The need for multi-participant alcohol administration studies

IF 5.3 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY Addiction Pub Date : 2024-12-25 DOI:10.1111/add.16735
Kasey G. Creswell, Catharine E. Fairbairn
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In total, 5690 records were screened for inclusion (see Figure 1). Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed. Two independent judges coded each article for inclusion/exclusion and whether the laboratory drinking setting was solitary or social (see pre-registration for additional details https://osf.io/njvzd).</p><p>Notably, as shown in Figure 1, of the 989 published alcohol administration studies we identified, 90.8% of them had participants consume alcohol alone in a solitary drinking setting. Less than 10% of studies featured a social context in which at least some of the participants interacted with at least one other participant or confederate during or after drinking alcohol. Importantly, in contrast to how alcohol is typically studied in the lab, outside of the lab, drinking most often occurs in the company of others. This is true for individuals across the lifespan (e.g. adolescents to older adults) and across the spectrum of alcohol use (e.g. light drinking to heavy and hazardous drinking) [<span>3-5</span>]. For instance, 86% of drinking occasions for a nationally representative sample of over 60 K British adults were in a social context [<span>6</span>]. Further, in nationally representative samples of United States (US) high school seniors, 75.5% of past-year alcohol use occurred ‘at a party’, [<span>5</span>] and three-fourths of seniors cited ‘to have a good time with friends’ as the primary motive for their alcohol use [<span>7</span>]. Even heavy drinking adults experiencing problems related to their alcohol consumption report drinking most often in social settings. For instance, in a large (<i>n</i> = 511) sample of US male veteran hazardous drinkers (mean age = 56 years), 73% of their past-week drinking occurred in social settings [<span>8</span>]. Even for the minority of individuals who report ever drinking alone, the majority of their drinking also occurs with others [<span>3, 9</span>]. As such, drinking alone is a very unusual way for individuals to experience alcohol.</p><p>With respect to the 10% of laboratory studies that do incorporate social context, although 91 multi-participant alcohol administration studies may seem substantial, the vast majority of these studies had methodological limitations that make drawing firm conclusions difficult. Many of these studies were published before 1990, with more than half (55%) of all studies published two decades or more ago. Although the concept of statistical power has been recognized for much longer, it was not until Cohen's seminal work on power analysis was widely disseminated in the early 1990s [<span>10</span>] that consideration of sample size and adequate power became standard practice in research design. As such, with a median sample size of 54 participants and a mode of 40, the majority of these 91 multi-participant alcohol administration studies were underpowered to detect the small to moderate effect sizes established for alcohol (vs. control beverages) across multiple outcomes including, craving, positive affect and subsequent consumption (see Halsall et al. [<span>11</span>] for a meta-analysis).</p><p>In addition, both conceptually and statistically, most of these multi-participant alcohol administration studies treated participants as collections of individuals without regard for the reciprocal impact that interacting participants have on one another. Proper analysis of data from such studies requires statistical methods that account for the interdependence of behavior among participants, such as linear mixed models or multilevel modeling [<span>12</span>]. However, with very few (and recent) exceptions, nearly all multi-participant alcohol administration studies have focused on individual behaviors and have incorrectly ignored the nested structure of the data when conducting statistical analyses, potentially leading to biased estimates and invalid inferences. As such, despite much time and many resources devoted to this line of inquiry across nearly a century, we still lack a clear understanding of alcohol's effects in social settings and how social contexts influence alcohol use. This is a significant gap in our understanding of alcohol's typical effects, and it has implications for understanding both heavy alcohol use and the development of AUD.</p><p>Not only are there serious concerns with the ecological validity of solitary lab drinking settings, but these types of contexts do not permit the examination of alcohol's socially reinforcing effects thought to be critical to our understanding of AUD risk, including alcohol's potent ability to enhance feelings of social bonding and reduce feelings of social tension/discomfort [<span>13, 14</span>]. Furthermore, individuals report more reinforcing effects of alcohol and consume more alcohol while drinking with others versus when drinking alone [<span>15, 16</span>]. Notably, this increased consumption in social contexts is not merely a matter of drinking more, but also of experiencing alcohol in a way that may lead to more severe outcomes, such as driving while intoxicated, engaging in risky sexual behavior and participating in alcohol-related violence [<span>17</span>]. The degree of harm associated with alcohol use has also been found to increase with the size of the drinking group, particularly in public drinking establishments like bars and nightclubs [<span>18, 19</span>]. A full understanding of alcohol-related harm and AUD risk necessitates that our lab studies more closely align with how drinking occurs outside of the lab.</p><p>Although it is time-consuming and expensive to conduct well-powered multi-participant alcohol administration studies, the relatively few studies conducted to date show great promise in better understanding mechanisms of risk for problematic drinking. For instance, unlike prior studies testing participants in isolation, large multi-participant alcohol administration studies have demonstrated robust support for alcohol's effects on emotions and social reward, assessed across self-report and behavioral observations, in both social drinkers (<i>n</i> = 720) [<span>14</span>] and heavy at-risk drinkers (<i>n</i> = 393) [<span>13</span>]. Importantly, group-level analyses accounting for the interdependence among group members in these studies uncovered social processes that could underlie an increased risk for alcohol-related problems. These processes included heightened coordination of smiling and speech patterns indicative of social bonding, as well as facial expressions suggesting reduced social tension or negative affect [<span>13, 14</span>]. Further, although a range of contextual factors can exert key effects on alcohol responses, social elements of context often emerge as most salient. Work by several research groups [<span>13, 14, 18, 20, 21</span>] indicates that, even in the absence of elaborate simulated real-world setups or laboratory-based ‘bars’, the mere presence of other individuals is sufficient to elicit alcohol effects in the laboratory that mimic those reported by participants in the real-world. Taken together, these findings underscore the potential for multi-participant alcohol administration studies to yield valuable data regarding etiological mechanisms underlying AUD.</p><p>In sum, although alcohol is a social drug and believed to affect interpersonal processes in ways that might contribute to the development and maintenance of AUD, very little experimental research has explored alcohol's effects in social settings. To advance our understanding of alcohol use and its associated harms, we must prioritize research designs that reflect the social nature of drinking. Multi-participant alcohol administration studies are critically needed to more effectively address the public health challenges posed by alcohol.</p><p><b>Kasey G. Creswell:</b> Conceptualization; formal analysis; funding acquisition; investigation; methodology; project administration; writing—original draft. <b>Catharine E. Fairbairn:</b> Conceptualization; funding acquisition; investigation; methodology; writing--review.</p><p>None.</p>","PeriodicalId":109,"journal":{"name":"Addiction","volume":"120 4","pages":"574-577"},"PeriodicalIF":5.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-12-25","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/add.16735","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Addiction","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/add.16735","RegionNum":1,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"PSYCHIATRY","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

Since the 1930s, researchers have conducted alcohol administration studies to better understand individual differences in alcohol's effects on emotions, behavior and cognition that may explain underlying risk to develop alcohol use disorders (AUD) (e.g. [1]-[2]). Because the vast majority of alcohol use occurs in social settings (e.g. with friends/family, with unfamiliar others in bars/at parties) [3-5], we wondered how often laboratory alcohol administration studies included a social context. To answer this, we conducted a systematic review of laboratory alcohol administration studies published through 2023, searching three databases (PsycINFO, PubMed and Web of Science) for studies in which human participants consumed a fixed dose of alcohol. In total, 5690 records were screened for inclusion (see Figure 1). Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) guidelines were followed. Two independent judges coded each article for inclusion/exclusion and whether the laboratory drinking setting was solitary or social (see pre-registration for additional details https://osf.io/njvzd).

Notably, as shown in Figure 1, of the 989 published alcohol administration studies we identified, 90.8% of them had participants consume alcohol alone in a solitary drinking setting. Less than 10% of studies featured a social context in which at least some of the participants interacted with at least one other participant or confederate during or after drinking alcohol. Importantly, in contrast to how alcohol is typically studied in the lab, outside of the lab, drinking most often occurs in the company of others. This is true for individuals across the lifespan (e.g. adolescents to older adults) and across the spectrum of alcohol use (e.g. light drinking to heavy and hazardous drinking) [3-5]. For instance, 86% of drinking occasions for a nationally representative sample of over 60 K British adults were in a social context [6]. Further, in nationally representative samples of United States (US) high school seniors, 75.5% of past-year alcohol use occurred ‘at a party’, [5] and three-fourths of seniors cited ‘to have a good time with friends’ as the primary motive for their alcohol use [7]. Even heavy drinking adults experiencing problems related to their alcohol consumption report drinking most often in social settings. For instance, in a large (n = 511) sample of US male veteran hazardous drinkers (mean age = 56 years), 73% of their past-week drinking occurred in social settings [8]. Even for the minority of individuals who report ever drinking alone, the majority of their drinking also occurs with others [3, 9]. As such, drinking alone is a very unusual way for individuals to experience alcohol.

With respect to the 10% of laboratory studies that do incorporate social context, although 91 multi-participant alcohol administration studies may seem substantial, the vast majority of these studies had methodological limitations that make drawing firm conclusions difficult. Many of these studies were published before 1990, with more than half (55%) of all studies published two decades or more ago. Although the concept of statistical power has been recognized for much longer, it was not until Cohen's seminal work on power analysis was widely disseminated in the early 1990s [10] that consideration of sample size and adequate power became standard practice in research design. As such, with a median sample size of 54 participants and a mode of 40, the majority of these 91 multi-participant alcohol administration studies were underpowered to detect the small to moderate effect sizes established for alcohol (vs. control beverages) across multiple outcomes including, craving, positive affect and subsequent consumption (see Halsall et al. [11] for a meta-analysis).

In addition, both conceptually and statistically, most of these multi-participant alcohol administration studies treated participants as collections of individuals without regard for the reciprocal impact that interacting participants have on one another. Proper analysis of data from such studies requires statistical methods that account for the interdependence of behavior among participants, such as linear mixed models or multilevel modeling [12]. However, with very few (and recent) exceptions, nearly all multi-participant alcohol administration studies have focused on individual behaviors and have incorrectly ignored the nested structure of the data when conducting statistical analyses, potentially leading to biased estimates and invalid inferences. As such, despite much time and many resources devoted to this line of inquiry across nearly a century, we still lack a clear understanding of alcohol's effects in social settings and how social contexts influence alcohol use. This is a significant gap in our understanding of alcohol's typical effects, and it has implications for understanding both heavy alcohol use and the development of AUD.

Not only are there serious concerns with the ecological validity of solitary lab drinking settings, but these types of contexts do not permit the examination of alcohol's socially reinforcing effects thought to be critical to our understanding of AUD risk, including alcohol's potent ability to enhance feelings of social bonding and reduce feelings of social tension/discomfort [13, 14]. Furthermore, individuals report more reinforcing effects of alcohol and consume more alcohol while drinking with others versus when drinking alone [15, 16]. Notably, this increased consumption in social contexts is not merely a matter of drinking more, but also of experiencing alcohol in a way that may lead to more severe outcomes, such as driving while intoxicated, engaging in risky sexual behavior and participating in alcohol-related violence [17]. The degree of harm associated with alcohol use has also been found to increase with the size of the drinking group, particularly in public drinking establishments like bars and nightclubs [18, 19]. A full understanding of alcohol-related harm and AUD risk necessitates that our lab studies more closely align with how drinking occurs outside of the lab.

Although it is time-consuming and expensive to conduct well-powered multi-participant alcohol administration studies, the relatively few studies conducted to date show great promise in better understanding mechanisms of risk for problematic drinking. For instance, unlike prior studies testing participants in isolation, large multi-participant alcohol administration studies have demonstrated robust support for alcohol's effects on emotions and social reward, assessed across self-report and behavioral observations, in both social drinkers (n = 720) [14] and heavy at-risk drinkers (n = 393) [13]. Importantly, group-level analyses accounting for the interdependence among group members in these studies uncovered social processes that could underlie an increased risk for alcohol-related problems. These processes included heightened coordination of smiling and speech patterns indicative of social bonding, as well as facial expressions suggesting reduced social tension or negative affect [13, 14]. Further, although a range of contextual factors can exert key effects on alcohol responses, social elements of context often emerge as most salient. Work by several research groups [13, 14, 18, 20, 21] indicates that, even in the absence of elaborate simulated real-world setups or laboratory-based ‘bars’, the mere presence of other individuals is sufficient to elicit alcohol effects in the laboratory that mimic those reported by participants in the real-world. Taken together, these findings underscore the potential for multi-participant alcohol administration studies to yield valuable data regarding etiological mechanisms underlying AUD.

In sum, although alcohol is a social drug and believed to affect interpersonal processes in ways that might contribute to the development and maintenance of AUD, very little experimental research has explored alcohol's effects in social settings. To advance our understanding of alcohol use and its associated harms, we must prioritize research designs that reflect the social nature of drinking. Multi-participant alcohol administration studies are critically needed to more effectively address the public health challenges posed by alcohol.

Kasey G. Creswell: Conceptualization; formal analysis; funding acquisition; investigation; methodology; project administration; writing—original draft. Catharine E. Fairbairn: Conceptualization; funding acquisition; investigation; methodology; writing--review.

None.

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多参与者酒精管理研究的必要性。
自20世纪30年代以来,研究人员进行了酒精管理研究,以更好地了解酒精对情绪、行为和认知的影响的个体差异,这些差异可能解释发生酒精使用障碍(AUD)(例如[1]-[2])的潜在风险。由于绝大多数酒精使用发生在社交环境中(例如与朋友/家人,在酒吧/聚会中与不熟悉的其他人)[3-5],我们想知道实验室酒精管理研究中有多少次包括社交环境。为了回答这个问题,我们对2023年之前发表的实验室酒精管理研究进行了系统回顾,搜索了三个数据库(PsycINFO、PubMed和Web of Science),以寻找人类参与者摄入固定剂量酒精的研究。总共筛选了5690条记录(见图1)。遵循系统评价和荟萃分析(PRISMA)指南的首选报告项目。两名独立的法官对每篇文章进行编码,以确定纳入/排除,以及实验室饮酒环境是独处还是社交(参见预登记获取更多细节https://osf.io/njvzd).Notably,如图1所示)。在我们确定的989篇已发表的酒精管理研究中,90.8%的研究参与者在独处饮酒环境中单独饮酒。在不到10%的研究中,至少有一些参与者在饮酒期间或饮酒后与至少一个其他参与者或同伙进行了互动。重要的是,与通常在实验室里研究酒精相比,在实验室之外,饮酒通常发生在他人的陪伴下。对于整个生命周期(如青少年到老年人)和整个酒精使用范围(如轻度饮酒到重度和危险饮酒)的个体而言,情况都是如此[3-5]。例如,在一个超过6万名英国成年人的全国代表性样本中,86%的饮酒场合是在社交场合。此外,在具有全国代表性的美国高中毕业生样本中,过去一年75.5%的饮酒发生在“聚会上”,4 / 3的高年级学生表示“与朋友共度美好时光”是他们饮酒的主要动机。即使是酗酒的成年人也会遇到与饮酒有关的问题,他们报告说,饮酒最常发生在社交场合。例如,在一项大型(n = 511)美国男性资深危险饮酒者(平均年龄= 56岁)的样本中,73%的人在过去一周饮酒是在社交场合。即使是报告曾独自饮酒的少数人,他们的大多数饮酒也发生在与其他人一起饮酒的情况下[3,9]。因此,独自饮酒对个人来说是一种非常不寻常的体验酒精的方式。至于10%的实验室研究确实纳入了社会背景,尽管91项多参与者酒精管理研究似乎相当可观,但这些研究中的绝大多数都存在方法上的局限性,因此难以得出确切的结论。其中许多研究发表于1990年之前,超过一半(55%)的研究发表于20年前或更早。虽然统计功率的概念被认可的时间要长得多,但直到20世纪90年代初,科恩关于功率分析的开创性工作才被广泛传播,考虑样本量和足够的功率才成为研究设计的标准做法。因此,中位样本量为54名参与者,模型为40,这91项多参与者酒精管理研究中的大多数不足以检测酒精(相对于对照饮料)在多个结果中建立的小到中等效应大小,包括渴望、积极影响和随后的消费(见Halsall等人的荟萃分析)。此外,在概念上和统计上,大多数这些多参与者酒精管理研究将参与者视为个体的集合,而不考虑相互作用的参与者对彼此的相互影响。对这类研究的数据进行适当的分析需要统计方法来解释参与者之间的行为相互依赖,例如线性混合模型或多层模型[12]。然而,除了极少数(和最近的)例外,几乎所有的多参与者酒精管理研究都集中在个人行为上,在进行统计分析时错误地忽略了数据的嵌套结构,这可能导致有偏见的估计和无效的推断。因此,尽管近一个世纪以来,我们在这方面投入了大量的时间和资源,但我们仍然对酒精在社会环境中的影响以及社会环境如何影响酒精的使用缺乏清晰的认识。这是我们对酒精的典型影响的理解上的一个重大差距,它对理解重度饮酒和AUD的发展都有意义。 不仅对单独实验室饮酒环境的生态有效性存在严重的担忧,而且这些类型的环境不允许检查酒精的社会强化效应,这被认为是我们理解AUD风险的关键,包括酒精增强社会联系感和减少社会紧张/不适感的强大能力[13,14]。此外,与单独饮酒相比,与他人一起饮酒时,个体报告的酒精强化效应更强,消耗的酒精更多[15,16]。值得注意的是,社交场合饮酒的增加不仅仅是饮酒增加的问题,还包括以一种可能导致更严重后果的方式体验酒精,例如醉酒驾驶、从事危险的性行为和参与与酒精有关的暴力活动。与饮酒相关的危害程度也随着饮酒群体的规模而增加,特别是在酒吧和夜总会等公共饮酒场所[18,19]。为了充分了解酒精相关的危害和AUD风险,我们的实验室研究必须更密切地与实验室外饮酒的情况联系起来。虽然进行有说服力的多参与者酒精管理研究既耗时又昂贵,但迄今为止进行的相对较少的研究显示出对更好地理解问题饮酒风险机制的巨大希望。例如,与先前的研究不同,大型多参与者酒精管理研究通过自我报告和行为观察,在社交饮酒者(n = 720)和重度高危饮酒者(n = 393)中,证明了酒精对情绪和社会奖励的影响的有力支持。重要的是,在这些研究中,群体层面的分析说明了群体成员之间的相互依存关系,揭示了可能导致酒精相关问题风险增加的社会过程。这些过程包括微笑和言语模式的高度协调,表明社会联系,以及面部表情,表明减少社会紧张或负面影响[13,14]。此外,尽管一系列的环境因素可以对酒精反应产生关键影响,但环境的社会因素往往是最突出的。几个研究小组的工作[13,14,18,20,21]表明,即使没有精心模拟真实世界的设置或实验室为基础的“酒吧”,仅仅是其他个体的存在就足以在实验室中引发酒精效应,模仿真实世界参与者所报告的效果。综上所述,这些发现强调了多参与者酒精管理研究的潜力,以获得有关AUD病因机制的有价值数据。总而言之,尽管酒精是一种社交毒品,并且被认为会影响人际交往过程,可能有助于AUD的发展和维持,但很少有实验研究探索酒精在社交环境中的影响。为了增进我们对酒精使用及其相关危害的理解,我们必须优先考虑反映饮酒社会本质的研究设计。迫切需要多参与者酒精管理研究,以更有效地解决酒精带来的公共卫生挑战。Kasey G. Creswell:概念化;正式的分析;资金收购;调查;方法;项目管理;原创作品。凯瑟琳E.费尔贝恩:概念化;资金收购;调查;方法;写作——review.None。
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来源期刊
Addiction
Addiction 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
10.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
319
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Addiction publishes peer-reviewed research reports on pharmacological and behavioural addictions, bringing together research conducted within many different disciplines. Its goal is to serve international and interdisciplinary scientific and clinical communication, to strengthen links between science and policy, and to stimulate and enhance the quality of debate. We seek submissions that are not only technically competent but are also original and contain information or ideas of fresh interest to our international readership. We seek to serve low- and middle-income (LAMI) countries as well as more economically developed countries. Addiction’s scope spans human experimental, epidemiological, social science, historical, clinical and policy research relating to addiction, primarily but not exclusively in the areas of psychoactive substance use and/or gambling. In addition to original research, the journal features editorials, commentaries, reviews, letters, and book reviews.
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