pub Date : 2024-11-23 DOI:10.1111/acer.15461
Christal N Davis, Nolan E Ramer, Lindsay M Squeglia, Kathryn S Gex, Aimee L McRae-Clark, Sherry A McKee, Walter Roberts, Kevin M Gray, Nathaniel L Baker, Rachel L Tomko
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Abstract

Background: Alcohol and cannabis are commonly used together by young adults. With frequent pairings, use of one substance may become a conditioned cue for use of a second, commonly co-used substance. Although this has been examined for alcohol and cannabis in laboratory conditions and with remote monitoring, no research has examined whether pharmacologically induced cross-substance craving occurs in naturalistic conditions.

Methods: In a sample of 63 frequent cannabis-using young adults (54% female) who completed 2 weeks of ecological momentary assessment, we tested whether alcohol use was associated with stronger in-the-moment cannabis craving. We also examined whether sex moderated this association and whether cannabis craving was stronger at higher levels of alcohol consumption.

Results: Although alcohol use and cannabis craving were not significantly associated at the momentary level, there was evidence that this relation significantly differed by sex. Among female participants, there was a negative association between alcohol use since the last prompt and momentary cannabis craving (b = -0.33, SE = 0.14, p = 0.02), while the association among male participants was positive (b = 0.32, SE = 0.13, p = 0.01). Similarly, alcohol quantity was negatively associated with cannabis craving at the momentary level for female participants (b = -0.10, SE = 0.04, p = 0.009) but was not significantly associated for male participants (b = 0.05, SE = 0.04, p = 0.18).

Conclusions: Alcohol may enhance cannabis craving among male individuals but reduce desire for cannabis among female individuals. This may point to differing functions of co-use by sex, highlighting a need for research to elucidate the mechanisms underlying this increasingly common pattern of substance use.

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日常生活中的酒精使用和大麻渴求:年轻成年人的性别差异与关联。
背景:酒精和大麻是青壮年经常同时使用的毒品。在频繁配对的情况下,使用一种药物可能会成为使用第二种常用药物的条件线索。虽然已经在实验室条件下和远程监控下对酒精和大麻进行了研究,但还没有研究表明在自然条件下是否会出现药理诱导的交叉物质渴求:我们以 63 名经常吸食大麻的年轻人(54% 为女性)为样本,对他们进行了为期两周的生态瞬间评估,测试了饮酒是否与更强烈的瞬间大麻渴求有关。我们还研究了性别是否会调节这种关联,以及饮酒量越高,大麻渴求是否越强烈:结果:尽管饮酒和大麻渴求在瞬间层面上没有显著关联,但有证据表明这种关联因性别而存在显著差异。在女性参与者中,自上次提示以来的饮酒量与瞬间大麻渴求之间存在负相关(b = -0.33,SE = 0.14,p = 0.02),而在男性参与者中则存在正相关(b = 0.32,SE = 0.13,p = 0.01)。同样,在瞬间水平上,女性参与者的饮酒量与大麻渴求呈负相关(b = -0.10,SE = 0.04,p = 0.009),但男性参与者的饮酒量与大麻渴求无显著关联(b = 0.05,SE = 0.04,p = 0.18):结论:酒精可能会增强男性对大麻的渴望,但会降低女性对大麻的渴望。结论:酒精可能会增强男性对大麻的渴求,但却会降低女性对大麻的渴望,这可能表明男女共同使用大麻的功能不同,因此有必要开展研究,以阐明这种日益普遍的药物使用模式的内在机制。
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