The Treatment of Alcohol Problems A Review of the Evidence Prepared for the Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing by Elizabeth Proude, Olga Lopatko, Nicholas Lintzeris and Paul Haber 2009 1 Contents List of Tables ............................................................................................................. 4 Chapter 1 Introduction......................................................................................... 5 Levels of evidence and strength of recommendations............................................ 5 Recommended drinking limits ............................................................................... 7 Healthy Adults........................................................................................................ 7 Minors.................................................................................................................... 7 Pregnancy and breastfeeding ................................................................................ 8 References ............................................................................................................ 8 Chapter 2 Prevalence of Alcohol Consumption and Related Harms in Australia.. 9 Key points.............................................................................................................. 9 Patterns of consumption ........................................................................................ 9 Gender differences in patterns of consumption .................................................... 10 Age differences in patterns of consumption.......................................................... 11 Alcohol consumption among Indigenous Australians ........................................... 11 Alcohol- related harm - Indigenous people........................................................... 12 Alcohol-related harm in general ........................................................................... 12 Regional variations in alcohol-related harms........................................................ 12 Mental health ....................................................................................................... 13 Physical health..................................................................................................... 13 Social costs.......................................................................................................... 14 References .......................................................................................................... 15 Chapter 3 Screening, assessment and treatment planning ............................... 17 Screening............................................................................................................. 17 Where to screen?................................................................................................. 17 How to screen?.................................................................................................... 19 Comprehensive Clinical Assessment ................................................................... 26 Purpose of assessment........................................................................................ 26 Diagnostic interviews ........................................................................................... 26 Treatment Planning.............................................................................................. 37 Identifying suitable interventions and developing treatment care plans ................ 37 References .......................................................................................................... 41 Chapter 4 Brief interventions............................................................................ 51 What are brief interventions? ............................................................................... 51 Who to target for brief interventions? ................................................................... 51 How to deliver brief intervention ........................................................................... 52 Who can deliver brief interventions? .................................................................... 54 Where should brief interventions be delivered?.................................................... 54 Limitations of Brief Interventions .......................................................................... 67 Summary ............................................................................................................. 68 References .......................................................................................................... 69 Chapter 5 Alcohol withdrawal management ............................................................ 74 Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome: Clinical Presentation ........................................... 74 Assessment and Treatment Matching .................................................................. 76 Supportive Care................................................................................................... 82 Medications for Managing Alcohol Withdrawal ..................................................... 86 Treatment of Severe Withdrawal Complications................................................... 98 Wernicke’s Korsakoff’s Syndrome...................................................................... 104 References ........................................................................................................ 107 Chapter 6 Psychosocial Interventions for Alcohol Use Disorders ........................... 114 Overview of Psychosocial Interventions ............................................................. 114 When to Use Psychosocial Interventions ........................................................... 114 Choosing Psychosocial Interventions: A Stepped Care Approach...................... 115 2 Motivational Interviewing.................................................................................... 115 Cognitive Behavioural Interventions................................................................... 119 Specific cognitive-behavioural interventions....................................................... 121 Other Counselling Strategies ............................................................................. 130 Relapse Prevention Strategies........................................................................... 131 Residential Rehabilitation Programs .................................................................. 132 References ........................................................................................................ 133 Chapter 7 Pharmacotherapies for alcohol dependence.......................................... 142 Overview of Pharmacotherapies ........................................................................ 142 Naltrexone ......................................................................................................... 144 Acamprosate...................................................................................................... 150 Combined Acamprosate and Naltrexone............................................................ 155 Disulfiram........................................................................................................... 156 Other medications.............................................................................................. 159 Integration with psychosocial treatments............................................................ 163 Increasing medication adherence ...................................................................... 163 Selecting medications for individual patients ...................................................... 164 References ........................................................................................................ 164 Chapter 8 Self-help programs ......................................................................... 170 Alcoholic Anonymous (AA)................................................................................. 170 SMART Recovery®............................................................................................ 174 Self-Help for Families......................................................................................... 175 References ........................................................................................................ 176 Chapter 9 Specific populations....................................................................... 179 Adolescents and Youth ...................................................................................... 179 Pregnant and breastfeeding women................................................................... 186 Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians................................................ 189 Older people ...................................................................................................... 193 Cognitively impaired patients ............................................................................. 199 References ........................................................................................................ 204 Chapter 10 Comorbidities.............................................................................. 217 Alcohol-related physical comorbidity .................................................................. 217 Co-occurring Mental Disorders........................................................................... 222 Polydrug use and dependence........................................................................... 239 References ........................................................................................................ 242 Chapter 11 Aftercare and long-term follow-up .............................................. 251 References ........................................................................................................ 255 3 List of Tables Table 1.1: Categories of evidence and strength of recommendations ........................ 6 Table 2.1: Percentage of the population aged 14 years and over at risk of long-term harm by gender, 2001 and 2007 .............................................................................. 10 Table 2.2: Percentage of the population aged 14 years and over at risk of short-term harm by gender, 2001 and 2007 .............................................................................. 10 Table 2.3: Percentage of the population aged 14 years and over at risk of harm in the long term by age group, 2001 and 2007 .................................................................. 11 Table 2.4: Prevalence of DSM-IV alcohol abuse and dependence by gender .......... 13 Table 4.1: FLAGS brief intervention structure .......................................................... 53 Table 5.1: Signs and symptoms of alcohol withdrawal ............................................. 74 Table 5.2 Post-ictal signs and symptoms: comparing epilepsy and alcohol withdrawal seizures ................................................................................................................. 100 Table 8.1: The 12 steps of Alcoholics Anonymous................................................. 171 Table 10.1: Alcohol use and physical complications .............................................. 218 4 Chapter 1 Introduction This review covers the major treatments currently available for treating alcohol use disorders. We have included screening and assessment as a critical component of the treatment process. The evidence on treatment setting, brief and early intervention with problem drinkers is reviewed. The review also covers pharmacotherapies for alcohol dependence, a range of psychosocial interventions, motivational interviewing, cognitive behavioural, behavioural couples and family therapy and self-directed treatment resources such as mutual support groups. Interventions for at-risk groups (indigenous people, pregnant women, older people, adolescents and the cognitively impaired) are discussed. Finally, the impact of psychological and physical comorbidity and polysubstance use upon treatment outcomes is reviewed. The focus of the review is on evidence that has emerged since the previous literature review, The Treatment of Alcohol Problems: a Review of the Evidence (Shand et al. 2003). Developments since that time include a significant volume of research into brief interventions, as well as more clinical trials in the use of acamprosate and naltrexone in relapse prevention. We have not revisited treatments that were considered previously to have little potential. These included aversive therapy, relaxation training, systematic desensitisation, interpretive therapy and hypnosis. Nor does the review give extensive coverage to interventions for which there is no new evidence. One of the challenges of preparing a review such as this is the selection of treatment categories. Since it is not always possible to divide treatments into discrete categories, readers may find that there is some overlap between treatment categories. The review of evidence is accompanied by a comprehensive set of guidelines for the treatment of alcohol use disorders, the Guidelines for the Treatment of Alcohol Problems (Haber et al. 2009). The procedure used to identify research has involved searching relevant databases for published clinical trials, hand searching references from journal articles, searching the web for published guidelines, and contact with major research centres for unpublished research and other relevant guidelines. Databases searched include Medline, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, ISI Web of Knowledge, PsychInfo and Evidence Based Medicine Reviews. Articles were ranked on their order of strength of evidence according to the table below. Levels of evidence and strength of recommendations The preferred level of evidence was a meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Overall, the quality of evidence available was high: meta-analyses have been completed for most of the major treatment modalities. Each chapter of the review presents first the evidence from meta-analytic reviews and findings from individual randomised controlled trials, followed by block-randomised and non-randomised controlled trials, and, if relevant, quasi-experimental studies, case-control studies and descriptive studies. Quality evidence is scant for the effectiveness of treatment of specific sub-groups: indigenous people, adolescents, and those with comorbid mental disorders. For 5 these areas, we have reviewed clinical trials where available, or otherwise relied on expert opinion. A randomised controlled trial refers to a study that has at least one treatment group and a control group, usually placebo or no treatment. The study uses outcome measures before and after treatment, and randomly assigns participants to the groups. Some trials, normally those testing medications, also use a double blind where neither the participants nor the researcher know who is receiving which treatment, or a single blind design where neither the participants nor the researcher know who is receiving which treatment. Controlled trials allow the researcher to conclude with a degree of certainty whether or not the treatment being tested is more effective than no treatment. Sample size is important, with larger samples giving greater statistical power to interpret differences in outcomes between groups. In field research with patients, this ideal design is not always possible because of ethical concerns. However it is still possible to draw conclusions from some of these quasiexperimental studies. Meta-analysis is a statistical technique which combines a number of single trials to increase the overall power and certainty of outcomes, provided the correct statistical analysis is used to control for confounding variables. The conclusions drawn, though, might be more tentative, especially if the samples are heterogeneous. The strength of recommendation reflects the available evidence and the clinical importance of research. In some circumstances, clinical recommendations are not based upon systematic evidence, but erepresent a consencus (practical or ethical) approach, indicated as S (standard of care) (See Table 1.1). Recommendations are included in the Review of Evidence to enable cross-reference with the Guidelines for the Treatment of Alcohol Problems (Haber et al. 2009). Table 1.1: Categories of evidence and strength of recommendations Categories of evidence for causal relationships and treatment Ia: Evidence obtained from a systematic review or meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. Ib: Evidence obtained from at least one properly designed randomised controlled trial. IIa: Evidence obtained from at least one controlled study without randomisation (alternate allocation or some other method) IIb: Evidence from at least one other type of quasi-experimental study III: Evidence from non-experimental descriptive studies, such as comparative studies, correlation studies and case-control studies IV Evidence from expert committee reports or opinions and/or clinical experience of respected authorities Categories of evidence for observational relationships I: II: III: III: Evidence from large representative population samples Evidence from small, well-designed but not necessarily representative samples Evidence from non-representative surveys Evidence from expert committee reports or opinions and/or clinical experience of respected authorities 6 Strength of recommendation A Directly based on category I evidence B Directly based on category II evidence or extrapolated recommendation from category I C Directly based on category III evidence or extrapolated recommendation from category I or II D Directly based on category IV evidence or extrapolated recommendation from category I, II, or III evidence S Standard of care Source: Shekelle et al. 1999; Lingford-Hughes et al. 2004. Note: This table is also included in the Chapter 1 Introduction of the Guidelines for the Treatment of Alcohol Problems (Haber et al. 2009). Recommended drinking limits The Australian Government NHMRC 2009 Guidelines to Reduce Health Risks from Drinking Alcohol (NHMRC 2009) has taken a population health approach to the subject. Their aim was to make the information simpler and easier to remember. In general, the Guidelines state that the risk of harm from drinking alcohol increases with the amount consumed. A ‘standard drink’ refers to the Australian measure, which contains 10g of ethanol. Guideline 1 advises on reducing the risk of alcohol-related harm over a lifetime; Guideline 2 refers to risk of injury; Guideline 3 is for young people, and Guideline 4 is for women who are pregnant or breastfeeding. Healthy Adults Guideline 1: Reducing risk of alcohol-related harm For healthy men and women, drinking no more than two standard drinks on any day reduces the lifetime risk of harm from alcoholrelated disease or injury Guideline 2: Reducing the risk of injury on a single occasion of drinking For healthy men and women, drinking no more than four standard drinks on a single occasion reduces the risk of alcohol-related injury arising from that occasion Minors Guideline 3: For children and young people under 18 years of age, not drinking is the safest option A. Parents and carers should be advised that children under 15 years of age are at the greatest risk of harm from drinking and that for this age group, not drinking is the safest option B. For young people aged 15-17 years, the safest option is to delay the initiation of drinking for as long as possible 7 Pregnancy and breastfeeding Guideline 4: Maternal alcohol consumption can harm the developing foetus or breastfeeding baby A. For women who are pregnant or planning a pregnancy, not drinking is the safest option B. For women who are breastfeeding, not drinking is the safest option References Haber, P, Lintzeris N, Proude E et al. 2009, Guidelines for the Treatment of Alcohol Problems. Canberra: Australian Government Department of Health and Aged Care. Lingford-Hughes, AR, S Welch and DJ Nutt 2004, Evidence-Based Guidelines for the Pharmacological Management of Substance Misuse, Addiction and Comorbidity: Recommendations from the British Association for Psychopharmacology. J Psychopharmacol 18(3): 293-335. NHMRC 2009, Australian Guidelines to reduce Health Risks from Drinking Alcohol, National Health & Medical Research Council and Commonwealth of Australia. Shand, F, Gates J, Fawcett J et al. 2003, The Treatment of Alcohol Problems: a review of the evidence. Canberra: Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing. Shekelle, PG, Woolf SH, Eccles M et al. 1999, Clinical guidelines: developing guidelines. BMJ 318(7183): 593-596. 8 Chapter 2 Prevalence of Alcohol Consumption and Related Harms in Australia Key points • Using the 2003 definitions, on which all the available data are based, the prevalence of high risk drinking or dependence in Australia was estimated at 5 percent of the population; 15% were considered ‘at risk’ (considering both definitions of long- and short-term risk of harm) drinkers; 65% were drinking at ‘low risk’ and 15% stated they were non-drinkers • Patterns of alcohol misuse differ by age group, place of residence, including regional, rural and remote areas, and also by sex and cultural group, including Indigenous or non-Indigenous status • Some of the adverse effects associated with excessive alcohol use, apart from acts of violence, accidents and injury, include higher levels of cancers, diabetes, overweight and obesity, cardiovascular disease, and other nutritional deficiencies, as well as mental health effects including cognitive impairment • Alcohol related harm can also result from the intoxicating effects of the drug and also from its long term toxicity; this includes cancer of the liver and the digestive system (including not only the bowel and colon, but also the mouth and throat) and damaging effects on the brain, the heart, the pancreas, and the peripheral nerves. Introduction As is well known, alcohol is commonly consumed in Australia; 83% of the population in the 2007 Drug Strategy Household Survey aged over 14 years reported drinking alcohol in the previous 12 months (AIHW 2008). Between 1996-7 and 2004-5, apparent alcohol consumption (quantity consumed divided by the population aged over 15 years) remained stable at 9.8 litres per person per annum, after declining from 11.5 in 1990 (AIHW 2007). Australia ranks 14th among the OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) countries for per capita pure alcohol consumption, with the UK at 9th place (11.5 litres) and New Zealand at 17th with 9.4 litres (AIHW 2007). Wine consumption has grown over the last 40 years, while beer has remained stable in comparison; however beer remains dominant in apparent consumption, with 4.6 litres consumed per person, wine at 3.1 and spirits at 2.1 litres. Patterns of consumption The most comprehensive estimate of patterns and prevalence of drinking in Australia has been obtained from the National Drug Strategy Household Survey which is conducted every three years (AIHW 2002, 2005, 2008). It is recognised that one of the drawbacks of population surveys include the omission of people who are not living in households, such as the homeless and those in institutions, as well as those who refuse to participate. This is taken into account by weighting and is somewhat counterbalanced by the large sample sizes taken, 25,000 respondents in the case of the 12th National Drug Strategy Household Survey and 10,600 in the National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing 1997 (Hall et al. 1999). 9 Results from the 2007 National Drug Strategy Household Survey suggest that current patterns of alcohol consumption are similar to those reported in 1998 and in 2001; the main difference from 2001 to 2007 was that slightly fewer people are abstinent and more are drinking at risky levels (AIHW 2008). The proportion of daily drinkers fell significantly between 2004 and 2007 (from 8.9% to 8.1%). In 2007, 72.6 percent of all persons aged 14 years and over consumed alcohol in quantities considered to be low risk to health in the long-term and 17.1 were abstainers (AIHW 2008). It was estimated that 6.9 percent of the population consumed alcohol in a manner considered risky and a further 3.4 percent consumed alcohol in a manner considered to be high risk to health in the long term (total 10%). However the National Health Survey 2004-5 showed that 13% of people consumed alcohol at levels which, if continued, would be risky to their health, compared with 11% in 2001 (ABS 2006). Gender differences in patterns of consumption Clear gender differences in patterns of alcohol consumption exist. On average men usually begin drinking at a younger age than women (16 years compared to 18 years), and widespread problems in the areas of alcohol misuse and violence have been identified as major health policy issues for men. Further, females are more vulnerable to both the acute and chronic effects of alcohol misuse than males. Females are more likely than males to be non-drinkers and males are more likely than females to consume alcohol at levels considered high risk in the long term (Table 2.1). Males are more likely than females to put themselves at risk of harm in the short term (Table 2.2) and are almost twice as likely to drink daily (AIHW 2008). Table 2.1: Percentage of the population aged 14 years and over at risk of longterm harm by gender, 2001 and 2007 Males Females Persons Abstinent % 2001 (2007) 14.1 (14.0) 20.8 (20.1) 17.5 (17.1) Low risk % 2001 (2007) 75.6 (75.8) 69.8 (69.4) 72.7 (72.6) Risky % 2001 (2007) 6.7 (6.2) 7.2 (7.6) 7.0 (6.9) High risk % 2001 (2007) 3.5 (3.9) 2.2 (2.8) 2.9 (3.4) Overall, 35 percent of persons aged 14 years and over put themselves at risk of alcohol-related harm in the short term at least once over a 12-month period, and almost 8 percent place themselves at risk for short-term harm at least weekly. At all ages, greater proportions of the population drink at risky or high-risk levels for shortterm harm, compared with risk for long-term harm (AIHW 2005). Table 2.2: Percentage of the population aged 14 years and over at risk of shortterm harm by gender, 2001 and 2007 Males Females Persons At least yearly % 2001 (2007) 15.5 (15.1) 12.7 (13.4) 14.1 (14.2) At least monthly % 2001 (2007) 15.3 (14.3) 11.6 (10.9) 13.4 (12.6) At least weekly % 2001 (2007) 8.5 (9.3) 5.3 (6.2) 6.9 (7.8) 10 Age differences in patterns of consumption The proportions of Australians aged 14 years or over abstaining from alcohol increased significantly between 2004 and 2007, with a greater change seen among males than females (AIHW 2008). However, people in the 20-29 year age group were most likely to consume alcohol at a level that put them at risk for long-term (chronic) and short-term harm and were the least likely to abstain (Tables 2.3 and 2.4). Rates of abstinence, therefore, are lowest in the 20-29 years age group; however they tend to increase with increasing age (Table 2.3). Table 2.3: Percentage of the population aged 14 years and over at risk of harm in the long term by age group, 2001 and 2007 Age group 14-19 20-29 30-39 40-49 50-59 60+ Abstinent % 2001 (2007) 26.2 (29.0) 9.9 (12.9) 13.0 (12.2) 13.9 (12.4) 17.1 (14.0) 27.1 (24.7) Low risk % 2001 (2007) 62.1 (62.2) 75.4 (71.1) 78.3 (77.5) 76.5 (76.8) 73.3 (75.6) 66.8 (68.9) Risky % 2001 (2007) 8.0 (5.6) 10.2 (10.2) 6.3 (7.0) 7.1 (7.7) 6.6 (6.5) 4.4 (4.8) High risk % 2001 (2007) 3.7 (3.2) 4.5 (5.8) 2.5 (3.3) 2.6 (3.1) 2.9 (3.9) 1.6 (1.6) Table 2.4: Proportion of the population aged 14 years and over at risk of harm in the short term by age group, 2001 and 2007 Age group Risky and high risk* At least yearly At least monthly At least weekly 2001 (2007) 2001 (2007) 2001 (2007) 14-19 13.4 (12.9) 20.5 (17.2) 10.7 (9.1) 20-29 21.1 (19.8) 27.3 (24.9) 12.0 (14.7) 30-39 20.5 (20.3) 16.5 (15.3) 6.3 (8.4) 40-49 16.0 (17.6) 11.1 (12.3) 6.2 (7.5) 50-59 10.2 (11.6) 6.4 (7.1) 5.8 (6.3) 60+ 3.7 (5.1) 2.4 (3.2) 2.6 (2.7) * For males, the consumption of 7 or more standard drinks on any one day; for females 5 or more. Alcohol consumption among Indigenous Australians Although the overall proportion of Indigenous Australians who drink alcohol (71 percent) is smaller than in the general population (82 percent), those who do drink tend to drink in larger and more harmful quantities (AIHW 2007). Twenty percent of Indigenous Australians report drinking at risky or high-risk levels for long-term harm. National statistics show that: • • Heaviest drinking occurs amongst Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people aged 25–34 years, while hazardous drinking in the general population is most common among people aged 14–24 years 15% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders consume alcohol at risk of long term alcohol related harm, compared to 9.8% of non-Indigenous Australians 11 • 31% of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders had not consumed alcohol in the last 12 months, compared to 13% of non-Indigenous Australians (AIHW 2007). Alcohol- related harm - Indigenous people • • • • Over the 5 year period from 2000 to 2004, an estimated 1,145 Indigenous Australians died from alcohol-related injury and disease caused by drinking Suicide (19%) and alcoholic liver cirrhosis (18%) account for almost 40% of all alcohol-attributable deaths among Indigenous men Alcohol liver cirrhosis (27%) haemorrhagic stroke (16%) and fatal injury caused by assault 910%) are the most common causes of alcohol-attributable death among Indigenous women Average age at death from alcohol-related causes among Indigenous people is about 35 years (Chikritzhs et al. 2007). Alcohol-related harm in general Alcohol is estimated to cause a net harm of 4.4% of the global burden of disease, indicating that the beneficial effects of alcohol are small compared to the detrimental effects. Alcohol causes a greater health burden for men than for women. Neuropsychiatric disorders, mainly made up of alcohol use disorders, constitute the category linked to most alcohol-attributable burden of disease, with unintentional injury being the second most important category. Contrary to the assumption by many that cirrhosis is the most important form of alcohol induced morbidity and mortality, it only contributes to 10% of the burden of disease caused by alcohol. The health burden is considerable both for acute and chronic health consequences (World Health Organization 2007). In Australia, alcohol consumption in total causes over 5000 deaths per year, and for each death about 19 years of life are prematurely lost. The burden of deaths is distributed unevenly across the population, with males being over-represented in mortality and morbidity statistics compared to females, as are those living in nonmetropolitan regions compared to metropolitan regions. Problems associated with drinking to intoxication are also unevenly distributed; with chronic diseases occurring among people aged over 30 years, whereas deaths and hospitalisations, largely caused by road accidents and violent assault, are much more common among younger people. This may be attributed to different drinking patterns between younger and older age groups (Chikritzhs et al. 2003). Regional variations in alcohol-related harms • • • Rates of alcohol-caused death and hospitalisation were higher in nonmetropolitan than in metropolitan areas; the bulk of this was associated with the effects of intoxication The Northern Territory had the highest percentages of people aged 15 years or older who drank at risky or high-risk levels for acute harm (30% at least monthly) and for chronic harm (18%) in 2001 The Northern Territory also had the highest alcohol-caused death and hospitalisation rates of all jurisdictions; however Western Australia and Queensland also had higher rates than other States (Chikritzhs et al. 2003). 12 Mental health The 1997 National Survey of Mental Health and Well-Being, the first such national survey conducted in Australia, examined the prevalence of alcohol and other substance use disorders in the population aged 18 years and over. The prevalence of alcohol dependence was estimated to be 3.5 percent, and 3 percent for harmful use, using ICD-10 criteria (Hall et al. 1999), and using the DSM-IV-TR criteria for substance dependence, the prevalence of dependence was 4.1%, with 75% of these being male and 60% in the 18-34 year age group (Proudfoot and Teesson 2002). This survey was conducted again between August and December 2007 but the results were not available at the time of writing. Table 2.4, therefore, represents figures from the 1997 survey. Men are more likely to meet criteria for an alcohol use disorder than women, and prevalence also decreases with age; compared with those aged 55 or older, people aged 18-34 were 6.4 times more likely to have an alcohol use disorder. Table 2.4: Prevalence of DSM-IV alcohol abuse and dependence by gender Males Females Persons Harmful use % 4.3 1.8 3.0 Dependence % 5.2 1.8 3.5 Source: (Hall et al. 1999) Data from the 2007 Drug Strategy Household Survey report that high-risk drinkers were twice as likely as low-risk drinkers (15.3% vs. 8.5%) to experience high or very high levels of psychological distress, as measured by the Kessler-10; however risky drinkers and abstainers were equally likely to experience high or very high levels of distress (AIHW 2008). Physical health In general, higher overall levels of consumption in a population are associated with higher levels of alcohol-related problems. Overall population levels of alcohol consumption have been related to total mortality and to specific causes of death and disease including liver cirrhosis, traffic accidents, suicide and criminal violence. However, the greatest alcohol-related harm may come from problem drinkers who are not likely to be alcohol dependent, compared with the minority who are, due to the relatively larger numbers of the former. Particularly high rates of alcohol-related harm have been found among low and moderate level drinkers on the occasions they drink to intoxication. One US population-based survey reports that including binge drinking into their calculations of average daily consumption and comparing it with standard quantity- frequency questions raised the level of heavy drinking by 19% to 42%, (Stahre et al. 2006) and as a result half of female binge drinkers and half of binge drinkers aged 55 and older met the criteria for heavy drinking. The former and the recently updated NHMRC guidelines therefore consider pattern as well as quantity of weekly consumption in considering level of risk associated with drinking. It becomes even more important, when taking into account the reported surge in binge drinking among young people, that reducing harm associated with lowdependent drinking patterns, such as episodes of intoxication, is at least as important as reducing harm associated with average consumption level. 13 The relationship between consumption and harm varies substantially among age and sex cohorts, since alcohol-related risk status is not necessarily stable over a person’s lifetime (e.g. young people and males are at greater risk of harm) and also varies between different defined sub-populations (e.g. Indigenous groups, those operating machinery or driving vehicles, and pregnant women are at greater risk of harm) and between different drinking situations (e.g. greater mortality and morbidity associated with drink driving in rural areas). However, the general pattern of the relationship between drinking and alcohol-related harm remains. Low risk alcohol consumption is thought to have some health benefits, especially in older men, where an association was found between moderate alcohol consumption and decreased risk of myocardial infarction (Mukamal et al. 2003). Australian studies, however, have found that benefits occur for women (Powers and Young 2008) but not for men, specifically when wine is the drink taken (Harriss et al. 2007). Nevertheless, the evidence for other benefits is conflicting. Rather than a linear relationship between consumption and harm, the relationship has been shown to be U-shaped, where overall, moderate drinkers have better physical and outcomes than either non-drinkers or heavy drinkers (O'Keefe et al. 2007). These authors warn that the hypothesis is a two-edged sword; while there is evidence to show that light drinking on a daily basis may significantly reduce the risks of coronary heart disease and all-cause mortality, excessive alcohol intake and binge drinking are implicated in types of cancer and are detrimental to the heart, liver and overall health. It is not recommended, therefore, for non-drinkers to start drinking in order to gain indefinable health benefits. Social costs The overall effects of alcohol-related harm extend beyond the individual to include social and economic costs of harm to families, communities and society at large (World Health Organization 2007). Alcohol abuse or intoxication is implicated in violence, both domestic and public, unemployment, financial problems and poverty, drink driving, traffic accidents, industrial and work accidents, fires, falls, and suicide (Crombie et al. 2007). There has been growing concern in the media both in Australia and in the UK and Europe over youth drinking, especially binge drinking, and its association with violence and accidents. One study that examined data from several Victorian (Australia) surveys reports inconclusive evidence in this regard; both the Victorian Emergency Minimum dataset and the Victorian Admitted Episodes dataset show an increasing trend in hospitalisation for alcohol-related causes among people aged 1824 years between 1999-2006 (Livingston 2008). Contradictory results provided by the Victorian Population Health Survey and the Victorian Youth Alcohol and Drug Survey found no increases in rates of risky drinking among young people; the authors conclude it is possible that, while the proportion of young people drinking at levels that exceed NHMRC guidelines has not changed, more are drinking at extremely high levels and thus are ending up in hospital (Livingston 2008). Overall the proportion of respondents to the Drug Strategy Household Survey who reported that they were likely to undertake potentially harmful activities while under the influence of alcohol remained relatively stable between 2004 and 2007- in every case males were more likely to undertake such activities. In 2007, 12.1 percent of adults admitted to driving a motor vehicle while under the influence of alcohol (AIHW 2008). This figure fell slightly from 13.4% in 2004. 14 Since 1995, there has been a slow decrease in those who experienced verbal abuse in the previous 12 months; down from 33 percent to 26.5 percent in 2001, to 24.9% in 2004 and 25.4% in 2007; the level of physical abuse (as victim) remained steady at 4.5%. References ABS 2006, National Health Survey 2004-5 Summary of Results. Cat no 4364.0. Canberra: Australian Bureau of Statistics. AIHW 2002, 2001 National Drug Strategy Household Survey. Canberra: Australian Institute of Health & Welfare. 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N Eng J Med 348(2): 109-118. 15 O'Keefe, JH, KA Bybee and CJ Lavie 2007, Alcohol and Cardiovascular Health: The Razor-Sharp Double-Edged Sword. J Am College Cardiol 50(11): 1009-1014. Powers, JR and AF Young 2008, Longitudinal analysis of alcohol consumption and health of middle-aged women in Australia. Addiction 103(3): 424-432. Proudfoot, H and M Teesson 2002, Who seeks treatment for alcohol dependence? Findings from the Australian National Survey of Mental Health and Wellbeing. Soc Psych Psych Epidemiol 37(10): 451-456. Stahre, M, Naimi T, Brewer R et al. 2006, Measuring average alcohol consumption: the impact of including binge drinks in quantity-frequency calculations. Addiction 101: 1711-1718. World Health Organization 2007, WHO Expert Committee on Problems Related to Alcohol Consumption. World Health Organization. Available at: http://www.who.int/substance_abuse/expert_committee_alcohol/en/index.html 16 Chapter 3 planning Screening, assessment and treatment Screening, assessment and diagnosis play a critical role in treatment planning and clinical management. The level of detail collected during assessment will vary across treatment settings and circumstances. In primary care settings such as general medical practices and hospitals, screening is recommended to identify hazardous or dependent drinkers. Screening Screening is intended to indicate the presence or absence of certain problems that might need further investigation. It can lead to early intervention for problem drinkers (see Chapter 4, Brief interventions), further investigation and problem management as the setting or referral to specialist services if the client requires more intensive assessment and treatment. Risky drinking needs to be identified and targeted in its early stages, in order to reduce its impact on the individual and the community. It is far more prevalent than dependent drinking (AIHW 2008). Where to screen? Given the pervasiveness of risky alcohol consumption in Australia and the seriousness of the health consequences of risky drinking, detection of risky alcohol consumption has been evaluated in a wide range of health care settings. General practice and relevant specialist settings In routine general practice, without specific screening techniques, up to 70 percent of risky/high risk drinkers are not detected (Reid et al. 1986). As indicated in the Cochrane review by Kaner et al (2007), a number of studies, but not all, have shown that screening and brief interventions are effective in primary care settings. There is Australian evidence that screening and early intervention in primary care settings is cost-effective (Wutzke et al. 2001). One study examined current practices and barriers for screening and interventions with primary care patients across randomly selected clinics in a large health care system in the USA. Focus groups and mailed structured surveys were sent to practising GPs. Results indicated that 85% of patients treated in primary care received some screening for alcohol use disorders (Barry et al. 2004). However CAGE was the predominant screening tool; the drawback of this approach is that the primary clinical focus falls on patients who meet abuse/dependence criteria. This shows the importance of using an appropriate screening instrument. Lack of time was the most important perceived barrier to implementing screening and brief interventions for problem drinkers. Another study examining barriers to screening conducted focus groups with primary care practitioners (GPs) in Pennsylvania. Their key barriers included lack of time, lack of access to treatment, and financial resources, both from the patient perspective and their own, of reimbursement from insurers. Additional barriers 17 included the negative attitude toward AOD use, their lack of self-efficacy in managing AOD use disorders, and lack of knowledge in this area (Holland et al. 2009). However, screening is the most important first step towards identification of problems and has been proven valuable in other common conditions such as raised cholesterol. GPs are well placed to undertake this important first step, as 85% of the Australian population have contact with a GP annually. Moreover, one comprehensive study (of 78,974 adult patients from 2470 GPs in Australia) found that heavy drinkers (n = 5,753) were more likely to see their GP for management of chronic problems, psychological problems and physical injuries than were light- or non-drinkers (Proude et al. 2006), thus providing perfect opportunities for early intervention. A number of initiatives to encourage screening were undertaken as part of the Smoking, Nutrition, Alcohol and Physical Activity (SNAP) Framework for General Practice (Harris et al. 2005). The Drink-Less package, developed by the University of Sydney in 1990s (Gomel et al. 1994) and revised and re-released in 2004 (Proude et al. 2005; Proude et al. 2006), has been implemented mainly within NSW, although it has been used in other countries, notably the UK (Institute of Health & Society, Newcastle University, Gateshead). Screening and brief interventions are feasible in specialist settings where prevalence of alcohol use is high such as opioid treatment services (Watson et al. 2007) and sexual health services (Lane et al. 2008). See also Chapter 4. Hospital settings, including emergency, mental health and general wards Several studies have shown that alcohol use disorders are commonly not identified in hospitalised patients (Proude et al. 2008; Shourie et al. 2007; Williams et al. 2008). Screening and brief interventions in emergency departments have proved to be effective in reducing risky levels of alcohol intake and binge drinking episodes (see Chapter 4). It is considered a good clinical practice to provide routine screening procedures for excessive alcohol consumption among inpatients and outpatients and have procedures for appropriate intervention in all hospital settings. Notwithstanding this consensus recommendation, studies in medical and surgical wards have not shown improved health outcomes as a consequence of screening and intervention for alcohol disorders in hospital inpatients (Shourie et al. 2007), (Saitz et al. 2007). However, the major benefit may lie in earlier recognition prevention and treatment of alcohol withdrawal and alcohol-related medical toxicity. Welfare and general counselling services In these settings, there is a need to develop a structure where screening can occur in a routine way, thereby increasing the likelihood that it will become and will remain a part of the normal for detecting unsafe drinking patterns (Piccinelli et al. 1997a). However, there are significant barriers to the widespread adoption of screening and intervention procedures. For instance, there are few incentives and some disincentives to primary health caseworkers and others becoming involved in screening activities (Babor et al. 2005). 18 The Workplace There is evidence of high rates of problem drinking in some of these settings, suggesting that the workplace is a suitable venue for detection of risky drinking and intervention (Richmond et al. 2000; Roche et al. 2008). Detection of unsafe alcohol consumption should form part of any routine health evaluation in the workplace. Although appealing in concept, brief intervention is not always effective in this setting (Anderson and Larimer 2002; Matano et al. 2007), and strategies for more intensive interventions have not been well studied (see also Chapter 4). Accordingly, widespread implementation of brief intervention in this setting cannot be recommended at this time. Workplace occupational health and safety procedures should identify appropriate strategies and referral options for those workers identified as having alcohol-related problems. Recommendation 3.1 Screening for risk levels of alcohol consumption and appropriate intervention systems should be widely implemented in general practice and emergency departments. 3.2 Screening for risk levels of alcohol consumption and appropriate intervention systems should be widely implemented in hospitals. 3.3 Screening for risk levels of alcohol consumption and appropriate intervention systems should be widely implemented in community health and welfare settings. 3.4 Screening for risk levels of alcohol consumption and appropriate intervention systems should be widely implemented in highrisk workplaces. Strength of recommendation A Level of evidence Ia D IV D IV D IV How to screen? The methods for detecting risky drinkers include quantity-frequency estimates of alcohol consumption, screening questionnaires, physical examination for intoxication or signs of harmful use of alcohol and biological markers of excessive alcohol consumption. Evaluation of all methods for assessing alcohol intake suffers from the absence of a “gold standard” against which they can be tested. Quantity-frequency estimates A quantitative alcohol history can be a reliable method of detecting risk patterns of alcohol consumption. It comprises the daily average consumption (grams per day or standard drinks per day) of alcohol, the number of drinking days per week (or month) and the pattern of drinking. Where use exceeds recommended NHMRC guidelines, a more detailed assessment is indicated to exclude harmful use and/or dependence. 19 Recommendation 3.5 Quantity–frequency estimates is the recommended way to detect levels of consumption in excess of the NHMRC 2009 guidelines in the general population. Strength of recommendation D Level of evidence IV Screening questionnaires In specialist alcohol and drug treatment settings, diagnostic interviews and questionnaires help to assess the severity of alcohol dependence, including consumption levels, so that appropriate treatment goals and strategies can be selected. A range of questionnaires is available for both uses. The list of assessment instruments reviewed below is by no means exhaustive. For a more comprehensive review of alcohol and other drug instruments, see Teesson et al. (2000). For a review of screening and diagnostic tools for other substances and mental disorders, see the review by Dawe et al. (2002). Validated alcohol screening questionnaires include the Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test (AUDIT) and its short version, AUDIT-C, the Michigan Alcoholism Screening Test (MAST) and its shortened versions, b-MAST, S-MAST, CAGE, TACE and TWEAK. To be effective, a questionnaire needs to be sensitive (capable of correctly identifying patients with the condition) and specific (capable of discriminating those who do not have the condition). Thus, a sensitivity of 0.90 indicates that 90 percent of those with the condition will be correctly identified; and a specificity of 0.90 indicates that the test correctly identifies 90 percent of those who do not have the condition. Alcohol Use Disorders Identification Test The AUDIT is a 10-item instrument designed to screen for a range of drinking problems, particularly hazardous and harmful consumption. A cut-off score of 8 is used to identify risky drinkers. Developed by a World Health Organisation (WHO) collaborative study in six countries, it is the only questionnaire designed for international use and has been translated into several languages. The questions cover four conceptual domains: alcohol consumption, drinking behaviour, adverse reactions and alcohol-related problems (Saunders et al. 1993). For more detailed administration and scoring information, refer to the World Health Organization Guidelines (Babor et al. 1992). It effectively distinguishes between risky and nonrisky drinkers, identifies dependent drinkers, and has cross-cultural validity. It is short (10 items) may be self-administered, and is suitable for primary health care settings. Its short version, AUDIT-C (the first 3 questions of AUDIT) also performs well at identifying alcohol misuse (Bradley et al. 2007), especially in primary care. A score of 3 or above for women, or 4 and above for men, has maximum sensitivity and specificity (Bradley et al. 2007; Dawson et al. 2005). AUDIT-C has been used successfully with male Veterans’ Affairs patients to screen for heavy drinking, performing similarly to the full AUDIT. Patients were considered to be heavy drinkers if they drank more than 14 drinks a week or five or more drinks on one occasion in the past or a typical month (Bush et al. 1998). 20 The third question of the AUDIT taken alone (AUDIT-3), has been shown to have almost as good sensitivity and specificity as the longer forms (level 1 evidence) (Bradley et al. 2007). At a cut-off score of eight to identify hazardous and harmful drinking, the full AUDIT has demonstrated a sensitivity of 0.92 and specificity of 0.94 (Saunders et al. 1993). When validated against a diagnostic interview, physical examination and laboratory tests, the AUDIT was better than the MAST at distinguishing between hazardous and non-hazardous drinkers (Fiellin et al. 2000). Both instruments effectively identified dependent drinkers. The AUDIT performed as well as the MAST and the CAGE when validated against Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) scores for dependent drinking and had higher sensitivity and specificity for detecting risky, nondependent drinking (Piccinelli et al. 1997b). MAST and CAGE questionnaire The prototype alcohol dependence questionnaire is the MAST (Selzer 1971). Instruments such as the MAST and the CAGE questionnaire were derived on the basis of their ability to distinguish chronic alcohol dependent individuals from nonalcohol dependent individuals (Mayfield et al. 1974). The MAST is a 24-item instrument designed to identify alcohol abuse and dependence. It has adequate sensitivity and specificity at a cut-off score of 13 in identifying both of these disorders, but is very long, taking at least 10 minutes. The SMAST, a shorter 13-item version of the MAST, has also demonstrated good reliability as a self-administered questionnaire. However there is little recent published research on these instruments. The Brief Michigan Alcohol Screening Test (b-MAST) has been recently validated against AUDIT, found significantly correlated, and proved effective in measuring severity of problem drinking in a treatment-seeking population (Connor et al. 2007). The MAST and its shorter versions have been criticised for their lack of sensitivity in detecting alcohol problems among women (Dawe et al 2002). The CAGE is a four-item screening instrument intended to identify alcohol abuse and dependence. Because of its brevity, it is less sensitive than the AUDIT or the MAST. It is not a diagnostic instrument, however a ‘yes’ to two or more questions indicates the need for further assessment for alcohol abuse (Mayfield et al. 1974). In a study with drink drivers, the MAST correlated more highly than the AUDIT with the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM-IV) criteria for alcohol use disorders, although both had acceptable internal validity (Conley 2001). Almost no new literature has been found in this area; one study examined the test-retest reliability of a new instrument to assess intoxicated driving, the FORM 90-DWI (Hettema et al. 2008) and found it demonstrated high levels of reliability for this purpose. However, this is not a brief screening test as it takes 45 minutes to administer. Japanese translations of AUDIT and CAGE have also been tested against a semistructured interview diagnosis; results showed that AUDIT had superior sensitivity and specificity for detecting dependent and problem drinkers (Volk et al. 1997). CAGE was found to have poor validity with a sample of USA university students (Heck and Lichtenberg 1990). When used with a group of drug-dependent patients, the AUDIT and the MAST were equally able to detect alcohol dependence, but the AUDIT was better at identifying 21 hazardous drinking (Skipsey et al. 1997). The AUDIT has also been evaluated in psychiatric patients and in one study demonstrated very high sensitivity and specificity at detecting alcohol abuse using a cut- off of 10 (Cassidy et al. 2008). The AUDIT-C also performed well against the S-MAST and CAGE in detecting risk drinking among people with any past-year mood disorder (Dawson et al. 2005). In another study of patients affected by a mood disorder, AUDIT and CAGE were compared with the first 2 questions of the NIAA guide (“do you sometimes drink alcohol?” and “how many times in the past year have you had 5 drinks [men] 4 [women] in a day?”). Both instruments achieved high sensitivity, using a cut-off of 5 for AUDIT and 1 for CAGE (Agabio et al. 2007). Overall it appears that the AUDIT is superior to other instruments in detecting various aspects of a range of alcohol problems. CAGE is proven to be insufficient to detect lower levels of alcohol abuse among primary care patients, and conventional laboratory tests were proved in at least one study to be of no use in this setting (Aertgeerts et al. 2001). The AUDIT can be also used effectively to identify hazardous, problem and dependent alcohol consumption amongst psychiatric patients; AUDIT-C can be used to detect alcohol use disorders, using a cut-off of 5 (Dawson et al. 2005). Other questionnaires The Alcohol, Smoking and Substance Involvement Screening Test (ASSIST) is a useful screening questionnaire, recommended by the World Health Organization, which includes alcohol with other substances (World Health Organization 2002). A number of other screening instruments have been developed to overcome the limitations of existing inventories. These are most useful for research rather than clinical settings and are not considered further in these guidelines. Recommendation 3.6 AUDIT is the most sensitive of the currently available screening tools and is recommended for use in the general population. Strength of recommendation A Level of evidence I Screening for alcohol use in special populations: Pregnant Women The NHMRC guidelines recommend that it is safest to consume no alcohol during pregnancy (NHMRC 2009). The low levels of consumption highlighted as a concern in recent guidelines cannot be identified using current questionnaires. A clinical history to estimate the quantity and frequency of alcohol use is the preferred method. In light of the potential for adverse effects on the foetus, screening for alcohol use should be included in the usual antenatal history. All pregnant women should be asked about their level of alcohol consumption. TWEAK and T-ACE questionnaires 22 Two screening instruments – TWEAK and T-ACE – have been developed for use with pregnant women. Both were designed in the 1980’s. TWEAK is a modified five-item version of MAST and has five items; a score of two or more suggests the patient is drinking at risky levels. Further assessment should be recommended. T-ACE consists of three CAGE questions and a tolerance question (see Appendix 1). It is quick and easy to administer; a score of two or more indicates the patient may be drinking at risky levels, and should be further investigated. Both T-ACE and TWEAK are more specific and sensitive than either MAST or CAGE in identifying risky drinking levels (Russell et al 1994). TWEAK and T-ACE have been tested against CAGE with pregnant women in Brazil and both were found to be clearly more reliable than CAGE (Moraes et al. 2005). TWEAK and AUDIT also both perform better than the CAGE when validated against standard cut-off points on the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI)(Piccinelli et al. 1997b). Both Both T-ACE and TWEAK identify levels of drinking associated with a significant risk of fetal alcohol-related harms and, until new tools are developed to better reflect the NHMRC 2009 guidelines, can be recommended for use in this population. The ASSIST questionnaire that screens for alcohol and other substances can also be used in this population (World Health Organization 2002). Recommendation 3.7 In pregnant women, quantity–frequency estimation is recommended to detect any consumption of alcohol. T-ACE and TWEAK questionnaires may be used in this population to detect consumption at levels likely to place the foetus at significant risk of alcohol-related harm. Strength of recommendation D Level of evidence IV Physical examination for intoxication or signs of harmful use of alcohol Clinical presentations related to alcohol use cover a diverse spectrum, varying across health and welfare settings: a characteristic is multiplicity of problems across these domains. Certain physical disorders or signs are indicative of hazardous alcohol use. Common physical indicators include hypertension, a pattern of accidents, dilated facial capillaries, blood shot eyes, hand or tongue tremor, history of gastrointestinal disorders, duodenal ulcers and cognitive deficits (Saunders and Hanratty 1990; Skinner et al. 1986). Conditions such as liver cirrhosis and pancreatitis are commonly alcohol-induced. More subtle signs include job, financial, marriage and relationship problems, insomnia, depression and anxiety, and domestic violence (Scouller et al. 2000). Whilst the above problems are indicative of alcohol misuse, it should be noted that they are not conclusive, nor does their absence rule out the existence of hazardous alcohol consumption. 23 However, patients presenting with such problems should be screened for alcohol use, and if appropriate, proceed to a more comprehensive assessment. General practitioners and other health and welfare workers encountering these presentations should have screening systems in place. Biological markers of excessive alcohol consumption Biological markers of excessive alcohol use include direct measures of alcohol (e.g. alcohol in breath or blood) and a range of indirect indices such as liver enzymes activity, the levels of carbohydrate-deficient transferrin, characteristics of blood erythrocytes (e.g. mean corpuscular volume) and others. Measures of alcohol levels Alcohol concentrations may be measured in breath, blood and urine. Use of breath alcohol testing has been incorporated into Emergency Department practice by a number of groups (Cherpitel 1995; Robinson et al. 1992; Walsh and Macleod 1983) as part of screening and brief intervention programs. There is evidence that such programs prevent readmission with alcohol-related trauma (Longabaugh et al. 2001). False positive detection may result from technical failure but may also be rarely encountered in low levels due to endogenous production of ethanol (Spinucci et al. 2006). Endogenous production of ethanol by yeasts is accentuated by gastrointestinal stasis and dietary sucrose and is reduced by antibiotics (Baraona et al. 1986). Recommendation 3.8 Direct measures of alcohol in breath and/or blood can be useful markers of recent use and in the assessment of intoxication. Strength of recommendation D Level of evidence II Indirect Markers A number of biological markers can be used to detect alcohol consumption: gamma glutamiltransferase (GGT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), mean cell volume (MCV), carbohydrate-deficient transferrin (CDT) and uric acid (Conigrave et al. 2003; Hannuksela et al. 2007). Serum GGT, a liver enzyme, is elevated in 60-80 percent of alcohol dependent people (Conigrave et al. 2002). CDT has similar sensitivity to GGT but higher specificity (Scouller et al. 2000). CDT results vary depending on the laboratory method used (the more commonly used modified test is less sensitive than the original test) and consequently may be no more sensitive than GGT (Scouller et al. 2000). A multi-site international study comparing CDT, GGT and AST found that CDT was little better than GGT in detecting high- or intermediate-risk alcohol consumption, although both were better than AST. CDT and GGT levels were influenced by body mass index, sex, age, and smoking status (Conigrave et al 2002). False positives occur with most CDT test kits in the presence of advanced liver disease of any cause (Anton et al. 2001). 24 CDT and GGT are used in some clinical settings, however with a clinical detection rate of around 30-40 percent in some studies, they are not recommended as a standalone screening technique. Some CDT assay methods (i.e. liquid chromatography and isoelectric focusing) appear promising, but more research is required before firm conclusions are drawn (Scouller et al. 2000). The other generally available laboratory tests are less sensitive: for example, an elevated mean cell volume (MCV) is found in only five to twenty percent of alcoholic patients. The value of these tests in detecting non-alcohol dependent people with risky/harmful alcohol consumption is correspondingly lower.The combination of a number of biological markers can provide a rate of detection above the rate achievable by any biochemical marker alone, with a sensitivity of 78 percent (Vanclay et al. 1991). However, combinations of tests are not recommended for clinical use because of reduced specificity (Musshoff and Daldrup1998). Recommendation 3.9 Indirect biological markers (liver function tests or carbohydrate-deficient transferrin) should only be used as an adjunct to other screening measures as they have lower sensitivity and specificity in detecting at-risk people than structured questionnaire approaches (such as AUDIT). Strength of recommendation A Level of evidence Ia Other Screening methods for binge drinking: The Quantity-Frequency Index (QFI) and the Retrospective Diary A comparison of a 30-day quantity-frequency index with a seven day retrospective diary and item three on AUDIT showed that the quantity-frequency question was comparable to the AUDIT item in detecting binge drinking (95 percent positive predictive value). All three methods were administered using a computer. The retrospective diary requires patients to identify the type and quantity of alcoholic beverage consumed beginning with the previous day and work back through each day of the week. It was less sensitive than the QFI (ranging from 23.1 percent to 36.7 percent) (Shakeshaft et al. 1999). The quantity-frequency question asked respondents to indicate the number of occasions during the previous 30 days on which they had consumed four different levels of standard drinks (defined by the NHMRC as the equivalent of 10g of ethanol) (NHMRC 2001). Item 3 (AUDIT-3) asks “how often do you have six or more drinks on one occasion?” Possible responses are “never”, “less than monthly”, “monthly”, “weekly”, and “daily or almost daily”. Although the retrospective diary took longer to administer than the QFI (mean completion times of three min, 38 sec and one min, 41 sec respectively) it provides two important pieces of information: weekly and binge consumption. Further, although the retrospective diary was inferior in detecting binge drinking, the QFI underestimated overall drinking relative to the retrospective diary (Shakeshaft et al. 1999). The researchers suggested that there is greater potential for improving the reliability and validity of the RD relative to the QFI. 25 Comprehensive Clinical Assessment A comprehensive clinical assessment should be conducted before developing a comprehensive treatment plan for those drinkers who have not responded to advice to reduce their consumption of alcohol, have severe alcohol-related problems and in patients who asked for or need help to deal with their drinking. Assessment should combine a variety of techniques for gathering information about the patient, including diagnostic interviews, physical examination, biological markers and clinical investigations as well as collateral information from significant others. The areas for assessment include: motivation to change, alcohol consumption pattern and severity of dependence, alcohol-related harms (such as physical and psychological health problems, relationship problems, occupational problems and legal problems), family factors and cognitive functioning. The need for comprehensive assessment must be balanced with the desire to engage and retain the patient in treatment. If the patient perceives that little or no progress is being made in the first sessions, their motivation to stay in treatment may reduce. Purpose of assessment Assessment has three important functions: a) to assist the patient and clinician to identify shared treatment goals and develop a treatment plan; b) to engage the patient in the assessment and treatment process; c) to motivate the patient to change drinking patterns and related behaviour. The patient’s perception of a gap between their goals and their present state may improve motivation for change (Miller and Rollnick 2002; Miller 1995). Recommendation 3.10 Assessment should include patient interview, structured questionnaires, physical examination, clinical investigations and collateral history. The length of the assessment should be balanced against the need to keep the patient in treatment and address immediate concerns. Strength of recommendation D Level of evidence IV Diagnostic interviews The initial assessment procedure ideally takes the form of an open-ended, semistructured interview where the patient and the clinician compile a narrative history, using questionnaires as appropriate and necessary. This has the advantage of clinician involvement which is personal and responsive to the drinker, rather than mechanical and impersonal. Yet, it should maintain a purposeful structure so as to avoid a vague, directionless discussion of the drinker’s history. Standardised questionnaires are not often used, but a number of validated 26 instruments may be useful in selected cases. Structured diagnostic interviews are available but infrequently used in clinical practice. Examples include: Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI), the Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry (SCAN) and the Alcohol Use Disorder and Associated Disabilities Interview Schedule-Alcohol/Drug-Revised (AUDADIS-ADR). The Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) is a standardised and comprehensive interview designed to assess psychological disorders against the International Classification of Diseases (ICD) and DSM-IV diagnoses (World Health Organisation 1990). It must be administered or supervised by a fully trained mental health professional who has undertaken recognised CIDI training. As well as substance use disorders, it covers eating disorders, organic mental disorders, schizophrenic disorders, paranoid disorders, affective disorders, anxiety disorders, somatisation disorders, dissociative disorders, and psychosexual disorders. WHO also recently produced the World Mental Health (WMH) Survey Initiative version (Kessler and Ustun 2004). However, one study found that CIDI performed poorly, especially in diagnosing social phobia and post-traumatic stress disorder, compared to clinical assessment (Komiti et al. 2001). The CIDI, the Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry (SCAN) and the Alcohol Use Disorder and Associated Disabilities Interview Schedule-Alcohol/DrugRevised (AUDADIS-ADR) all have reasonable test-retest reliability and diagnostic concordance for alcohol dependence, but not for risky alcohol use or abuse. Assessing level and history of alcohol consumption The assessment process should gather information about the drinking history, including how the drinking pattern evolved, fluctuated and/or progressed over time. The history should include the daily average consumption (grams per day or standard drinks per day) of alcohol, the number of drinking days per week (or month) and the pattern of drinking. There is limited community recognition of a standard drink (Kaskutas and Kerr 2008) (Gill et al. 2007). Based on cumulative population self-report, overall alcohol use is under-reported, but interviewing style influences the accuracy of self-report (Stockwell et al. 2004; Stockwell et al. 2008). For example, the Lifetime Drinking History that examines alcohol use throughout the life span has been shown to be a valid assessment (Koenig et al. 2009). There are several structured methods available to perform assessment of alcohol consumption, although these are not routinely used in clinical practice. The Timeline Follow-back Method (TLFB) helps to obtain an accurate, retrospective account of alcohol consumption over a particular period, typically three months. This method requires the patient and clinician to fill in a blank calendar with a detailed description of alcohol consumption. The patient is first asked to note all events that may assist with recall, for example public holidays or significant personal events. Any personal diaries may help with recall. The patient then fills in the drinking days, noting the amount consumed, and perhaps also the number of hours of consumption. This can be extended to obtain a life-time drinking history which is useful for research and occasionally for other purposes, but is time consuming and of moderate accuracy (Sobell and Sobell 1992). 27 Recommendation 3.11 A quantitative alcohol history should be recorded. Strength of recommendation A Level of evidence I Assessing motivation According to the model developed by Prochaska and DiClemente (Prochaska et al. 1992), readiness for change may be conceptualised as involving five (or six if precontemplation is included) stages: AC TION PREPARATION M AINTENANC E C O N T EM PLAT I O N RELAPSE Design: Author • • • • • • A pre-contemplative stage, during which the person is not considering changing A contemplative stage, during which the person becomes more aware of the benefits of changing, but is ambivalent about changing and does not act A preparation stage, during which the person formulates plans for change, may take steps to monitor their problem behaviour and initiate behaviour change An action stage, during which the person will engage in active attempts to moderate or to cease the behaviour A maintenance stage, which occurs after the behaviour has been moderated or stopped but during which the person could relapse and return to an earlier stage A relapse stage, when the individual resumes or even increases the intensity or frequency of the previous behaviour The model, also known as the transtheoretical model (TTM), includes change processes and levels of change. However, the assessment tool’s primary purpose is to measure stages of change and our discussion is limited to this aspect. The TTM 28 theory has been tested widely, most often with smoking cessation, and correlational data supports its predictive validity (DiClemente et al. 1991); however this has recently been challenged by others (Dijkstra et al. 2006; West 2005). There is only slim evidence of its ability to predict treatment outcome with alcohol dependent patients. Project MATCH assessed readiness to change using a subset of the University of Rhode Island Change Assessment (URICA) scale, and hypothesised that patients low in motivation would do better in the motivational enhancement therapy than in cognitive behaviour therapy. On an analysis of data, overall a median of only 3% of the drinking outcome at follow-up could be attributed to treatment; however the effect appeared to be present before most of the treatment had been delivered, with the zero treatment group showing the most improvement. The long-term results found that patient-treatment matching was unsuccessful and that the three treatments produced essentially the same results (Cutler and Fishbain 2005). Callaghan’s additional analysis found that, contrary to expectations, the individuals who made a progressive stage transition to action-oriented stages did not manifest greater improvements in drinking than those remaining in preparatory stages (Callaghan et al. 2007). A similar effect, that greater readiness to change was not predictive of reduced alcohol consumption, was found in a prospective cohort study (Williams et al. 2007), where patient confidence in their ability to change was more predictive of a favourable outcome. Others have challenged the concept that welldefined ‘stages’ actually exist; West’s criticism partly rests on the premise that people sometimes change their behaviour on strong situational determinants without any prior evidence of motivation (West 2005). In an Australian study of brief interventions, heavy drinkers who were less ready to change did better with a brief motivational interviewing intervention than with a skills based intervention; however, those classified as ready to change did not do better in the skills-based intervention (Heather et al. 1996). In a more recent study of hospital patients, Saitz et al found that brief motivational counselling did not reduce alcohol consumption significantly among the intervention group of heavy drinkers (1.8 drinks per day) compared to ‘usual care’ patients (2.6 drinks per day) at 12 months; neither did it reduce the need for alcohol assistance in the intervention group at 3 months. However, both groups reduced their drinking and this may be attributable to the screening and feedback process in itself (Saitz et al. 2007). Results of these studies suggest that factors other than ‘stage of change’ (e.g. confidence, peer group behaviour) play an important part in behaviour change and must be considered in all assessments. However, treatment planning should take motivational state into account so as to maintain and enhance motivation to control excessive drinking. Recommendation 3.12 Motivation to change should be assessed through direct questioning, although expressed motivation has only a moderate impact on treatment outcome. Strength of recommendation B Level of evidence II 29 Assessing dependence and alcohol-related harms When assessing the patient’s dependence on alcohol and the related harms he/she may be consequently suffering, clinicians should examine patient’s severity of dependence, the consequences of drinking and any previous experiences of abstinence and treatment. Severity of dependence DSM-IV criteria or ICD-10 diagnoses are more often currently used to define alcohol dependence than the older questionnaires (American Psychiatric Association 2000; World Health Organization 1992). A number of instruments are available to assess the severity of alcohol dependence. However there is little current research on some of the questionnaires described below. The Severity of Alcohol Dependence Questionnaire (SADQ-C) is most useful as an assessment tool with problem drinkers rather than as a screening tool (Stockwell et al. 1994). It takes about five minutes to complete and has five subscales: physical withdrawal symptoms, affective withdrawal symptoms, craving and withdrawal relief drinking, consumption and reinstatement. An addition, the Impaired Control Scale (ICQ) part of SADQ assesses the extent to which subjects perceive themselves to be out of control with respect to their alcohol use (Marsh et al. 2002). The original SADQ had good concordance with clinician ratings of alcohol dependence (Stockwell et al. 1979), high test-retest reliability, and significant correlations with observed withdrawal severity and narrowing of drinking repertoire (Stockwell et al. 1983) A cut-off score of 30 was found to indicate severe dependence. However, a lower cut-off score may be appropriate for females due to the contribution of consumption questions to the total score. The shortened version of the SADQ (SADQ-C) demonstrated good reliability and validity in a general (Australian) population sample (Stockwell et al. 1994). A key difference between the SADQ and the SADQ-C is that the latter focuses on the last three months, rather than a ‘recent period’ of heavy drinking. The Short Alcohol Dependence Data Questionnaire (SADD), a 15-item questionnaire, is similar to the SADQ, although less focused on the experience of withdrawal symptoms. The SADD and the SADQ are thought to measure the same theoretical construct, i.e. the alcohol dependence syndrome (Raistrick et al. 1983; Heather 1995). The Severity of Dependence Scale (SDS) was the subject of a recent Australian study aiming to determine a cut-off point that discriminated between the presence and absence of a DSM-IV diagnosis of alcohol dependence. It was found that a score of 3 or above on the SDS was the optimal cut-off to detect alcohol dependence (Lawrinson et al. 2007). The Alcohol Dependence Scale (ADS), a 25-item questionnaire, is designed to identify and assess alcohol abuse and dependence. It assesses four aspects of the alcohol dependence syndrome: loss of behavioural control, psychoperceptual withdrawal symptoms, psychophysical withdrawal symptoms and obsessive- 30 compulsive drinking style. The validation study for the ADS reported high correlations with daily consumption of alcohol, lifetime use of alcohol, social consequences from drinking, prior treatment for alcohol abuse, use of alcohol to change mood, feelings of guilt over drinking, and MAST scores (Skinner and Holm 1984). For alcohol use disorders, a cut-off score of six or seven had a sensitivity of 0.97 and 0.75 specificity. An early study found high correlations between the ADS and the MAST, with an ADS score of eight or nine accurately classifying 88 percent of patients with an alcohol use disorder (Ross et al. 1990). The ADS was also found to correlate well with a structured diagnostic interview amongst a sample of homeless women (Chantarujikapong et al. 1997). A more recent study identified nine of the 25 ADS items as reliably discriminating between those with no or minimal alcohol problems and those with symptoms of excessive or abusive drinking, in a sample of high-risk drinkers mandated to a domestic violence program (Kahler et al. 2003). However, another study evaluated the concurrent validity of the ADS as a general measure of severity and the screening accuracy of the total score and subscales to detect DSM-IV physiological dependence, with patients entering the COMBINE study. These authors conclude that the ADS reflected variation in symptom severity, but did not adequately identify physiological dependence or withdrawal in treatment-seeking individuals with DSMIV alcohol dependence (Saxon et al. 2007). Consequences of drinking The clinician should assess the range of problems the patient has encountered as a result of their drinking. In addition to physical and mental health, the patient’s drinking may have led to family problems, detrimentally affected work performance, social relations or financial stability. Alcohol-related offences such as drink–driving are also relevant. A specific crisis in one of these areas may have been the impetus for seeking help, and this should be explored. Discussion of the ‘less good things’ about drinking can enhance the patient’s readiness for change. Alcohol harms are usually assessed using unstructured clinical interviewing. The Alcohol Problems Questionnaire (APQ) is a reliable instrument that covers eight domains: friends, money, police, physical, affective, marital, children and work (Drummond 1990). Previous experiences of abstinence and treatment Previous episodes of abstinence or reduced drinking and treatment exposure are important to record and understand as it helps to plan future treatment, both in terms of what worked and what did not, as well as to clarify patient experiences, tolerances. Recommendation 3.13 Assessment of the patient’s alcohol-related problems, diagnosis and severity of dependence should be recorded. Strength of recommendation S Level of evidence Assessing physical well-being 31 According to the professional background and skills of the health professional, all patients should be assessed regarding their physical health. If there are any active medical issues, it is appropriate to encourage the patient to see his/her GP or other medical practitioner. If there are no significant symptoms but the alcohol history places the patient at risk of medical illness, medical referral for physical examination and blood tests should also be recommended. Medical practitioners should conduct a thorough assessment, including history, examination and clinical investigations. Physical examination should at least assess signs intoxication or withdrawal, signs of liver disease, vital signs (temp, blood pressure, pulse) and screen for organic brain damage (Miller et al. 1988). There is demonstrated value in the simple act of feeding back to the patient the results of the medical examination and any clinical investigations. For example, discussion about the implications of abnormal liver function tests has been shown to reduce subsequent alcohol consumption.The Drinker’s Check-up is an example of a computer software program that relies heavily on this motivating function of feeding back objective information (Hester et al. 2005; Miller et al. 1988). The advantages of feedback are less clear when the medical tests show normal results. However, the whole assessment process should allow patients to assess accurately the degree of their alcohol- related problems and normal medical results should not detract from this process. The issue of normal results can be looked at within the context of a clinical interaction and is further discussed in the motivational interviewing material in Chapter 6: Psychosocial interventions. Recommendation 3.14 Assessment for alcohol-related physical health problems should be routinely conducted. A medical practitioner should assess patients at risk of physical health problems. Strength of recommendation S Level of evidence Assessing psychological and psychiatric disorders Alcohol use disorders are associated with a range of mental health problems. It is therefore critical to assess for comorbid disorders and symptoms, particularly depression and anxiety symptoms. A range of short questionnaires is available for assessing mental health disorders. Around one in five (20 percent) Australians with alcohol dependence also have an anxiety disorder, whilst 24 percent have an affective (mood) disorder. Heavy alcohol use is also associated with other substance misuse, greater levels of psychological distress and high levels of psychosis (Teesson et al. 2000; Cleary et al. 2008). Patients with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) also have increased rates of alcohol-related disorders, and both of these may also be associated with a range of personality disorders (American Psychiatric Asscoation 2000). However, care must be taken not to make a personality disorder diagnosis based solely on behaviours that are a result of alcohol intoxication or withdrawal. Thus, it is critical to assess for comorbid disorders and symptoms, and suicidal ideation. Referral for further specialist assessment may be required if significant mental problems are suspected. 32 A limited range of measures of mental health is outlined below. Their use will depend to some extent on the setting (i.e. the type of patients being seen; the amount of time available for assessment; the skill level/qualifications of the clinician). However, at least a brief assessment for depression and anxiety should be routinely carried out for patients with a suspected alcohol use disorder such as the Kessler 10 Symptom Scale or the General Health Questionnaire (Kessler et al. 2002; Goldberg 1972). The following list is a sample of the available assessment tools. For a more extensive review of instruments, see Dawe et al (2002). • The Kessler 10 Symptom Scale is a scale of psychological distress, suitable for use as an outcome measure in people with anxiety and depressive disorders (Kessler et al. 2002). • The General Health Questionnaire (GHQ) is designed as a screening instrument to identify likely non-psychotic psychiatric ‘cases’ in general health settings (Goldberg 1972). • The Short Form 12 (SF-12) assesses possible limitations in both physical and mental health (Ware et al. 1996). • The Beck Depression Inventory measures depression and its symptoms (Beck and Steer 1987a). • The Beck Hopelessness Scale measures hopelessness and negative views about the future, as well as being an indicator of suicide attempts (Beck and Steer 1987b). • The Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Scale measures current anxiety (state anxiety) and a more enduring personality characteristic (trait anxiety) (Speilberger et al. 1983). • The Social Anxiety Interaction Scale and the Social Phobia Scale are useful for assessing social phobia (Mattick and Clarke 1998). • The Modified PTSD Symptom Scale is a brief (17-item) measure of post traumatic stress disorder symptoms (Falsetti et al. 1993). Note: The Kessler 10, the GHQ, the SF-12, the Mattick scales and the Modified PTSD Symptom Scale are all in the public domain. The other scales need to be purchased. Recommendation 3.15 Assessment for mental health problems, such as anxiety, depressive symptoms and suicidal risk, should be routine, including mental stage examination. Referral for further specialist assessment may be needed if significant mental problems are suspected. Strength of recommendation S Level of evidence Assessment of cognitive functioning There is a high prevalence of cognitive dysfunction among people with alcohol problems (Cook 2000). It is estimated that more than 50 percent of patients over the age of 45 who have lengthy histories of drinking at risky levels will show some degree of cognitive dysfunction, although this may not be permanent (Lishman 1987). Between 75 and 100 percent of patients admitted to alcohol treatment facilities perform below normal for their age groups on tests of cognitive function (Goldman 1995). 33 Many patients can report that there has been a decline in memory function as shown by a number of changes in memory ability. However, some commentators caution against relying upon the self-report of patients, especially in the case of damage to the frontal lobes, as they may not be aware that the changes have occurred (Lennane 1986). Wernicke–Korsakoff’s syndrome is one of the forms of alcohol-related cognitive deficit, and has high prevalence in alcohol dependent people. It is a potentially fatal neurological disorder caused by thiamine (Vitamin B1) deficiency (see Chapters 5 and 9). Other medical causes of cognitive impairment include cerebrovascular disease, dementia, Alzheimer’s disease, chronic subdural haematoma, cerebral neoplasm, syphilis and HIV/AIDS. While not the most common form of alcohol-related cognitive deficit, Wernicke Korsakoff’s syndrome (WKS) can have severe consequences for its sufferers (Donnino et al. 2007). WKS is characterised most notably by cognitive impairments in memory (i.e. anterograde amnesia) as well as deficits in abstraction and problem solving. However, overall intelligence usually remains intact. The acute phase (Wernicke’s encephalopathy) is characterised by confusion, ocular and gait disturbances, apathy and amnesia. Once this acute phase resolves, some patients are left with an irreversible and dense amnesia, usually accompanied by apathy (the chronic phase, known as Korsakoff syndrome) (Thomson and Marshall 2006a; Thomson and Marshall 2006b; Donnino et al. 2007). Autopsy studies in the 1980s showed that Australia had amongst the highest recorded prevalence of WKS in the world, 80% of which cases had not been diagnosed during life (Harper et al. 1989), although this rate of under-diagnosis is still common today (Donnino et al. 2007). The introduction of thiamine into bread flour in 1991 dramatically reduced the incidence of WKS in Sydney hospitals, most notably in the two years following its introduction (Ma and Truswell 1995), although some doubts were voiced at the time about ‘mass medication’. The condition is much more frequent in alcohol dependent individuals than in others (although by no means confined to alcohol drinkers) with a prevalence of around 12 to 13 percent. There is also some evidence that some single symptoms of WKS are present in around one-third of alcohol-dependent people, and that lower estimates are due to the difficulty in diagnosing WKS (Cook 2000). Some cognitive deficits such as impairment in verbal abilities, visual-spatial abilities, problem-solving skills and memory often improve with a period of abstinence from alcohol (Goldman 1995). Screening instruments for cognitive Impairment A brief assessment of cognitive functioning should be an integral part of the assessment procedure and results should be used to guide treatment planning. If significant impairment is suspected, a more thorough assessment by an appropriately qualified professional is indicated. For the non-psychologist seeking a quick assessment of cognitive dysfunction, the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) is helpful (Kurlowicz and Wallace 1999). However, among elderly Australians aged 65 and over, taken from the National Mental Health and Wellbeing Survey, total scores on the MMSE were influenced by 34 education, ethnic background, language spoken at home, socio-economic status, occupation, prevalence of a mood disorder, sex and age (Anderson et al. 2007), and the authors suggest appropriate cut-off points to take some of these variables into account. One study among alcohol-dependent, psychiatric patients, and those with dual diagnosis found higher rates of cognitive impairment among dual diagnosis patients compared to the schizophrenia or alcohol patients, and age was a considerable confounding factor. Despite its common usage, global MMSE scores were insensitive to the cognitive impairments typically found in these clinical groups (Manning et al. 2007). Therefore the MMSE should be used with caution, and referral to a specialist for further assessment is recommended. For a more extensive assessment, a variety of tests have been shown to be sensitive to alcohol-related brain damage. These tests include the Rey Complex Figure Test, designed to test perceptual organisation and visual memory, the Rey Auditory-Verbal Learning Test which measures verbal memory recall and recognition and the Trail Making Test which tests visual concepts and visuomotor tracking. However, some of these tests have very limited normative data available and they are not specific to alcohol-related brain damage, so that their confident interpretation is made difficult. Some of the tests relevant to the detection of cognitive dysfunction (e.g. Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-III (WAIS-III)) should only be administered by psychologists who have been trained in their interpretation. Two subtests are especially useful in this context, although the entire WAIS-III should be administered to determine if there is significant scatter among the various subtests, rather than relying upon a single subtest result. The most relevant subtests of the WAIS-III are the Digit Symbol subtest and the Block Design subtest (Ryan et al. 2000). The Wechsler logical testing materials are available, depending upon professional qualifications, from the Australian Council for Educational Research and the Psychological Corporation. The Clock Drawing Test is another widely used screening test for cognitive dysfunction that can be recommended but to achieve optimal performance (Pinto and Peters 2009). Caution needs to be applied to ensure testing is not conducted while the patient is intoxicated or undergoing detoxification, or while affected by benzodiazepines or other sedatives. As well, the clinician must be aware of other factors, such as concomitant anxiety or depression, when interpreting tests of cognitive dysfunction. Recommendation 3.16 Screening for cognitive dysfunction should be conducted if the clinician suspects the patient has cognitive impairment. Referral to a clinical psychologist or neuropsychologist for further testing may be appropriate. The need for formal cognitive assessment is generally deferred until the patient has achieved several weeks of abstinence. Strength of recommendation S Level of evidence 35 Gathering collateral information Excessive alcohol use and its consequences are stigmatised problems that many patients are reluctant to acknowledge. Collateral interviews play a central role where the patient does not self-report their use of alcohol or its consequences. Collateral information is particularly needed where a discrepancy appears likely. There are significant barriers that limit access to collateral reports, including legal (privacy legislation limits the distribution of personal information without consent), ethical and financial (the enquiry can be time consuming). Patients may object to such enquiries and the therapeutic relationship may be disrupted. Recommendation 3.17 Collateral reports should be incorporated in the assessment where inconsistencies appear likely, with the patient’s permission where possible, and subject to legal and ethical boundaries. Strength of recommendation S Level of evidence Family factors Patients should be encouraged to explore relevant family issues during assessment including the relationships with their spouse or partner, their parents, their children, and other significant people in their lives including any attributions about the effects of the patient’s drinking. Domestic violence and sexual abuse, either as perpetrator and/or victim, are common and serious problems associated with alcohol and other substance use. Because of the sensitivity of these issues, it may not be appropriate to raise them in the first contact session unless there is reason to believe there may be a current safety risk. It is important to determine whether the patient wishes to discuss these issues. Specialist assessment and intervention is typically required. When it is possible the clinician should interview the spouse or the family members. The family interview is an opportunity for family members to ask questions and to voice their concerns. It may also help the family see the drinking problem in perspective. While this kind of complex information is best obtained by clinical interview, Alcohol Problems Questionnaire has a subscale assessing family problems and one assessing marital/relationship problems (see Appendix) (Drummond 1990). Recommendation 3.18 The social support for the patient should be assessed and this information should be incorporated into the management plan. 3.19 Clinicians should determine if the patient cares for any children under the age of 16, and act according to jurisdictional guidelines if there are any concerns about child welfare. Strength of recommendation S Level of evidence S 36 Assessing risk Full risk assessment involves assessment of a number of aspects of safety of the patient or others, including suicide risk, violence risk, physical safety (for example, self-care, risk of accidental injury), childcare, driving and workplace safety. Detailed considerations of full risk assessment are beyond the scope of these guidelines. In many cases, intervention to help the patient abstain from alcohol will substantially reduce many risks. However, where concern about safety of the patient or others remains, specialist consultation should be advised. Recommendation 3.20 In the event of suspected or continuing concerns over safety of the patient or others, specialist consultation is advised. Strength of recommendation S Level of evidence Treatment Planning As part of treatment planning it is important to identify suitable interventions, set goals, and plan long-term follow-up aftercare to prevent relapse. Identifying suitable interventions and developing treatment care plans The factors that promote change in individuals are broader than treatment alone, but treatment can help patients change by learning to think and act differently in relation to drinking (Orford et al. 2006). The cumulative evidence from the results of the large scale treatment trials, such as Project MATCH (Project MATCH Research Group 1997) and the United Kingdom Alcohol Treatment Trial (UKATT Research Team 2005) ssuggests that there are a range of effective interventions and treatment approaches for alcohol disorders. No single intervention is effective for all people with alcohol problems. There may be treatment processes that reduce the likelihood of finding large differential effects between empirically supported interventions. Assessment and feedback A comprehensive assessment is fundamental in treatment planning. Feedback of assessment information to patients, that is sharing this information in plain, nonjudgemental language, should be standard practice in a collaborative and motivationally oriented approach to treatment (Miller and Rollnick 2002), and can increase the patient’s understanding, motivation to change and engagement in the treatment process. Recommendation 3.21 Assessment should lead to a clear, mutually acceptable comprehensive treatment plan that structures specific interventions to meet the patient’s needs. Strength of recommendation D Level of evidence IV 37 Engaging the patient in treatment Patient engagement may be viewed in terms of intensity and duration of treatment participation. Higher levels of engagement are predictive of positive treatment outcomes and are, in turn, contingent upon patient, clinician and clinic characteristics. • Patient characteristics include pre-treatment motivation, severity of disorder and prior treatment experiences, strength of therapeutic relationship, perceived helpfulness of the treatment services. • Clinician factors include degree of empathy, therapeutic relationship and counselling skills. • Clinic factors include removal of practical access barriers such as transportation, fees, hours, physical surroundings, and perceptions about other patients of the service. In addition to identifying clinical disorders and effective interventions, negotiation of treatment goals requires clarification of the patient’s insight, values and expectation. There is also evidence that providing the patient with a choice of treatment options improves treatment retention (Rokke et al. 1999). Treatment adherence and completion are prominent issues in alcohol and other drug treatment and the factors that improve it are not yet well understood (Mattson and Friedman 1994; Mattson et al. 1998). A focus in early interactions with patients should be on maximising engagement with the professional and the service and fostering a sense of collaboration (Zweben 2002; Zweben and Zuckoff 2002). Central to the provision of any intervention is a strong bond and therapeutic alliance alliance between patient and clinician (Shand et al. 2003). Basic counselling “micro skills” including warmth, empathy and optimism, and strong interpersonal skills are associated with better retention in treatment and indirectly with better treatment outcomes (Shand et al. 2003; Miller and Rollnick 2002). Goal setting: abstinence, moderation and reduced drinking Identifying and agreeing upon treatment goals regarding alcohol consumption is an important process for many patients. For patients with no or low levels of dependence, and who are not experiencing significant alcohol related harms, a goal of moderation may be achievable (Sitharthan et al. 1997; Heather 1995). For patients with severe alcohol dependence, and/or those presenting with associated problems such as organ damage, cognitive impairment and co-existing mental health problems, the most realistic drinking goal is likely to be abstinence (Edwards et al. 2003). Often patients may wish to drink at levels that can continue to cause harm, or may not be realistically sustained. Several options can be considered when the patient’s 38 expressed preference for moderation is at odds with clinician advice (Miller and Page 1991; Jarvis et al. 2005). Options include • to decline assistance explaining that it would be unethical for you to support your patient’s goal. However, this approach is unlikely to engage and retain the patient in treatment; • to accept the patient’s goal on a provisional basis for a stipulated period of time, and: 1. negotiate a period of abstinence (e.g. one to three months) with the rationale that this would allow the patient to get through withdrawal (if relevant), provide some much needed recovery from the effects of alcohol, and provide time to acquire new skills that can be applied to learning moderation (controlled drinking strategies); 2. agree on a gradual tapering down of drinking towards abstinence, setting realistic, intermediate goals, and monitoring the number of drinks consumed daily; 3. negotiate a period of trial moderation, with daily drink monitoring and controlled drinking strategies (coping skills training). Central to this process is ongoing review and monitoring of drinking against identified goals. If these goals are too difficult to achieve, then abstinence may seem a more reasonable goal, and this should be clearly identified and agreed upon with the patient from the outset. Interventions with some patients require protracted but important negotiation for goal setting (Miller and Page 1991; Jarvis et al. 2005). Recommendation 3.22 Patients should be involved in goal setting and treatment planning. Strength of recommendation A Level of evidence I Development of treatment care plan Information obtained during assessment is used to develop a case formulation with patients, that entails a shared understanding of alcohol and other drug problems, coexisting health and social problems and other concerns, and to formulate hypotheses about their development, maintenance and inter-relationships (Baker et al. 2007). Any treatment plan must address the patient’s presenting problem. Often, the presenting problem is alcohol-related (e.g. liver disease, depression, domestic violence), and it will be necessary to also address the patient’s alcohol use in order for comprehensive and longer term changes to take effect. However, the sequence of interventions is often determined by immediate needs (e.g. hospitalisation for hepatic failure or suicidal attempt, emergency shelter to avoid further violence). Treatment options should be discussed with patients (and their families or carers as relevant), identifying • what is involved with each treatment approach, • the likely outcomes (including potential adverse outcomes), and • provide the patient the opportunity to raise questions or concerns. As in any health care intervention, informed consent is essential. A stepped care model is proposed that serves as a guide to clinical decision making and treatment planning (Sobell and Sobell 2000). Stepped care identifies that 39 patients should be offered the least “restrictive” intervention appropriate to their presentation. Should the first intervention prove to be insufficient to achieve the agreed treatment goals for the patient, the next level of intensity of treatment should be offered until the desired treatment goals are achieved. This approach requires regular review and monitoring of the patient, their response to treatment and any changes in their presentation (ie continuous assessment). Relapse prevention, aftercare and long-term follow-up Relapse is a common problem in alcohol treatment, with approximately 60% of treated patients relapsing to problematic drinking within the first 12 months (Connors et al. 1996). It has long been observed that specific situations or mood states are associated with relapse. Factors include: negative emotional states (e.g. frustration, anger, anxiety, depression or anger); interpersonal conflict (e.g. relationships with partner, work colleagues, friends); and direct or indirect social pressure to drink (Marlatt and George 1984). Relapse prevention addresses itself to the maintenance of change, and to the development of self-efficacy and coping skills (Edwards et al. 2003). Relapse prevention can be assisted through the use of medication, including alcohol pharmacotherapies for reducing alcohol use (e.g. naltrexone, acamprosate, disulfiram), or medication directed towards addressing psychological problems such as anxiety or depression (See Chapter 6). Aftercare or extended care refers to the period immediately following intensive treatment (See Chapter 11). Aftercare acknowledges the fact that severe alcohol problems are prone to recurrence and that maintenance of change may require some ongoing monitoring and assistance beyond the active phase of initial treatment. It is particularly suited to people with severe dependence whose likelihood of relapse is greater. It consists of planned telephone or face-to-face contact following a period of treatment to discuss progress and any problems that may have arisen since the end of active treatment. Structured aftercare is more effective than patient-initiated, unstructured aftercare (See Chapter 11). Many clinicians may use referral to self-help programs (such as Alcoholic Anonymous and SMART Recovery) as forms of continuing care, although aftercare generally refers to contact with the treating clinician or service with the goal of maintaining treatment gains. Often primary care workers (e.g. general practitioners) can provide this function through ongoing follow-up of other health issues (See Chapter 8). Recommendation 3.23 Treatment plans should be modified according to reassessment and response to interventions (stepped care approach). 3.24 Evidence-based treatment should be offered in a clinical setting with the appropriate resources based on the patient’s needs. Strength of recommendation S Level of evidence S 40 References Aertgeerts, B, Buntinx F, Ansoms S et al. 2001, Screening properties of questionnaires and laboratory tests for the detection of alcohol abuse or dependence in a general practice population. Br J Gen Pract 51(464): 206217. Agabio, R, Marras P, Gessa GL et al. 2007, Alcohol use disorders, and at-risk drinking in patients affected by a mood disorder, in Cagliari, Italy: sensitivity and specificity of different questionnaires. Alcohol Alcoho 42(6): 575-581. AIHW 2008, 2007 National Drug Strategy Household Survey. 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In: Miller, WR and S Rollnick (eds) Motivational interviewing: preparing people for change.New York: The Guilford Press. 50 Chapter 4 Brief interventions Brief interventions represent an important and effective way to reduce alcohol related harm, especially in primary care (Kaner et al. 2007, 2009). This treatment strategy has been shown to be as effective for heavy drinkers as more intensive interventions, more cost-effective due to their length and can be used in a wide variety of primary care settings to reach a large number of patients. Significant reductions of up to 30% in alcohol consumption have been achieved in a variety of health care settings, including hospital and general practice (Bertholet et al. 2005; Kaner et al. 2007) (Kaner et al. 2009). Brief interventions in primary care are also cost-effective (Wutzke et al. 2001). What are brief interventions? Brief interventions comprise clinical interventions that include screening and assessment, and provide information and advice designed to achieve a reduction in risky alcohol consumption, and/or alcohol-related problems (Bien et al. 1993). They typically target individuals drinking at risky levels before they develop into abuse or dependence disorders (Babor et al. 2000). Opportunistic brief interventions are usually delivered to people who have not sought help for a problem with alcohol but are identified as drinking at risk levels via screening. They are viewed as a component of a public health approach to alcoholrelated harm; at least one study showed long-term effects of up to 9 years (Nilssen 2004), and while the effect shown in another study had faded at 10 years (Wutzke et al. 2002), this is still a worthwhile strategy. However, despite years of research and positive evidence for their effect, routine screening, identification of alcohol use disorders, and the implementation of brief intervention remains remarkably low (Cheeta et al. 2008). Who to target for brief interventions? Brief interventions are a recognised treatment approach to responding to individuals with risky patterns of drinking who may or may not already have experienced alcohol related harms, but without a diagnosis of alcohol dependence (Kaner et al. 2007). There is strong scientific evidence for their effectiveness in reducing levels of alcohol intake in people who drink above recommended levels and are at risk of developing alcohol related problems, but do not seek treatment (Moyer et al. 2002). This effectiveness has been demonstrated across a variety of settings. Meta-analyses In the first meta-analysis of brief interventions in various settings, Bien, Miller and Tonigan pooled the findings of 18 studies that compared opportunistic brief interventions to a control condition and 13 studies comparing less-intensive treatments with more extended therapy (Bien et al. 1993). The mean pooled effect size (values above zero indicate higher effect) for brief interventions versus a control condition favoured brief interventions (0.38), indicating that brief interventions were more effective than usual care (no intervention) in reducing alcohol consumption. The mean pooled effect size for less-intensive treatment versus extended treatment was negligible (0.06), indicating that the interventions were effective regardless of 51 intensity. However, in this review, mean effect sizes were not weighted by study size/variance and no homogeneity tests or significance tests for overall effect sizes were conducted, thus making it unclear as to whether the types of studies examined were comparing similar treatment interventions. Nevertheless, this was the first metaanalysis that has clearly demonstrated that brief intervention is effective in reducing alcohol consumption when compared to no intervention. Wilk et al reviewed 12 randomised controlled trials of brief interventions (i.e. less than 1 hour) focusing on studies with adult participants and sample sizes greater than thirty, conducted in a variety of settings (Wilk et al. 1997). Only eight of these reported outcome data that allowed calculation of individual odds ratios. These odds ratios were calculated based on the estimate that the heavy drinkers had moderated their drinking six or 12 months after intervention compared to the untreated control group. The odds ratio was 1.95. Heavy drinkers were defined as those who were drinking more than 2 or 3 drinks daily, but were non-dependent. This level of drinking is shown to increase the risk of accidents, injuries and subsequent alcohol-related problems (Saunders et al. 1993). Conclusions were that heavy drinkers who received an intervention were twice as likely to moderate their drinking 6 to12 months postintervention as controls. The results of Wilk’s meta-analysis also confirm that brief interventions are effective in reducing alcohol consumption when compared to no intervention. The more recent meta-analyses and randomised controlled studies are discussed below and are classified according to the settings in which the studies were conducted. The results are consistent in suggesting that opportunistic brief interventions are effective in reducing alcohol consumption compared to screening alone or to no intervention. There is no consistent evidence that less-intensive treatments are less effective than more intensive treatment interventions for more severe cases of alcohol abuse and dependence. Brief interventions are not usually effective in individuals who have developed dependence, or who are experiencing severe alcohol related harms. For these individuals, more intensive treatment interventions are recommended (Heather et al. 2004). However, there is some evidence that brief interventions can be effective in dependent individuals (Guth et al. 2008). This study is discussed later in the text. Recommendation 4.1 Brief interventions are effective in reducing alcohol use in people with risky pattern of alcohol use and in non-dependent drinkers experiencing alcohol-related harms and should be routinely offered to these populations. 4.2 Brief interventions are not recommended for people with more severe alcohol-related problems or alcohol dependence. Strength of recommendation A Level of evidence Ia A Ib How to deliver brief intervention As a general rule, brief interventions should include at least the five components identified in the acronym FLAGS, the two most crucial of which are Feedback and Advice (see Table 4.1) (Proude et al. 2005). 52 Table 4.1: FLAGS brief intervention structure Feedback • Provide individualised feedback about the risks associated with continued drinking, based on current drinking patterns, problem indicators, and health status. • Discuss the potential health problems that can arise from risky alcohol use. Listen • • Advice • Goals • Strategies • • Listen to the patient’s response. This should spark a discussion of the patient’s consumption level and how it relates to general population consumption and any false beliefs held by the patient. Give clear advice about the importance of changing current drinking patterns and a recommended level of consumption. • A typical five to 10 minute brief intervention should involve advice on reducing consumption in a persuasive but non-judgemental way. • Advice can be supported by self-help materials, which provide information about the potential harms of risky alcohol consumption and can provide additional motivation to change. Discuss the safe drinking limits and assist the patient to set specific goals for changing patterns of consumption. • Instil optimism in the patient that his or her chosen goals can be achieved. • It is in this step, in particular, that motivation-enhancing techniques are used to encourage patients to develop, implement and commit to plans to stop drinking. Ask the patient to suggest some strategies for achieving these goals. This approach emphasises the individual’s choice to reduce drinking patterns and allows them to choose the approach best suited to their own situation. • The individual might consider setting a specific limit on alcohol consumption, learning to recognise the antecedents of drinking, and developing skills to avoid drinking in high-risk situations, pacing one’s drinking and learning to cope with everyday problems that lead to drinking. There are alternative acronyms such as FRAMES (Bien et al. 1993) and 5A’s (Ask, Advise, Assess, Assist, Arrange, usually used in interventions for tobacco) (Zwar et al. 2005) with comparable structures for guiding an intervention, which can be used. However, for people who drink above recommended levels but are not experiencing alcohol-related harm, brief advice may be sufficient. Recommendation 4.3 Brief interventions may consist of the five components of the FLAGS acronym: feedback, listening, advice, goals, and strategies (or equivalent). 4.4 Brief advice may be sufficient for those drinking above NHMRC recommendations but not experiencing harm. Strength of recommendation A Level of evidence Ia S 53 Who can deliver brief interventions? Any health professional or treatment provider with adequate training can deliver brief interventions. Generalist health professionals can be successfully trained in the delivery of brief interventions within a 1-2 hour training program (Field et al. 2005). Where should brief interventions be delivered? Brief interventions can be effectively delivered in a variety of settings including general practice settings, general hospital wards, emergency departments, trauma centres and community counselling centres. General practice setting Universal screening in general practice can identify excessive drinkers suitable for brief interventions, as about 85 percent of the population visit their general practitioner each year (Beich et al. 2003b; AIHW 2004). general practitioners have the resources and skills to offer an intervention and thus, the general practitioners has the ability and potential to have a substantial effect on risky levels of drinking. The level of evidence for its effect is strong, especially for male patients (Kaner et al. 2007). However, about 25 percent of patients presenting to general practitioner settings in Australia who are drinking at risk levels are likely to remain undetected (Britt et al. 2003). General practice setting: Meta-analyses There have been a number of meta-analyses examining the effectiveness of brief interventions in various settings, the most recent of which was carried out by Kaner and colleagues (Kaner et al. 2007). The majority of these studies are in agreement that brief interventions are effective in this setting. To demonstrate the depth of research in this area and the consistency of results this chapter briefly reviews each meta-analysis and has a more detailed explanation of the most recent and comprehensive one. The first two meta-analyses of brief interventions conducted in various settings, including primary care (Bien et al. 1993; Wilk et al. 1997), are described above. Their results demonstrate that brief interventions are effective in reducing alcohol consumption when compared to no intervention. The next review concentrated on randomised controlled trials of brief interventions delivered in primary health care (Poikolainen 1999). Results from the 7 publications selected, with the inclusion criterion of follow-up at 6-12 months, indicated that very brief interventions (5-20 minutes) did not result in a significant change in alcohol consumption; however, extended brief interventions (several visits) produced a significant pooled effect estimate of change in alcohol intake among women and among the whole sample. Among men, the statistical heterogeneity among studies meant that no significant conclusions could be reached. One of the author’s conclusions was that ‘excessive drinking’ should be based in standard criteria so that trials could be compared more efficiently (Poikolainen 1999). Therefore, the results of this meta-analysis suggest that a single brief intervention may be less effective than an extended brief intervention delivered and reinforced over several sessions. 54 The next meta-analysis of brief interventions was a comprehensive examination of the brief intervention literature, resulting in 56 trials (Moyer et al. 2002). Studies were classified according to both the type of comparison (brief treatment compared to a control or a more extended treatment) and the type of patient population (treatmentseeking compared to non-treatment-seeking). Comparing brief intervention and control conditions, effect sizes were significant at less than 3 months (p<0.01), more than 3-6 months (p<0.001), and more than 6-12 months (p<0.001) follow-up points for the composite variable of drinking related outcomes, and at a significance level of p<0.001 at all follow-up points for reductions in alcohol consumption. Their results indicated that brief interventions were effective when compared to no intervention in reducing alcohol consumption. The effect was significant until twelve months after the intervention. The results also suggest that brief interventions are more effective in studies of treatment-seeking populations who do not have severe alcohol problems than in non-treatment-seeking people. Beich et al conducted a meta-analysis of screening and brief intervention trials in general practice, with the aim of discovering the number needed to treat, proportion of patients positive to screening, proportion given brief intervention and effect of screening (as opposed to intervention) (Beich et al. 2003b). Their conclusions were that only two to three patients per thousand would benefit from screening, and therefore universal screening was not a viable proposition, a statement that was widely challenged in the online responses to the article (Vinson 2003; Conigrave et al. 2003). Following this, Ballesteros et al published the results of a meta-analysis of thirteen studies of brief intervention with non-dependent patients in primary care (Ballesteros et al. 2004). One of their aims was to examine whether there was a dose-effect trend which aligned with the number or intensity of interventions. Studies were selected on the basis that intention-to-treat analyses were available and there was a six to 12 month follow-up. Studies were published between 1987 and 2003. The only measurable and reported effect was the change in proportion of hazardous drinkers 6-12 months after randomisation (i.e. decrease in numbers drinking at hazardous levels); other outcomes such as changes in consumption, biochemical markers and psychosocial outcomes were not used in the meta-analysis. No dose-effect of the intervention was found. Findings from this meta-analysis showed clear support for the efficacy of brief intervention at consultations in primary care (odds ratio =1.41; NNT= 12). Bertholet et al. also conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis, focussing on non-treatment-seeking patients in primary care, the setting and population group that is most recommended for brief interventions (Bertholet et al. 2005). Nineteen trials were selected that fulfilled the criteria. Follow-up rates ranged from 32.5% to 92.4%. No studies reported negative effects. Meta-analysis was restricted to those 10 trials for which the reduction of alcohol consumption could be calculated, and was the only outcome that was pooled for the analysis. The other variables were too disparate to allow pooling. The adjusted intention-to-treat analysis showed a mean pooled difference of -38 g of ethanol (approximately 4 drinks) per week (95% confidence interval, -51 to -24 g/wk) in favor of the brief alcohol intervention group. Results indicated that brief intervention is effective for both men and women in reducing alcohol consumption at 6 and 12 months; reductions were similar for both 6 and 12 months. Most studies they reviewed, however, also reported a 10-30% reduction of drinking in the control group, a common effect which can be caused by several reasons including natural changes over the course of time, regression to the mean, the Hawthorne effect, or just the effect of screening (McCambridge et al. 2008). Nine 55 studies also reported data related to mental or physical health perception, well-being and alcohol-related problems. There were significant differences among 9 of the 21 measures reported, showing a more improved quality of life in the intervention group than in the control group (Bertholet et al. 2005). Therefore, according to this review, brief intervention delivered in primary care setting is effective in reducing alcohol consumption by 4 standard drinks a week in a population of non-treatment-seeking patients (both in men and women) at 6 and 12 months post-intervention. A high-quality review carried out for the U.S. Preventive Services Taskforce by Whitlock et al was published in the Annals of Internal Medicine (Whitlock et al. 2004). All studies in this review were published prior to 2002 and almost all of them were included in the above meta-analyses. In order to avoid repetition of results, the main findings only are summarised here. Twelve trials of intervention in primary care met the study criteria of randomised controlled trial with 6-12 month follow-up data. Results showed that intervention group participants reduced the average number of drinks per week by 13-34% more than the control group, and the proportion of patients drinking at moderate or safe levels was 10-19% greater than controls at follow-up. The latest and most comprehensive meta-analysis of the effectiveness of brief alcohol interventions in primary care was a Cochrane review by Kaner et al (2007). The previous meta-analyses by Ballesteros, Bertholet, Moyer, and Poikolainen were, as they mention, similar and directly relevant to their review. While their exercise might be viewed as needless repetition, there are still evidence gaps, namely in subgroups, e.g. young people; in different countries and cultures; in identifying the ‘active ingredient’ of brief intervention; and lastly the efficacy/effectiveness issue. As mentioned above, while evidence for the efficacy of brief intervention is plentiful, the effectiveness (will it work in actual clinical practice?) is the sticking point. This review therefore undertook a secondary subgroup analysis to assess the impact of brief intervention in efficacy (ideal world) and effectiveness (real world) trials to account for variability in treatment exposure relating to frequency, duration and theoretical basis of the brief intervention. The main results: primary meta-analyses of 22 trials with 7.619 participants showed that, compared to controls, brief intervention reduced the quantity of alcohol consumed per week by 38g (95% CI: 23 to 54); which equates to between 4 to 5 (UK) units of alcohol. This analysis was repeated excluding trials of uncertain quality (e.g. insufficient reporting of procedures for randomisation) and excluding participants lost to follow-up, with the results still showing a statistically significant benefit of brief intervention. The secondary subgroup analysis of the issue of efficacy/effectiveness showed no evidence of any difference in effect of brief intervention between the two types of trials (Kaner et al. 2007). Final conclusions from the data were that: brief intervention in primary care results in significant reductions in weekly consumption for men, with an average drop of about 6 standard drinks per week; however there was no significant reduction in alcohol consumption for women. Although this may have been due to low statistical power (only 499 female participants), it seems from this analysis as though brief interventions in primary care for women are not yet justified. Further research should focus on women and on finding the most effective components of interventions. General Practice Setting: Selected randomised controlled trials As so many trials of rigorous quality have been published about brief intervention, we have selected only the most recent, significant, or unusual trials of methods or settings or with unexpected results for this section of the review. 56 General Practice: Negative outcome Beich et al trialled screening and brief intervention in Danish general practices (Beich et al. 2007). Their aims were to conduct a pragmatic controlled trial aimed at evaluating the effectiveness of the WHO recommendations for screening and brief intervention in general practice. The trial involved 39 Danish general practitioners. Systematic screening of 6897 adults led to inclusion of 906 risky drinkers; 537 of whom were followed up at 12-14 months. Outcome measures focused on patients' acceptance of screening and intervention and their self-reported alcohol consumption. Their results showed that although all the intervention group subjects (n = 442) were exposed to an instant brief counselling session, only 18% (79/442) attended a follow-up consultation that was offered by their general practitioner. At one-year follow-up, average weekly consumption had increased by 0.7 drinks in both groups. Secondary findings were an indiscriminate absolute risk reduction (ARR = 0.08 (95% confidence interval, CI: 0.02-0.18)) in male binge drinking, but adverse intervention effects for women on the secondary outcomes (binge drinking ARR = 0.30 (95% CI: 0.47-0.09)). The authors’ conclusions were that the results of systematic screening and brief interventions in everyday general practice fell short of their theoretical expectations and therefore could not be considered effective. General Practice: Stepped-care approach Another trial was conducted to look for gender differences in response to brief intervention with a stepped care approach (Reinhardt et al. 2008). In "Stepped Interventions for Problem Drinkers," 10,803 patients from 85 general practitioners were screened using alcohol related questionnaires; 408 patients (32% female) were randomised to a control (booklet only) or two different intervention groups: stepped care (feedback, manual, and up to three counselling sessions depending on the success of the previous intervention) and fixed care (four sessions). Response rate for the 12 month follow-up was 91.7%. Regression analysis revealed a significant effect size (R2) only in women (R2 = 0.029; p = 0.039) when both interventions together were compared with the control group. After excluding alcohol dependents and binge drinkers an effect size (R2) of 0.031 (p = 0.05) in women and an effect size (R2) of 0.069 (p = 0.057) in men was obtained. Among the patients in stepped care who, by the first assessment point, had reduced drinking to within safe drinking limits, there was a tendency for females to have achieved this more often than males (40% vs. 24%; p = 0.09). Authors did not report mean values. Number needed to treat (NNT) to achieve reduction in alcohol consumption as a relust of an intervention (either fixed or stepped care) was 10 for women and 17 for men. Conclusions were that in a heterogeneous sample the intervention was only effective for women, and also that women tended to benefit more from the less intensive intervention than did men. General Practice: Young adults An article by Grossberg et al. (2004) reports the results of a subanalysis of young adults (aged 18 to 30 years) who participated in Project TrEAT (Trial of Early Alcohol Treatment) conducted in the offices of 64 primary care physicians located in 10 counties in southern Wisconsin. Project TrEAT was a randomised clinical trial designed to test the efficacy of a brief intervention protocol to reduce alcohol use, improve health status, and decrease health care utilisation. A total of 226 young adults were randomly assigned to either a usual care or brief intervention group. Results showed that during the 4-year follow-up period, there were significant 57 reductions in the intervention group in number of persons drinking more than 3 drinks per day, average 7-day alcohol use, number of persons drinking 6 or more drinks per occasion, and number of binge drinking episodes in the previous 30 days (p<0.01 to p<0.001). There were also significant differences (p<0.05) in emergency department visits (103 vs. 177), motor vehicle crashes (9 vs. 20), total motor vehicle offences (114 vs. 149), and arrests for controlled substances or possession of liquor (0 vs. 8), between intervention and control groups. Conclusions were that long-term effects on drinking could be achieved by intervention with young adults and should be more widely implemented. A University health care service in New Zealand was the setting for a randomised controlled trial of a web-based screening and intervention (Kypri et al. 2008). Participants were 975 students (aged 17-29 years) screened using AUDIT. Of 599 students who scored in the hazardous or harmful range, 576 (50% male) consented to the trial and were randomised to receive an information pamphlet (control group), a web-based motivational intervention (single-dose e-SBI group), or a web-based motivational intervention with further interventions 1 and 6 months later (multidose eSBI group). Results showed that relative to the control group, the single-dose group reported a lower frequency of drinking at 6 months (rate ratio [RR], 0.79; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.68-0.94), less total consumption (RR, 0.77; 95% CI, 0.630.95), and fewer academic problems (RR, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.64-0.91). At 12 months, statistically significant differences in total consumption and in academic problems remained, and the AUDIT scores were 2.17 points lower (95% CI, -1.10 to -3.24). Relative to the control group, the multidose group reported a lower frequency of drinking at 6 months (RR, 0.85), reduced total consumption (RR, 0.79, [equivalent to 3 standard drinks per week]), reduced episodic heavy drinking (RR, 0.65), and fewer academic problems (RR, 0.78). At 12 months, statistically significant differences in academic problems remained (RR, 0.75), while the AUDIT scores were 2.02 points lower. The conclusions were that the single-dose intervention reduced hazardous drinking significantly with an effect lasting for 12 months. The additional sessions seemed not to add any benefit. A more unusual (and partially inconclusive) study compared 10 hours of intervention with a mailed intervention comprising the student’s AUDIT score, advice to cut down and suggested sources of help (e.g. telephone numbers of treatment organisations) (Johnsson et al. 2006). In total 693 freshmen at Lund University, Sweden, took part. A cognitive behavioural alcohol program or mailed intervention was randomly assigned to high-risk drinkers (n = 177). The AUDIT was used at baseline and at a 12 month follow-up to measure any changes in drinking. Results showed no significant differences between the cognitive behavioural and the mailed intervention groups. Both groups reduced their AUDIT scores, which could be explained by effects of regression to the mean. No significant differences occurred between the groups. This result suggests that mailed intervention was as effective as the much more intensive cognitive behavioural intervention. General Practice: Effect of mental comorbidities In a randomised controlled brief intervention study with two intervention groups and one control group, data were collected from 408 general practice patients with alcohol use disorders, at-risk drinking or binge drinking (Grothues et al. 2008). Eighty-eight participants were diagnosed with comorbid anxiety and/or depressive disorders. The effectiveness of the intervention was assessed at a 12-month followup in relation to the presence and absence of comorbidity. Reduction of drinking in six ordered categories (g/alcohol) between baseline and follow-up served as the 58 outcome variable. Results showed that the brief intervention significantly reduced drinking in the non-comorbid (p = 0.03) but not in the comorbid subsample (p = 0.76). Compared to non-comorbid participants, a significantly higher reduction of drinking was found for comorbid individuals (p = 0.01). Ordinal regression analysis revealed comorbidity to be a positive predictor for reduction of drinking (p<0.01). When entering the variables (i) amount of drinking at baseline, (ii) intervention and (iii) classification of problematic drinking, these became significant predictors, whereas comorbidity showed only a tendency. As brief interventions are known to be less effective for dependent drinkers, a larger proportion of dependents among the comorbid might have limited its effectiveness. General Practice: Dependent drinkers At least one study tested brief interventions with dependent drinkers and compared the results with non-dependent drinkers (Guth et al. 2008). Retrospective analyses were performed on participants (n = 326) enrolled in a randomised trial designed to examine the impact of interactive voice response following brief intervention. All participants had received a brief intervention from their primary care provider before enrolling in the study. Daily consumption data were collected using the Timeline Followback method for the period prior to intervention (mean = 71 days) and for 6 months following. Dependent participants had significantly higher pre-brief intervention consumption than non-dependent patients. At the initial assessment 15 days after the brief intervention, both dependent and non-dependent participants reported significant reductions in total drinks per week and drinking days per week. Dependent participants significantly reduced their drinks per drinking day and no longer differed significantly from non-dependent participants on these measures. Similar decreases were observed in both groups over the following 6 months, although dependent participants drank on fewer days, but in significantly higher amounts than did non-dependent drinkers. Regression analyses showed that baseline consumption was the only significant predictor of post-intervention consumption. Conclusions were that there was no evidence that dependent participants gained less benefit on measures of alcohol consumption following brief intervention than non-dependent participants. Recommendation 4.5 Brief interventions should be implemented in general practice and other primary care settings. Strength of recommendation A Level of evidence Ia Emergency departments and trauma centres There is a high rate of alcohol-related injuries and conditions among people attending accident and emergency departments, 1.5 to 3 times the rate seen in primary care. Data suggest that recent trauma or a life-threatening experience increases the receptivity of patients to interventions, thus increasing the likelihood of brief intervention being effective in reducing alcohol consumption among these patients (D'Onofrio et al. 2002; Neumann et al. 2006). Interventions in emergency departments have proved to be effective in reducing risky levels of alcohol intake and binge drinking episodes (D'Onofrio et al. 2004/05; Bazargan-Hejazi et al. 2005; Soderstrom et al. 2007; Walton et al. 2008; Nilsen et al. 2008) and reducing subsequent alcohol-related injuries in the 6-12 months subsequent to intervention (Havard et al. 2008; Dinh-Zarr t al. 2005) although Dinh- 59 Zarr’s Cochrane review was not able to correlate this benefit with the effect of the intervention on abstinence, consumption, or drinking-related hazardous behaviour (Dinh-Zarr et al. 2005). Reduction of heavy alcohol consumption in the subsequent 12 months is less likely (Havard et al. 2008), but has been shown in some studies (Bazargan-Hejazi et al. 2005; Walton et al. 2008). A number of studies reported reductions in alcohol consumption from risky to low risk levels in emergency department/trauma patients who did not receive structured brief intervention, but were asked about their levels of alcohol consumption and participated in the study as a control or standard care group (Daeppen et al. 2007; Dent et al. 2008; D'Onofrio et al. 2004/05). Highlighting the alcohol/injury connection as part of brief intervention in this setting may increase the effect of the intervention (Walton et al. 2008). Uptake of opportunistic screening by emergency department staff in one Australian study (Dent et al. 2008) was poor, as was patient compliance with off-site counselling. Computer-assisted brief interventions in emergency department settings have demonstrated reductions in alcohol use over the subsequent 6 to 12 months, and appears a promising dissemination strategy (Neumann et al 2006). Emergency Departments and Trauma Centres: Meta-analyses A review and meta-analysis of strategies targeting alcohol problems in emergency departments (ED) was recently published (Havard et al. 2008). Thirteen studies with reasonable methodological quality were identified, with the exception that some had poor reporting of effect size or inconsistent selection of outcome measures. Sample sizes ranged from 85 to 1334. Selected outcome measures were quantity/frequency of alcohol consumption at 12 month follow-up; frequency of high-volume drinking at 3 months and 12 months; consequences from drinking at 6 and 12 months, and alcohol-related injuries at 6 and 12 months. Ten randomised controlled trials fulfilled these criteria. Findings were that ED-based interventions were found to have no effect on quantity/frequency or on high volume drinking at 12 months. Effects on frequency of heavy drinking at 3 months and consequences of drinking at 6 or 12 months were inconclusive; the only statistically significant effect found from the analysis was that intervention patients had half the probability (OR: 0.59) of controls in sustaining an alcohol-related injury in the 6 or 12 months following their ED visit. However, there were limitations in the data that prevented more thorough analyses being conducted. A Cochrane review that examined interventions to prevent injuries in problem drinkers (Dinh-Zarr et al. 2005) was published prior to the Havard paper above. Settings were various, participants included dependent and non-dependent drinkers, partners of drinkers, men convicted of drink driving (DUI) and settings included Emergency departments, outpatient and inpatient settings, and others not described. Interventions ranged from brief intervention to a one hour consultation with a psychologist and included blood test results, medications, probation, rehabilitation programs, and AA attendance. The most common intervention studied was brief counselling in the clinical setting for problem drinking. The majority of trials of brief counselling showed beneficial effects on diverse non-fatal injury outcomes: motorvehicle crashes and related injuries, falls, suicide attempts, domestic violence, assaults and child abuse, alcohol-related injuries and injury emergency visits, and hospitalisations; seven trials demonstrated reductions in injury-related deaths 60 (relative risk (RR) 0.65; 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.21-2.00). Reductions ranged from 27% to 65%. Because few trials were sufficiently large to assess effects on injuries, individual effect estimates were generally imprecise. The results were not combined quantitatively because the interventions, patient populations, and outcomes were so diverse. The major conclusions were that interventions for problem drinking appear to reduce injuries and their antecedents (e.g. falls, motor vehicle crashes, suicide attempts). The time frames for follow-up varied from 3 to 48 months. Several studies have reported on the results of brief intervention delivered during a visit to an ED or trauma centre. D’Onofrio and Degutis compared 4 studies conducted between 1999 and 2004: Monti et al. (1999); Gentilello et al. (1999); Longabaugh et al. (2001) and Spirito et al. (2004). Findings suggested that, from the evidence presented, brief intervention to patients whose injuries are alcohol-related may decrease their alcohol consumption. However, the standard care groups also reduced their drinking in every case, and three of the studies had very high refusal rates, perhaps skewing the results in favour of more compliant patients (D'Onofrio et al. 2004/05). The follow-up intervals were 3 and 6 months (Monti); 3, 6 and 12 months (Spirito); 6 and 12 months (Gentilello); and 12 months only (Longabaugh). Nilsen et al carried out a systematic review of emergency care brief interventions for injured patients, selecting 14 studies for analysis (Nilsen et al. 2008). Of the 12 studies that compared pre- and post-brief intervention results, 11 observed a significant effect of brief intervention on the following outcomes: alcohol intake, risky drinking practices, alcohol-related negative consequences, and injury frequency. Two studies assessed only post- brief intervention results. More intensive interventions tended to yield more favourable results. brief intervention patients achieved greater reductions than control group patients, although there was a tendency for the control group(s) to also show improvements. Five studies failed to show significant differences between the compared treatment conditions. Variations in the study protocol, alcohol-related recruitment criteria, screening and assessment methods, and injury severity limited the specific conclusions that could be drawn. Emergency departments and trauma centres: RCTs One study in ED with patients that were not randomised, but allocated alternately to control and intervention groups, showed that brief motivational intervention delivered by peer educators significantly reduced moderately risky drinking and associated problems in the intervention group patients who scored 7-18 on AUDIT at baseline (Bazargan-Hejazi et al. 2005). No such effect was found, however, for intervention group patients in the high-risk group (defined by AUDIT scores above 19). Two recent randomised controlled trials in Switzerland and in Australia were not able to demonstrate any effect on alcohol use in either intervention or control groups (Daeppen et al. 2007; Dent et al. 2008). The aims of the Swiss study were to evaluate the effectiveness of brief intervention (BI) in reducing alcohol use among hazardous drinkers treated in the ED after an injury; it also tested whether assessment of alcohol use without intervention was sufficient to reduce hazardous drinking. A total of 5136 consecutive patients completed a seven-item general and a three-item alcohol screen; 1472 (28.7%) were positive for hazardous drinking according to the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Addiction definition; 987 (67.1%) were randomised into a BI group (n = 310), a control group with screening and assessment (n = 342), or a control group with screening only (n = 335). A total of 770 patients (78%) completed the 12-month follow-up. The intervention was a single 61 standardised 10-15-minute session conducted by a trained research assistant. At follow-up similar proportions of participants reduced their level of drinking to low-risk in the intervention and both control groups with and without assessment (35.6%, 34.0%, 37.0%, respectively, p = 0.71). Data also indicated similar reductions in drinking frequency, quantity, binge drinking frequency and AUDIT scores across groups. A model including age groups, gender, AUDIT and injury severity scores indicated that BI had no influence on the main alcohol use outcome. This study provided evidence that a 10-15-minute intervention did not decrease alcohol use and health resource utilisation in hazardous drinkers attending ED. The authors also state that commonly-found decreases in hazardous alcohol use in control groups cannot be solely attributed to the baseline alcohol assessment. There are three possible explanations for this; either a very minimal intervention (the assessment) is sufficient to change behaviour; having an injury is of itself enough reason to reduce drinking; or the brief Intervention of 10-15 minutes had no effect over and above the minimal intervention, due to regression to the mean. The Australian study (Dent et al. 2008) aimed to evaluate the feasibility and efficacy of opportunistic screening and brief intervention by ED staff to reduce high-risk alcohol consumption. It was an open, randomised controlled trial with allocation blinding, performed over 12 months. Adult patients were screened using the Paddington Alcohol Test. Consenting patients screened positive were randomised to standard care (control group), same-day brief intervention (BI) by an emergency nurse or doctor, or motivational intervention (MI) within 1 week by off-site drug and alcohol counsellors. Telephone follow up was performed at 1 and 3 months. The primary outcome was maximum self-reported daily standard drinks consumed. Of 32,965 eligible patients, 10,274 (31%) were screened, 1043 (10%) were positive, 468 (45%) consented to the study, and 161, 159 and 148 were allocated to SC, BI and MI respectively. Results showed a loss to follow-up of about 50%. In the MI group, 133 declined intervention or failed to attend the counselling session. At 3 months, 96 (60%), 81 (51%) and 74 (50%) participants in the control, BI and MI groups, respectively, were contactable and consented to telephone interview. Overall, maximum daily alcohol consumption decreased from a median of 13.5 standard drinks at enrolment to 9.25 drinks at 3 months. At 3 months, control participants reported fewer drinks than those randomised to MI. The authors’ conclusions were that neither BI nor MI was better in this case than standard care in reducing high-risk alcohol consumption. However, the uptake of opportunistic screening by ED staff was poor, as was patient compliance with off-site counselling, which would have had an impact on the lack of significant results. The aim of the latest study published by D’Onofrio et al was to determine the efficacy of emergency practitioner-performed brief intervention for hazardous/harmful drinkers in reducing alcohol consumption and negative consequences (D'Onofrio et al. 2008). A randomised clinical trial was conducted in an urban ED. Patients who screened above National Institute for Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism guidelines for low-risk drinking or presented with an alcohol-related injury were eligible. The mean number of drinks per week and binge-drinking episodes during the past 30 days were collected at 6 and 12 months; negative consequences and use of treatment services at 12 months. A brief negotiation Interview performed by emergency practitioners was compared to a scripted discharge instruction sheet. A total of 494 drinkers took part and each group was similar with respect to baseline characteristics. In the Brief Negotiation Interview group, the mean number of drinks per week at 12 months was 3.8 fewer than the 13.6 reported at baseline. The discharge instructions group decreased their mean number of drinks to 2.6 from 12.4 at baseline. Likewise, bingedrinking episodes per month decreased from 6.0 to 4.0 in the brief interview group and from 5.4 to 3.9 in the discharge instructions group. For each outcome, the time 62 effect was significant and the treatment effect was not. The authors conclude that brief interventions among ED patients with hazardous/harmful drinking were effective in reducing alcohol consumption at 3 months and there was no difference in efficacy between the two types of interventions. Yet another randomised controlled study (Soderstrom et al. 2007) tested the effectiveness of two different brief interventions to reduce both drinking and the consequences of drinking. Trauma patients defined as at-risk alcohol users (n=497) were randomised into two treatment options: a brief personalised motivational intervention (MI), or brief information and advice (BI). After a brief assessment, MI subjects received a motivational session, feedback letter, and two post-discharge telephone contacts, whereas the BI group received a brochure and one postdischarge telephone contact. Both groups were followed up and reassessed at 6 and 12 months post-injury. Results show that both groups had statistically significant reductions in drinking, binge episodes, and consequences related to drinking that persisted from the 6- to the 12-month follow-up. Although not statistically significant, for those classified as lower-level drinkers (<1 drink per day), there was a consistent pattern of maintaining reductions for the MI group at 12 months compared with the BI group. Their results suggest that brief interventions that link alcohol consumption with trauma injury and consequences of drinking can be effective in reducing drinking and consequences related to drinking in non-dependent drinkers. Walton et al carried out a study with an aim of determining what influence the stage of change and other attitudes might have on advice given to injured patients visiting ED for non-life- threatening injuries (Walton et al. 2008). Patients (n = 4,476) completed a computerised survey; 575 at-risk drinkers were randomly assigned to one of four brief intervention conditions, and 85% were interviewed again at 3-month and 12-month follow-ups. The results produced by regression models examined interaction effects between intervention/control condition (advice/no advice) and hypothesised moderator variables (stage of change, self-efficacy, acute alcohol use, attribution of injury to alcohol) on alcohol outcomes over time. Overall, participants who reported higher levels of self-efficacy had lower weekly consumption, whereas those with higher readiness to change had greater weekly consumption. In addition, individuals who attributed their injury to alcohol and received advice had significantly lower levels of average weekly alcohol consumption and less frequent heavy drinking from baseline to 12-month follow-up, compared with those who did not receive advice. This study provides more data regarding attribution for alcohol-related injury as an important moderator of change and suggests that highlighting the alcohol/injury connection in ED-based alcohol interventions can augment their effectiveness. Use of Computers in Emergency Department screening and intervention Neumann et al hypothesised that the use of computer technology to screen and provide an intervention could reduce at-risk drinking in injured ED patients (Neumann et al. 2006). Sub-critically injured patients were screened for an alcohol use disorder, using a laptop computer that administered the AUDIT and assessed motivation to reduce drinking. Patients with a positive AUDIT (n = 1,139) were randomised to an intervention (n = 563) or control (n = 576) condition. The computer generated a customised printout based on the patient's own alcohol use pattern, level of motivation, and personal factors, which was provided in the form of feedback and advice. Most patients (85%) used the computer with minimal assistance. At study entry, a similar proportion in each group met criteria for at-risk drinking (49.6% versus 46.8%, p = 0.355). At 6 months, 21.7% of intervention and 30.4% of control patients met criteria for at-risk drinking (p = 0.008). Intervention patients also had a 35.7% 63 decrease in alcohol intake, compared with a 20.5% decrease in controls (p = 0.006). At 12 months, alcohol intake decreased by 22.8% in the intervention group versus 10.9% in controls (p = 0.023), but the proportion of at-risk drinkers did not significantly differ (37.3% versus 42.6%, p = 0.168). The results suggest that this is a practical and effective option to assist the implementation of screening and intervention in ED. Recommendation 4.6 Brief interventions should be implemented in emergency departments and trauma centres. Strength of recommendation A Level of evidence Ia Hospital settings Clear associations have been found between admissions for traumatic incidents or medical problems and alcohol consumption (Saitz 2005). There is a high prevalence of problem drinkers among hospital inpatients (Shourie et al. 2007), making general hospital wards a good environment in which to offer brief interventions to a large number of risky drinkers who already demonstrate or may be at risk of developing alcohol problems. It is likely that the experience of being admitted to hospital provides an ideal opportunity for brief alcohol intervention, which is rarely done (Hosking et al. 2007; Williams et al. 2008). Hospital wards can be a particularly effective setting for advice, as patients are often more motivated and willing to change their drinking behaviours after being hospitalised. However, to date the evidence for the effectiveness of brief intervention in this setting is limited (Emmen et al. 2004; Freyer-Adam et al. 2008; Saitz et al. 2007). See also Chapter 3. The existing studies (described in more detail below) could suggest that minimal intervention (or even simply a participation in a research trial) in these settings is as successful as a more intensive intervention, or conversely, that all interventions are ineffective and the impact of hospital admittance is sufficient to effect changes in alcohol-related behaviour, including rate of consumption. However, there seems to be more influences at work than is yet fully explored. “What explains the range of findings?” is a question asked in an editorial (Bernstein et al. 2008); possibilities for negative influences include low sample size, low AUDIT score cut-off for eligibility; length of the intervention, lack of booster session, possible contamination, patient characteristics, social desirability bias, etc. These issues have been addressed fully in primary care and it seems too early to dismiss the usefulness of brief intervention in hospital settings; the fact that there are conflicting results, some positive and some negative, seems to indicate that the most effective combination of intervention elements have not yet been found (Bernstein et al. 2008). Routine screening for excessive alcohol consumption should be implemented in general hospital settings; however the evidence for brief intervention is limited Hospital Settings: Meta-analyses Eight studies of opportunistic brief intervention conducted in hospitals were reviewed by Emmen et al (2004) for their effectiveness in reducing alcohol consumption. Some were individually randomised, some were cluster randomised and one was nonrandomised (group allocation, 6 hospitals, 3 control and 3 intervention). The sole 64 outcome measure was change in alcohol consumption. Weaknesses in study reporting meant that the authors had difficulty in drawing any conclusions; these weaknesses included irretrievable data, gaps in data collection or reporting, small sample sizes and losses to follow-up (from 9% to 50%). Only one study, with a short follow-up period, showed any significant effect, a larger reduction in weekly drinking by the intervention group (mean difference -309g; range -470g to -148g). These were outpatients in a hypertension clinic, 91% of whom were followed up. Changes in the control group patients are not described. Results from this particular review, therefore, are inconclusive. Hospital settings: Randomised controlled trials Two recent studies have trialled brief alcohol intervention in a hospital setting, by Saitz et al. (2007) and Freyer-Adam et al. (2008). The Saitz et al (2007) study included dependent drinkers (77% of whom fulfilled the CIDI criteria for dependence) and included the outcome measure of treatment by a specialist for this group, as well as change in mean number of drinks which was applied to all participants (Saitz et al. 2007). The intervention was a 30-minute session of motivational counselling by a trained counsellor. Results showed that the intervention was not significantly associated with receipt of alcohol assistance by 3 months among alcohol-dependent patients (adjusted proportions receiving assistance, 49% for the intervention group and 44% for the control group; intervention-control difference, 5% [95% confidence interval, CI, -8%-19%]) or with drinks per day at 12 months among all patients (adjusted mean decreases, 1.5 for patients who received the intervention and 3.1 for patients who received usual care; adjusted mean group difference was -1.5 (CI, -3.7-0.6). There was no significant interaction between the intervention and alcohol dependence in statistical models predicting drinks per day (p = 0.24). The conclusions these authors drew are that brief intervention is insufficient to link medical inpatients with treatment for alcohol dependence, and is ineffective in reducing levels of alcohol consumption. Freyer-Adam et al (2008) screened all inpatients of 29 wards from 4 hospitals in Germany, and 595 were randomised into 3 groups; a control condition or to two intervention groups which included motivational interviewing by either the specialist consultation liaison service or by hospital physicians. At baseline, the three groups differed regarding motivation, with higher motivation among the controls. At 12-month follow-up, the groups did not differ in alcohol consumption, alcohol-related problems or measure of well-being. All groups significantly decreased their alcohol consumption. Regarding motivation, longitudinal analyses revealed significant interaction effects of time and intervention (p<0.05), indicating a stronger increase of readiness to change drinking and a small increase in readiness to seek help among those who received intervention compared to the controls. The conclusions were that the intervention was not effective in reducing alcohol consumption when compared to controls (who, however, had higher motivation to reduce drinking, thereby affecting the results) or in increasing well-being 12 months after hospitalisation. However, it had a positive effect on readiness to change drinking and on readiness to seek formal help for alcohol problems. Recommendation 4.7 Brief interventions should be implemented in general hospital settings. Strength of recommendation D Level of evidence IV 65 Community counselling and welfare services Patients may present to community counselling services with a variety of complaints that may be related to their alcohol or other drug use, including financial, relationship, employment or parenting problems. Brief interventions may be appropriate for those drinking at risky levels (O'Connor et al. 2007) (Sullivan et al. 2005); however as yet there is little evidence as to their effectiveness in these settings (see Chapter 3) . Recommendation 4.8 Brief interventions in community health and welfare settings may be used, but should not be a sole intervention strategy. Strength of recommendation D Level of evidence IV Workplace settings Rates of alcohol consumption are particularly high in some workplace settings. In particular, hospitality, agriculture and construction industries have been identified as having a large proportion of people drinking at levels leading to both short-term and long-term risk of harm (Berry et al. 2007), which can lead to increased rates of accidents and absenteeism (Roche et al. 2008). Web-based feedback, with or without motivational counselling, proved an effective method for reducing risky drinking among young employed people (Doumas et al. 2008); 124 participants were randomly assigned to one of three conditions: webbased feedback, web-based feedback plus a 15-minute motivational interviewing session, or a control group. Both intervention groups reported significantly lower levels of drinking than those in the control group at a 30-day follow-up. No differences were found between the two intervention conditions, indicating that the addition of the motivational interview did not increase the efficacy of the web-based feedback program. However the small sample size limits any generalisations that can be made from this study. Another study found challenges in getting people to access and participate in the workplace-initiated website program (Matano et al. 2007). Matano‘s pilot study gave 145 employees working in Silicon Valley access to a web site that provided feedback on their levels of stress and use of coping strategies. Participants randomised to receive full individualised feedback also received individualised feedback about their risk for alcohol-related problem. The major drawback is that only 3% took up the offer of participation, severely limiting the results and any conclusions that could be made. A substance misuse prevention training program designed to change work culture, combined with random workplace testing, in a large US transportation company, was successful in reducing injuries (Miller et al. 2007). This program focussed on changing workplace attitudes toward on-the-job substance use, in addition to training workers to recognise and intervene with co-workers who have a problem. The main benefit to the company was that the combination of the peer-based program and testing was associated with an approximate one-third reduction in injury rate, avoiding a $48m in employer costs. The cost-benefit ratio was 1:26, thereby making the program extremely worthwhile both for participants and employers. However, the project had the benefit of being backed up by a federally mandated testing program. 66 There is at present not enough evidence to recommend implementation of brief interventions in this setting Recommendation 4.9 Brief interventions in high-risk workplaces may be used, but should not be a sole intervention strategy. Strength of recommendation D Level of evidence IV The wider community- and the internet Research on the efficacy of correspondence or web-based interventions is emerging. For example, Kypri et al identified nine acceptability or feasibility studies of these approaches and seven efficacy trials covering a wide range of settings in 2003-4 (Kypri et al. 2005). These modes of intervention are acceptable to patients and the public, and with careful planning can be implemented in a variety of settings. Treatment trials demonstrate the efficacy of these interventions in reducing hazardous drinking by university students, in delaying initiation of heavy drinking in children and adolescents, and, intriguingly, in addressing insomnia among recovering alcoholics. There is strong support among potential users for alcohol interventions that employ telephone assistance, written correspondence, and the Internet. These new technologies offer the prospect of increasing the reach of interventions for problem drinking and being cost-effective alternatives or supplements to face-to-face interventions. One study is presently examining two alternative modes of electronic intervention (Murray et al. 2007). In a two-arm randomised controlled trial, an on-line psychologically enhanced interactive computer-based intervention is compared with a flat, text-based information web-site. Recruitment, consent, randomisation and data collection are all on-line. The primary outcome is to be total past-week alcohol consumption; secondary outcomes include hazardous or harmful drinking, dependence, harm caused by alcohol, and mental health. Web-based interventions show promise, especially in university students (Bewick et al. 2008b; Bewick et al. 2008a) and young people. Web-based feedback, with or without motivational counselling, proved an effective method for reducing risky drinking among young employed people (Doumas et al. 2008), although another study found challenges in getting people to access and participate in the website program through their workplace (Matano et al. 2007). Limitations of Brief Interventions The outcomes can be perceived as modest and discourage clinicians from using brief interventions routinely. One of the limitations of brief interventions is that the clinician often does not see beneficial results of the intervention (e.g. the number needed to treat can be substantial in order to create a measurable effect). In order to get one drinker to return within recommended limits, brief intervention needs to be delivered to 10 67 patients (this is the number needed to treat, or NNT) (Beich et al. 2003a; Beich et al. 2003b; Vinson 2003). To identify those individuals one must screen 100 (the number needed to screen). However this is a quarter of the number (400) needed to screen for high cholesterol before 1 person can benefit, which is a routine, expensive and invasive test (Vinson 2003; Shepherd et al. 1995). Another factor that must be mentioned is that screening alone can raise the patients’ awareness and have a similar effect to a brief intervention (Kaner et al. 2007; Kaner et al. 2009). There is no evidence that brief interventions are effective among people with more severe alcohol problems and dependence disorders. Typically, interventions offered to treatment-seeking populations or those with severe alcohol problems require more comprehensive treatment approaches, that will usually include intensive interventions (e.g. detoxification), or extended follow-up sessions. A number of barriers to the uptake and implementation of brief interventions in health care settings have been identified (Aalto et al. 2003). These include: • Lack of confidence, knowledge, or skills • Difficulty in identifying risky drinkers • Uncertainty of the justification for initiating discussion about alcohol • Lack of simple guidelines • Lack of financial incentives Summary Most alcohol-related harm in the community is caused by excessive drinkers whose consumption exceeds recommended drinking levels, not the drinkers with severe alcohol dependency problems. One way to reduce consumption levels in a community is to provide a brief intervention in primary care over one to four sessions, provided by healthcare workers such as general physicians, nurses or psychologists. In general practice, patients should be routinely asked about alcohol consumption during registration, general health checks and as part of health screening (using a questionnaire). 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Aust Fam Physician 34(6): 461-466. 73 Chapter 5 Alcohol withdrawal management Alcohol Withdrawal Syndrome: Clinical Presentation This section discusses the clinical signs and symptoms, onset and duration, and common complications of alcohol withdrawal. Signs and symptoms of alcohol withdrawal Alcohol withdrawal syndrome is characterised by central nervous system hyperactivity that occurs when an alcohol dependent individual abruptly stops or significantly reduces alcohol consumption. About 50% of alcohol-dependent patients develop clinically relevant symptoms of withdrawal, ranging from 13% to 71% (Victor and Adams 1953; Saitz et al. 1994; Degenhardt et al. 2000). The signs and symptoms of alcohol withdrawal may be grouped into three major classes (autonomic, gastro-intestinal and cognitive and perceptual changes), and may be uncomplicated or complicated withdrawal (American Psychiatric Association 2000). Table 5.1: Signs and symptoms of alcohol withdrawal Uncomplicated withdrawal features Severe withdrawal complications Autonomic hyperactivity Sweating Tachycardia Hypertension Tremor Fever (generally <38°C) Gastrointestinal features Anorexia Nausea Vomiting Dyspepsia Diarrhoea Dehydration and electrolyte disturbances Cognitive and perceptual changes Poor concentration Anxiety Psychomotor agitation Disturbed sleep, vivid dreams Seizures Hallucinations or perceptual disturbances (visual, tactile, auditory) Delirium Onset and duration of withdrawal symptoms Onset of alcohol withdrawal is usually between six and 24 hours after the last drink or following significant reduction in alcohol consumption. In some individuals (usually relatively fit and healthy), the withdrawal syndrome is short-lived and inconsequential, with the acute phase resolving well within five days with minimal or no medical intervention. However, in others it increases in severity over the first 48 to 72 hours of abstinence (Saitz 1998; Shuckitt 2006; Prescrire 2007). In some severely dependent drinkers, withdrawal can occur when the blood alcohol level (BAL) is decreasing, even if the patient is still intoxicated or has consumed 74 alcohol recently, with a significant proportion of dependent drinkers experiencing the onset of withdrawal symptoms before the BAL reaches zero (Victor and Brausch 1967). Psychological symptoms of alcohol withdrawal, including dysphoria, sleep disturbance and anxiety often persist for 1-2 weeks after drinking cessation and can continue for months (Satel et al. 1993; Shuckitt 2006). Severe withdrawal complications Severe withdrawal complications include seizures, delirium and hallucinations. Alcohol Withdrawal Seizures Alcohol withdrawal seizures are usually generalised (tonic-clonic) seizures. Seizures may occur 6 to 48 hours after the last drink is consumed in alcohol dependent individuals , and can occur even if the blood alcohol level is high (e.g. greater than 0.10 g%) in severely dependent drinkers (Victor and Brausch 1967; Tartara et al 1983). The prevalence of alcohol-withdrawal seizures is estimated at between 2 and 9% of alcohol dependent individuals (Chan 1985). Individuals who have experienced an alcohol withdrawal seizure are more likely to experience further seizures in subsequent alcohol withdrawal episodes (Trevisan et al. 1998). The risk of seizure recurrence within 6-12 hours is estimated at between 13% and 24% in untreated patients (Hillbom et al 2003). Alcohol withdrawal delirium The features of alcohol withdrawal delirium (also known as delirium tremens, DTs) are disturbance of consciousness and changes in cognition or perceptual disturbance (American Psychiatric Association 2002). The terms “alcohol withdrawal delirium” and “delirium tremens” can be used interchangeably. The incidence of alcohol withdrawal delirium in un-medicated alcohol dependent patients averages at 5%, although the incidence is much lower with effective treatment of alcohol withdrawal. Early studies of delirium tremens reported mortality rates as high as 15%, however, mortality rates have fallen with advances in management to less than 1% (Mayo-Smith et al. 2004). Alcohol withdrawal delirium usually occurs 48 to 96 hours after the last drink is consumed but may take up to seven days to appear. The delirium usually lasts for 2 to 3 days, although can persist for several days (Mayo-Smith et al. 2004). Hallucinations During any stage of the alcohol withdrawal, transient hallucinations either visual or tactile may occur in 3-10% of patients with severe withdrawal, however they have no prognostic significance (Trevisan et al. 1998). Some patients may also experience paranoia, psychomotor disturbances, abnormal affect and other delusions. Hallucinations may appear within the first 24 hours and in some cases last up to three days; however they can resolve within 24 to 48 hours. 75 Assessment and Treatment Matching Assessment of patients undergoing alcohol withdrawal requires a comprehensive history, examination, investigations and collateral history and is described in detail in Chapter 3. This section discusses common predictors of alcohol withdrawal severity, withdrawal treatment services and their objectives, treatment matching and monitoring during withdrawal and the use of alcohol withdrawal scales are also discussed. Predictors of withdrawal severity Development of severe withdrawal in an individual patient is difficult to predict. However, a number of patient characteristics have been identified that are likely to be associated with more severe withdrawal symptoms or complications (Saitz 1998). These include: current drinking pattern, past withdrawal experience, concomitant substance use and coexisting medical and psychiatric conditions. The severity of withdrawal is only moderately predicted by amounts of alcohol consumed. Large numbers of patients can be safely managed without medication (Benzer 1990; Whitfield et al. 1978). Severe withdrawal is more likely with the higher the levels of chronic alcohol consumption (e.g. 150 grams of alcohol per day), but individuals with lower levels can experience severe withdrawal and withdrawal complications. The minimal quantity and frequency of alcohol consumption that may lead to withdrawal is not known. In a recent review of alcohol withdrawal syndromes no studies identified the minimal level of alcohol consumption required to produce physical dependence (Prescrire 2007). Duration of heavy alcohol use for 6 years or longer increases the odds of developing withdrawal symptoms 15 times (Ballenger and Post 1978). Early morning drinking to alleviate withdrawal symptoms is a predictor of higher alcohol withdrawal severity (Benzer 1990; Essardas Darayanani et al. 1994; Prescrire 2007). Individuals with heavy but irregular (e.g. 2-3 days per week) alcohol consumption (sometimes referred to as ‘binge’ drinking) generally do not experience severe withdrawal, but are still at risk of such. Patients with a history of severe alcohol withdrawal syndrome (e.g. severe anxiety, seizures, delirium, hallucinations) are more likely to experience such complications in future withdrawal episodes (Essardas Darayanani et al.1994; Trevisan et al. 1998; Saitz 1998). Patients with heavy or regular use of other substances (e.g. benzodiazepines, stimulants, opiates) may experience more severe withdrawal features. In particular, withdrawal from both alcohol and benzodiazepines may increase the risk of withdrawal complications (Saitz 1998; Soyka et al. 1989). Patients with concomitant medical (e.g. sepsis, epilepsy, severe hepatic disease, head injury, pain and nutritional depletion) or psychiatric conditions (e.g. anxiety, psychosis or depression) are more likely to experience severe withdrawal complications (Wetterling et al. 1994; Myrick and Anton 1998; Saitz 1998). The presence of moderate to severe withdrawal symptoms (e.g. CIWA-Ar ≥ 15, see discussion of alcohol withdrawal scales below) left untreated is one of the stronger predictors of seizures and confusion (Foy et al. 1988). 76 It is important to monitor all patients carefully during the alcohol withdrawal period, particularly those with heavy alcohol use and with a history of alcohol withdrawal. Recommendation 5.1 The risk of severe alcohol withdrawal should be assessed based on current drinking patterns, past withdrawal experience, concomitant substance use, and concomitant medical or psychiatric conditions. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence B II Objectives of alcohol withdrawal services Research suggests that withdrawal treatment alone has little, if any, impact on longterm alcohol use (Vaillant 1988). All existing literature assessing efficacy of relapse prevention medication indicates high levels of relapse in the first 3 month after detoxification in placebo group. For example in the study by Kiefer et al. (2004) comparing acamprosate and naltrexone, 75% of placebo group relapsed at 12 weeks and 80% at 24 weeks post-withdrawal. Withdrawal management should not be seen as a stand-alone treatment that is likely to result in prolonged periods of abstinence, but instead as a transitional step on the long road to abstinence. Many commentators have described objectives for alcohol and drug withdrawal services (e.g. Saitz and O’Malley 1997; Myrick and Anton 1998). A consensus approach developed for opiate withdrawal services in Australia (Lintzeris et al 2006) can also be applied to alcohol withdrawal services. The realistic set of objectives adapted for alcohol withdrawal services is as follows: 1. To interrupt a pattern of heavy and regular alcohol use. Some individuals require the structure and support of withdrawal services in order to stop drinking. Whilst many have a longer term goal of achieving abstinence, some individuals may be seeking a temporary break from their alcohol use. 2. To alleviate withdrawal symptoms. Palliation of the discomfort of alcohol withdrawal symptoms is an important reason for patients presenting for treatment, and one of the primary aims of withdrawal services. 3. To prevent severe withdrawal complications. Management of alcohol withdrawal aims to prevent or manage potentially life threatening complications such as seizures, delirium and Wernicke’s encephalopathy. Furthermore, alcohol withdrawal can complicate concomitant medical or psychiatric conditions. 4. Facilitate linkages to ongoing treatment for alcohol dependence. Withdrawal services are acute services with short-term outcomes. However alcohol dependence is a chronic relapsing condition and positive long-term outcomes are more often associated with participation in ongoing treatment such as counselling, self-help, residential rehabilitation and pharmacological approaches (see Chapter 7). Managed withdrawal provides an opportunity to plan and engage in postwithdrawal treatment services. 5. To get help with any other problems. While some people will be unwilling or unable to continue in ongoing drug treatment programs, they may benefit from 77 linkages with primary or specialist health services or welfare services (e.g. accommodation, employment services). Recommendation Strength of recommendation Level of evidence 5.2 Successful completion of alcohol withdrawal does not prevent recurrent alcohol consumption and additional interventions are needed to achieve long-term reduction in alcohol consumption. A Ia 5.3 Realistic goals of clinicians, patients and their carers for withdrawal services include: interrupting a pattern of heavy and regular alcohol use, alleviating withdrawal symptoms, preventing severe withdrawal complications, facilitating links to ongoing treatment for alcohol dependence, providing help with any other problems (such as accommodation, employment services). D IV Settings for alcohol withdrawal Alcohol withdrawal management can occur in a variety of settings, ranging from hospital inpatient, community residential (e.g. specialised detoxification unit) to ambulatory services (outpatient or home-based detoxification services). Outpatient withdrawal management is an effective, safe, and low-cost treatment for patients with mid-to-moderate symptoms of alcohol withdrawal. One randomised controlled study comparing inpatient and outpatient treatment of withdrawal found that the cost and duration of treatment were significantly lower in the outpatient group. The completion rates were higher in the inpatient group than in the outpatient (95% vs 72%) and abstinence rates were higher in the inpatient group at one month follow up. The abstinence rates were not different at 6 months. There were no serious medical complications in either group (Hayashida et al. 1989). Soyka and Horak (2004) examined the effectiveness and safety of alcohol outpatient detoxification in an open prospective study. Patients were screened for relevant neuropsychiatric disorders and other exclusion criteria and then seen on a daily outpatient basis for 5-7 days. Psychotropic or symptomatic medications to alleviate withdrawal symptoms were prescribed if necessary (CIWA-A score >16). Psychotherapeutic interventions were conducted to motivate the patient for further alcohol therapy. Of 557 patients screened 331 entered the study. Ninety four percent (n = 312) of the study participants successfully completed treatment. Sixty percent of them required psychotropic medication. Ninety one percent of the initial sample patients entered a consecutive 3-month motivational treatment program. Forty six percent of patients successfully completed the 1-year consecutive outpatient treatment. The patients who were not included into the study required inpatient management of withdrawal for medical reasons. It should be noted that this study does not compare outpatient vs inpatient management. However, it provides evidence for safe and effective management of alcohol withdrawal in an outpatient setting. 78 Selecting withdrawal settings The withdrawal setting should be carefully selected for each individual patient. Withdrawal can be managed in an ambulatory setting (i.e. outpatient, home-based detoxification), a community residential unit or in a hospital. The choice of withdrawal setting requires a comprehensive clinical assessment and discussion with the patient (and where possible family or carers) regarding the advantages and disadvantages of each approach (Saitz and O’Malley 1997; Saitz 1998; Myrick and Anton 1998). Factors to be considered in determining the most appropriate withdrawal setting for an individual include: likely severity of alcohol withdrawal and occurrence of severe withdrawal complications (seizures, delirium, hallucinations); use of other substances: individuals who report heavy use of other drugs (e.g. benzodiazepines, psychostimulants, opiates), may be at increased risk of withdrawal complications and generally require close monitoring and supervision (e.g. community residential unit); concomitant medical or psychiatric conditions: patients with significant comorbidity may require hospital admission until medically cleared. Patients may be able to be ‘step-down’ to less intensive withdrawal settings to complete withdrawal once medically stable. social circumstances, the availability of a safe environment and ‘home’ supports; outcome of prior withdrawal attempts: repeated failure at ambulatory withdrawal may be an indication for referral to a residential detox unit; patient preference and availability of resources; Some patients wish to attempt ambulatory withdrawal despite multiple failed prior attempts. Further attempts at outpatient withdrawal may be appropriate, however clinicians should identify how this attempt will be different to previous attempts (e.g. increased home supports and monitoring), and negotiate with the patient mutually agreed criteria to be met in order to continue with the withdrawal attempt (e.g. no alcohol use in first 2 days). Patients on waiting-lists for residential withdrawal units may require support in maintaining motivation and avoiding high risk activities until admission. Prescribing benzodiazepines in an attempt to alleviate withdrawal prior to admission is not recommended, and may increase the risk of adverse events from the combination of alcohol and benzodiazepines. Based on the assessment of these factors, patients with no history of severe withdrawal complications and without severe concomitant medical, psychiatric or other substance use disorders are likely to experience withdrawal of mild to moderate severity. They are suitable for ambulatory withdrawal setting, if they have a safe ‘home’ environment and good social support enabling daily monitoring by reliable support person and good access to health care services. 79 Patients with predicted moderate to severe withdrawal, who have a history of severe withdrawal complications (such as seizure, hallucinations) or withdrawing from multiple substances should be recommended withdrawal management in a community residential setting, if they have no severe medical or psychiatric comorbidity. Patients without safe home environment or social supports and those with repeated failed ambulatory withdrawal attempts would also benefit from residential withdrawal. Inpatient hospital treatment should be recommended for those with severe withdrawal complications (such as delirium or seizures of unknown cause), and/or severe medical or psychiatric comorbidity. Hospital addiction medicine consultation liaison services should be accessible in hospitals to aid assessment, management and discharge planning. Recommendation Strength of recommendation Level of evidence 5.4 Ambulatory withdrawal is appropriate for those with mild to moderate predicted withdrawal severity, a safe ‘home’ environment and social supports, no history of severe withdrawal complications, and no severe concomitant medical, psychiatric or other substance use disorders. 5.5 Community residential withdrawal is appropriate for those with predicted moderate to severe withdrawal, a history of severe withdrawal complications, withdrawing from multiple substances, no safe environment or social supports, repeated failed ambulatory withdrawal attempts, and with no severe medical or psychiatric comorbidity. D IV D IV 5.6 Inpatient hospital treatment is appropriate for those with severe withdrawal complications (such as delirium or seizures of unknown cause), and/or severe medical or psychiatric comorbidity. S 5.7 Hospital addiction medicine consultation liaison services should be accessible in hospitals to aid assessment, management and discharge planning. S Monitoring during alcohol withdrawal Patients with moderate to severe withdrawal symptoms left untreated are more likely to develop withdrawal complications (Foy et al. 1988). Other factors, such as patient’s compliance with treatment, level of motivation and perception of treatment effectiveness may influence treatment outcome. It is important to carefully monitor patients during the alcohol withdrawal period paying particular attention to the following: • physical parameters, including level of hydration, pulse rate, blood pressure, temperature, level of consciousness (especially if medicated); 80 • • severity of alcohol withdrawal. It is beneficial to use an alcohol withdrawal rating scale to assess the severity of withdrawal, to guide treatment, and to assist clinicians in communicating more objectively about the severity and management of alcohol withdrawal. Alcohol withdrawal scales are described below. general progress during withdrawal episode. This includes ongoing level of motivation, alcohol and other drug use during ambulatory withdrawal (breathalyser readings and/or urine drug screens may be clinically indicated); response to any medication(s); and patient concerns or difficulties. Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol Scale The Clinical Institute Withdrawal Assessment for Alcohol revised CIWA-Ar is a 10item, validated scale. CIWA-Ar scores below 10 are considered mild withdrawal; between 10 and 20 are moderate withdrawal, and above 20 are considered severe withdrawal. Patients with CIWA-Ar scores of >10 are at greater risk of developing withdrawal complications if not medicated (Sullivan et al. 1989). Frequency of CIWA-Ar monitoring depends upon treatment setting and clinical condition of the patient. Patients with CIWA-Ar scores of >10 require more frequent monitoring (e.g. at least 4 hourly), and patients with severe withdrawal (CIWA-Ar>20) should be monitored every 2 hours (Saitz and O’Malley 1997; NSW Department of Health 2007). Alcohol Withdrawal Symptoms – Rating Scale An alternative scale is the Alcohol Withdrawal Symptoms - Rating Scale (AWS). The AWS has not been validated, however it has been widely used in Australian conditions and is considered acceptable for use (NSW Department of Health 1999). Short Alcohol Withdrawal Scale The Short Alcohol Withdrawal Scale (SAWS) is a self-completion scale used once a day, and is suited to ambulatory withdrawal settings (Gossop et al. 2002). Other validated scales may be used according to local preference. Limitations of withdrawal scales Alcohol withdrawal rating scales are not to be used as diagnostic tools, as many other medical conditions (e.g. sepsis, hepatic encephalopathy, severe pain), psychiatric conditions (e.g. anxiety disorder) or other drug withdrawal syndromes (e.g. benzodiazepine, stimulant or opiate withdrawal), will produce signs and symptoms that rate on these scales, and can lead to an inappropriate diagnosis of alcohol withdrawal (Foy et al. 1988). These scales have not been validated for management of seriously ill patients. For example, there is evidence of inappropriate use of CIWA-Ar to guide treatment of alcohol withdrawal in hospitalised medical and surgical patients (Bostwick and Lapid 2004; Hecksel et al. 2008), particularly in patients with limited communication abilities. 81 Therefore, alcohol withdrawal scales should not be used to guide medication (e.g. symptom-triggered regimes) in patients with significant medical or psychiatric comorbidity, or those withdrawing from other substances. Health professionals should consult a specialist drug and alcohol clinician about monitoring and management needs. Scoring is typically highly variable in clinical practice and often not reproducible. Clinicians should review scores before making management decisions. Recommendation 5.8 Patients withdrawing from alcohol should be regularly monitored for physical signs, severity of alcohol withdrawal and general progress during withdrawal. 5.9 Alcohol withdrawal scales (CIWA-Ar, AWS) can be used to assess withdrawal severity, to guide treatment (such as symptom-triggered medication regimes) and to aid objective communication between clinicians; but should not be used as diagnostic tools. 5.10 Alcohol withdrawal scales should not be used to guide treatment in patients concurrently withdrawing from other substances, or with significant medical or psychiatric comorbidity. Health professionals should consult a specialist drug and alcohol clinician about monitoring and management needs. 5.11 Scores on alcohol withdrawal scales are not always reproducible and should be checked before using them to make management decisions. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence S A Ia B Ib S Supportive Care This section discusses strategies used to improve withdrawal outcomes, including patient information, environment and support, counselling, diet and rehydration, thiamine supplementation, sleep and relaxation and strategies to facilitate links with other services for further treatment and support. Patient Information Patients (and carers) generally benefit from information regarding the likely nature, severity and duration of symptoms during withdrawal, strategies for coping with symptoms and cravings, strategies to reduce high-risk situations and the role of medication (NSW Department of Health 2007). Recommendation 5.12 Patients (and carers) should be provided with information about the likely nature and course of alcohol withdrawal, and strategies to cope with common symptoms and cravings. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence C III 82 Environment and support Patients attempting alcohol withdrawal are vulnerable to psychological stress. Treatment is more effective in an environment that is quiet, non-stimulating, and nonthreatening. Easy availability of alcohol and other drugs reduces the likelihood of treatment completion (Ozdemir et al. 1994; Myrick and Anton 1998). Recommendation 5.13 Treatment environment should be quiet, non-stimulating, and non-threatening, and where alcohol and other drugs are not available. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence S Supportive counselling Counselling during the withdrawal episode should be aimed specifically at providing patient with strategies for coping with withdrawal symptoms, including cravings, maintaining motivation, and facilitating post-withdrawal links. While no studies directly assessed the effectiveness of these strategies in management of alcohol withdrawal, a recent meta-analysis of treatments for opioid dependence has shown that psychosocial interventions implemented during withdrawal management were effective in terms of completion of treatment, use of opioids, results at follow-up and compliance (Amato et al. 2008). Recommendation 5.14 Supportive counselling should be provided to maintain motivation, provide strategies for coping with symptoms, and reduce high-risk situations. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence D III Diet, nutrition and rehydration Many patients experience nausea and/or diarrhoea during withdrawal. It appears that frequent, light meals are generally better tolerated in the first few days of withdrawal. Patients with such withdrawal symptoms as diarrhoea, nausea/vomiting or profuse sweating may develop dehydration. Dehydration can cause severe disturbances of fluid and electrolyte balance and provoke withdrawal complications and should be corrected with oral fluids or via intravenous infusion, if necessary. In patients with fluid retention water balance should be maintained by oral administration of fluids as intravenous infusion may cause fluid overload leading to heart failure (Myrick and Anton 1998). Recommendation 5.15 Clinicians should ensure oral rehydration is adequate. Intravenous fluids may be necessary in severe dehydration and/or in those not tolerating oral fluids. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence S 83 Thiamine and other supplements Thiamine deficiency is common in patients with alcohol dependence, particularly in those with poor nutritional status (Sgouros et al. 2004). Thiamine supplements are recommended for all individuals undergoing alcohol withdrawal (Cook 2000). According to the recent Cochrane review there is insufficient evidence from randomised controlled trials to guide the clinician as to the optimum dose, frequency, route, or duration of thiamine treatment for prophylaxis or treatment of Wernicke's encephalopathy due to alcohol misuse (Day et al. 2004). There is one randomised, double-blind, multidose study of thiamine treatment in 107 subjects who were detoxifying from alcohol (Ambrose et al. 2001). The results did not reveal a simple dose-response relationship. However, the study has demonstrated that the dose of 200mg IM thiamine for two consecutive days was more effective that the 5mg dose in improving participants’ performance in the test of working memory (a delayed alteration task). The existing recommendations currently used in the UK and Australia (Thomson et al. 2002; Lingford-Hughes et al. 2004; NSW Department of Health 2007; Feeney and Connor 2008) are mostly based on studies by Cook et al. (e.g. 1998, 2000) and Thomson et al. (e.g. 2000; 2006). See also Sechi (2007) for review. In patients showing no clinical features of Wernicke’s Encephalopathy or memory impairment, thiamine is recommended as a prophylactic measure (Cook et al. 1998). The dose, route and duration of thiamine administration depend on patient’s nutritional status. Healthy patients with good dietary intake may be administered oral thiamine. The recommended dose is 300mg per day (e.g. 100mg tds) for 3 to 5 days, and maintained on 100mg oral thiamine for a further 4 to 9 days (total of 1 -2 weeks of oral thiamine). Intestinal absorption of oral thiamine supplements is slow and may be incomplete in patients with poor nutritional status (Thomson et al. 2000). Chronic drinkers with poor dietary intake and general poor nutritional state require parenteral thiamine doses. The recommended dose of thiamine 300mg IM or IV per day for 3-5 days, with subsequent oral thiamine doses of 300mg per day for several weeks (Cook 2000). The intramuscular route should not be used for patients with coagulopathy as absorption of thiamine will be reduced. Parenteral carbohydrates can cause rapid utilisation of thiamine in peripheral tissues and precipitate Wernicke’s Encephalopathy. Therefore, thiamine (oral or intramuscular) should be given BEFORE any carbohydrate load (e.g. IV glucose) (Thomson et al. 2002). Deficiencies of other B complex vitamins, vitamin C, folic acid, zinc and magnesium are not uncommon and an oral multi-vitamin preparation can be given for several days in nutritionally depleted individuals (Myrick and Anton 1998). Thiamine supplementation should be continued indefinitely in an alcohol-dependent patient who continues to drink alcohol. 84 Recommendation Strength of recommendation Level of evidence 5.16 Thiamine should be provided to all patients undergoing alcohol withdrawal to prevent Wernicke’s encephalopathy. 5.17 Thiamine should be given before any carbohydrate load (such as intravenous glucose) as carbohydrates can cause rapid use or depletion of thiamine and precipitate Wernicke’s encephalopathy. D IV D III 5.18 Healthy patients with good dietary intake should be administered oral thiamine 300 mg per day for 3 to 5 days, and maintained on 100 mg oral thiamine for a further 4 to 9 days (total of 1 to 2 weeks of thiamine). 5.19 Chronic drinkers with poor dietary intake and general poor nutritional state should be administered parenteral (intramuscular or intravenous) thiamine doses of 300 mg per day for 3 to 5 days, with subsequent oral thiamine doses of 300 mg per day for several weeks. The intramuscular route should not be used for patients with coagulopathy. D IV D Ib 5.20 Thiamine supplementation should be continued indefinitely in an alcohol-dependent patient who continues to drink alcohol. S Sleep and relaxation Heavy drinkers commonly report sleep disturbances (Benca et al. 1992). Insomnia is a frequent symptom of alcohol withdrawal (Caetano et al. 1998) and a predictor of relapse during early recovery (Foster and Peters 1999; Brower et al. 2001; Malcolm et al. 2007). However, there is no role for continuing treatment with long-term benzodiazepines or other sedatives to improve sleep following alcohol withdrawal (i.e. more than one week). Sleep hygiene practices should be encouraged. Patient literature should be provided regarding sleep and relaxation techniques. Similarly, there is limited role for benzodiazepines or other sedatives for management of anxiety after alcohol withdrawal, and behavioural approaches to relaxation and anxiety management should be encouraged. Recommendation 5.21 Sedatives (such as benzodiazepines) should not be continued beyond the first week of withdrawal. Behavioural approaches to management of anxiety and sleep problems should be encouraged. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence D IV 85 Facilitating links with other services for further treatment and support It has long been recognised that effective management of patients’ alcohol withdrawal symptoms presents a window of opportunity to initiate further treatment of their alcohol dependence (Saitz 1998). Post-withdrawal treatment options include counselling (e.g. relapse prevention), residential rehabilitation, self-help, and medications for relapse prevention. Medications such as naltrexone and acamprosate can be initiated during alcohol withdrawal treatment as a way of enhancing uptake, and indeed acamprosate may also reduce calcium mediated neuronal damage during the withdrawal process (Mann et al. 2008). These are generally commenced after at least three days of abstinence (see Chapter 7). Based on the meta-analysis of studies investigating the effect psychosocial interventions during withdrawal from opioids (Amato et al. 2008), counselling strategies during alcohol withdrawal should focus on examining post-withdrawal treatment options, and facilitating engagement with these services (See section on Supportive counselling, above). Recommendation 5.22 Clinicians should facilitate links to postwithdrawal treatment services during withdrawal treatment. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence D III Medications for Managing Alcohol Withdrawal The following describes the use of medications for managing alcohol withdrawal. Benzodiazepines Benzodiazepines are safe and effective for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal. In general, long acting benzodiazepines with a rapid onset of action are most commonly recommended. The recommendations are based on the evidence from earlier metaanalyses (Mayo-Smith 1997; Holbrook et al. 1999) and reviews (Lingford-Hughes et al. 2004; Mayo-Smith et al. 2004). There is significant evidence that benzodiazepines are effective in reducing symptoms of alcohol withdrawal and in reducing the risk of seizures and alcohol withdrawal delirium when compared to placebo (Mayo-Smith 1997; Holbrook et al. 1999). The most recent meta-analysis (Ntais et al. 2005) has also found that benzodiazepines are effective in reducing withdrawal symptoms and, in particular, in treatment and prevention of withdrawal seizures (see below). Diazepam is the benzodiazepine of choice in many countries, including Australia. Chlordiazepoxide, a long acting and rapid onset benzodiazepine, is widely used internationally but is not registered in Australia. The choice among different agents is guided by duration of action, rapidity of onset, and cost. Meta-analyses show no differences in relative efficacies of different benzodiazepines (Mayo-Smith 1997; Ntais et al. 2005). Earlier randomised controlled 86 trials have shown that lorazepam was more effective than placebo (Naranjo 1998) and as effective as diazepam in reducing symptoms of moderate alcohol withdrawal (Miller and McCurdy 1983). Long-acting benzodiazepines may be more effective in preventing seizures than short acting benzodiazepines (Mayo-Smith 1997). Benzodiazepines with shorter duration of action, such as midazolam, lorazepam, oxazepam lorazepam are recommended when there is concern about prolonged sedation (e.g., in elderly, in patients with significant comorbidities or liver disease) (Saitz 1998; Mayo-Smith et al. 2004). Benzodiazepines should not be continued beyond the first week for managing alcohol withdrawal due to the risk of rebound phenomenon and dependence (Saitz and O’Malley 1997). Benzodiazepines: Recent Meta-analysis A Cochrane review of the use of benzodiazepines for alcohol withdrawal was carried out in 2005 by Ntais et al (2005). Fifty-seven trials included a total of 4,051 people. There was a very large variety of outcomes and of different rating scales, and this limited the data analyses. It was found that benzodiazepines offered a large benefit against alcohol withdrawal seizures compared to placebo (relative risk [RR] 0.16; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.04 to 0.69; p = 0.01). Benzodiazepines had similar success rates to other drugs (RR 1.02; 95% CI 0.92 to 1.12), particularly, anticonvulsants (RR 1.00; 95% CI 0.87 to 1.16) in reducing symptoms of alcohol withdrawal. Seizures were better prevented with benzodiazepines than with nonanticonvulsants (RR 0.23; 95% CI 0.07 to 0.75; p = 0.02). However, no differences in this outcome were found between benzodiazepines and anticonvulsants (RR 1.99; 95% CI 0.46 to 8.65). Thirteen trials with the total of 571 patients showed no difference in efficacy, adverse effects or drop-out rate among patients treated with the following benzodiazepines for 5-28 days: alprazolam, chlordiazepoxide, clobazam, diazepam, halazepam, lopirazepam, lorazepam, and prazepam. Small sample sizes, inadequate reporting of patient status (inpatient or outpatient), or of randomisation techniques, limited the possibilities for further pooling of data. It was not possible to draw definite conclusions about the relative effectiveness and safety of benzodiazepines against other drugs (including carbamazepine, clonidine, propranolol, bromocriptine) in alcohol withdrawal, because of the large heterogeneity of the trials both in interventions and assessment of outcomes. The main conclusion reached by the authors was that benzodiazepines were effective against alcohol withdrawal symptoms, in particular seizures, when compared to placebo. This conclusion is in concordance with previous meta-analyses and in general justifies the current status of benzodiazepines as first-line treatment for alcohol withdrawal, although clear superiority over other agents has not been demonstrated. Recommendation 5.23 Benzodiazepines are the recommended medication in managing alcohol withdrawal. In Australia, diazepam is recommended as ‘gold standard’ and as first-line treatment because of its rapid onset of action, long half-life and evidence for effectiveness. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence A Ia 87 5.24 Shorter-acting benzodiazepines (lorazepam, oxazepam, midazolam) may be indicated where the clinician is concerned about accumulation and over sedation from diazepam, such as in the elderly, severe liver disease, recent head injury, respiratory failure, in obese patients, or where the diagnosis is unclear. 5.25 Benzodiazepines should not be continued beyond the first week for managing alcohol withdrawal due to the risk of rebound phenomenon and dependence. D III D III Symptom-triggered therapy Symptom-triggered medication regimen relies upon linking medication (e.g. diazepam doses) to scores on a frequently administered withdrawal scale (e.g. CIWA-Ar or AWS) (e.g. four times a day). Medication is administered only when the patient develops moderate alcohol withdrawal symptoms. Symptom-triggered regimens have the advantage of better tailoring medication to the needs of individuals, and have been shown to result in less benzodiazepine use than fixeddose regimens in specialist residential detoxification settings (Saitz et al. 1994; Reoux and Miller 2000; Daeppen et al. 2002; Spies et al. 2003). The meta-analysis described above (Ntais et al. 2005) included three of the above studies (Saitz et al. 1994; Daeppen et al. 2002; Spies et al. 2003) with the total of 262 patients. While there was a trend towards a higher effectiveness of symptomtriggered dosing schedules when compared to fixed-dose regimens, in terms of CIWA-Ar score at the end of treatment, therapeutic success and number of completed withdrawals per arm, the statistical significance was not reached. This regimen is not suitable for ambulatory settings or for patients with a history of seizures (Saitz and O’Malley 1997). It should be noted that the appropriateness of symptom-triggered regimen in seriously ill, medically or surgically unstable patients with an established drinking history is unproven. This is particularly the case for patients with limited communication abilities (Hecksel et al. 2008). In the latter study (Hecksel et al. 2008) 25% of all hospital patients who received symptom-triggered therapy according to CIWA-Ar protocol were randomly selected (n=124) and assessed for appropriateness of treatment administered. It was found that although scoring with CIWA-Ar requires communication between the patient and nursing staff, 23% of cases involved patients unable to interact meaningfully. Furthermore, 44% of patients assessed with CIWA-Ar had no history of recent drinking. As a result, 64% of non-drinkers were treated as if they were experiencing alcohol withdrawal syndrome. All these patients could communicate appropriately with the nursing staff, but were not specifically asked about their current drinking status. The situation was especially problematic for patients who had a history of heavy drinking but who had since achieved sobriety. In this study, post-operative status was most likely to result in inappropriate initiation of the CIWA-Ar protocol, probably because the delirium common in the hours and days after surgery is more 88 likely to be mistaken for alcohol withdrawal syndrome. Patients with liver disease were more likely to receive appropriate treatment. Similarly, the symptom-triggered schedule may not be appropriate for management of patients with psychiatric comorbidity or polysubstance dependence. Recommendation 5.26 Diazepam should be administered in a symptom-triggered regimen in residential withdrawal settings for people with no concomitant medical, psychiatric or substance use disorders. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence B Ia Loading dose therapy Loading dose regimens (also referred to as “front-loading”) administer high doses of benzodiazepines in the early stages of alcohol withdrawal. These regimens are used in managing patients with a prior history of severe withdrawal complications and in patients presenting in severe alcohol withdrawal and/or severe withdrawal complications (Saitz and O’Malley 1997). Diazepam is safe to administer in loading regime (Heinala et al. 1990). A common loading diazepam regime under these circumstances is 20mg orally every 2 hours until reaching 60 to 80mg or the patient is sedated (Saitz and O’Malley 1997). Hillbom et al (2003) performed a meta-analysis of 22 randomised controlled studies investigating medications for treatment and prevention of alcohol withdrawal seizures (see below, in Anticonvulsants: Meta-analyses and reviews). They also recommend an administration of the loading dose of diazepam of 10-20mg orally or parenterally to all patients presenting in withdrawal seizures. They emphasised the importance of prevention and treatment of first seizures as every subsequent seizure increases the risk of status epilepticus and other life-threatening complications. Status epilepticus increases the risk of seizures in future withdrawal episodes (Hesdorffer 1998, cited in Hillbom et al. 2003). Two small RCTs examined the effectiveness of diazepam loading dose (Sellers et al.1983, Manikant et al. 1993). Sellers et al (1983) showed that the loading dose regimen using 20mg diazepam was more effective than placebo. Manikant et al. (1993) compared conventional and loading doses. The total dose of diazepam in the conventional treatment and in the loading dose groups were 200 mg and 67 +/- 9.3 mg, respectively. Clinical response was comparable in both groups. None of the subjects developed diazepam related side effects. Patients with a history of severe withdrawal complications (seizures, delirium) and those presenting in severe alcohol withdrawal with or without complications should be treated according to the loading dose regimen. Recommendation 5.27 Diazepam should be administered in a loading regimen (20 mg 2 hourly until 60 to 80 mg or light sedation) in patients with a history of Strength of recommendation Level of evidence B Ib 89 severe withdrawal complications (seizures, delirium); in patients presenting in severe alcohol withdrawal and/or severe withdrawal complications (delirium, hallucinations, following withdrawal seizure). Fixed-schedule therapy Benzodiazepines given at fixed dosing intervals are a common therapy for alcohol withdrawal management, and are well suited to ambulatory withdrawal, community residential and inpatient withdrawal settings (Saitz and O’Malley 1997; Saitz 1998). Fixed schedule regimens may be supplemented with additional diazepam as needed for people with low tolerance of withdrawal discomfort (for example, 5 mg 6 hourly as needed, based on clinical observation or alcohol withdrawal scale scores) (Saitz and O’Malley 1997). In general hospitals, patients with a history of alcohol dependence are the most likely to experience complications of alcohol withdrawal, such as delirium and seizures, when receiving symptom-triggered therapy according to the CIWA-Ar protocol. Such patients should be monitored more closely and may require more frequent doses of benzodiazepines than the CIWA-Ar protocol permits (Hecksel et al. 2008). In patients with concomitant medical, psychiatric or substance use disorders a fixedschedule therapy is more appropriate. Recommendation Strength of recommendation Level of evidence C Ib 5.28 Diazepam should be administered in a fixed dose regimen in ambulatory settings, or for those with concomitant medical, psychiatric or substance use disorders. Alternative, symptomatic and other medications Alternative medications may need to be considered in patients who abuse benzodiazepines, particularly if they continue drinking. In minority of patients benzodiazepines cause paradoxical reactions (such as violence, agitation) or confusion and delirium and are not recommended for use in these patients. However, the alternative medications should be effective in preventing serious complications of alcohol withdrawal, such as seizures and delirium. Anticonvulsant medications should be continued in patients who take them regularly (such as for epilepsy not related to withdrawal). Anticonvulsants: Meta-analyses and reviews A Cochrane review of clinical trials assessing safety and effectiveness of anticonvulsants in the treatment of alcohol withdrawal (Polycarpou et al. 2005), analysed forty-eight studies with the total number of 3610 patients. However, 90 because these studies assessed a large variety of outcomes and used different withdrawal rating scales, quantification of the data was limited. While certain trends were noted, no statistical significance was shown for the benefit of anticonvulsants in reducing severity of withdrawal symptoms (relative risk [RR] 1.32; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.92 to 1.91) or preventing alcohol withdrawal seizures (RR 0.57; 95% CI 0.27 to 1.19) when compared to placebo. When anticonvulsants were compared to other drugs (such as oxazepam) no significant differences were found in CIWA-Ar scores at the end of treatment (weighted mean difference [WMD] -0.73; 95% CI -1.76 to 0.31). In a subgroup analysis of three studies, carbamazepine was found to be significantly more effective than a benzodiazepine (oxazepam and lorazepam), in reducing severity of some alcohol withdrawal symptoms (WMD -1.04; 95% CI -1.89 to -0.20; p = 0.02); however this result was based on only 260 participants. The incidence of alcohol withdrawal seizures post-treatment tended to be lower with anticonvulsants than with placebo or other drugs, but the difference did not reach significance. Phenytoin assessed alone was found to be ineffective in preventing seizures when compared to placebo (RR 0.78; 95% CI 0.35 to 1.77; p = 0.56). The side-effects tended to be less common in the anticonvulsant-group (RR 0.56; 95% CI 0.31 to 1.02). The authors state that it was not possible to draw definite conclusions about the effectiveness and safety of anticonvulsants in alcohol withdrawal in this review, due to the heterogeneity of the trials both in interventions and the assessment of outcomes. An earlier review by Hillbom et al (2003) provides a meta-analysis of twenty two randomised controlled trials examining the efficacy of different drugs for the primary prevention of seizures. This study found that benzodiazepines significantly reduced the risk of seizures while antipsychotics significantly increased the risk seizures. Short-acting benzodiazepines (oxazepam and lorazepam) appeared less effective as tapering off the drugs caused additional seizures in some cases. Anticonvulsants were as effective as benzodiazepines in preventing primary alcohol withdrawal seizures but adding them to benzodiazepines did not further reduce the risk of seizures. A meta-analysis of three randomised controlled trials examining the efficacy of drugs for prevention of the secondary (recurrent) seizures, found phenytoin to be ineffective. The authors conclude that benzodiazepines should be the first line of treatment as they effectively prevent both first seizures and recurrent seizures during alcohol withdrawal episode. Non-sedative anticonvulsants are the second choice. Ait-Daoud et al. (2006) provide an overview on a number of medications for treatment of alcohol dependence, including treatment of withdrawal. They examined the results of eight trials of valproate for treatment of withdrawal, including openlabel, case-report and randomised controlled studies. They also reported in detail the results of a double-blind trial comparing carbamazepine with lorazepam (Malcolm et al. 2002). The authors concluded that ‘valproate and carbamazepine have been shown to be safe and effective alternatives to benzodiazepines for treating alcohol withdrawal’. However, the effectiveness of these drugs for prevention of secondary seizures was not discussed. Carbamazepine Carbamazepine for treatment of alcohol withdrawal has been studied for many years and is widely used in Europe for this indication (Mayo-Smith 1997; Mayo-Smith 2004). It is a safe alternative to benzodiazepines, but it is usually is not recommended for use as the first line of treatment because it has significant side effects and may not prevent secondary seizures (Hillbom et al. 1989). 91 Prince and Turpin (2008) reviewed six randomised double-blind trials investigating carbamazepine, gabapentin and nitrous oxide as alternatives to symptom-triggered benzodiazepine administration for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal syndrome (Prince and Turpin 2008). The results of the review suggested that carbamazepine 200mg four times daily was as effective as 30 mg of lorazepam four times daily in reducing symptoms of alcohol withdrawal. It is therefore, may be useful for treatment of alcohol withdrawal, particularly in outpatient settings, although adverse effects and drug interactions may limit its usefulness. The role of gabapentin was unclear because of the lack of randomised, double-blind, controlled trials and the conflicting results of existing case series and open-label trials. Two trials of nitrous oxide were poorly designed and had conflicting results. The authors conclude that because of the limitations in evidence, the routine use of carbamazepine and gabapentin for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal cannot be recommended, and the use nitrous oxide should be avoided. Valproate One study looked at the role of valproic acid, conducting a literature review of controlled clinical trials (Lum et al. 2006). The results were inconclusive. Comparisons were made among various regimens of valproic acid and traditional therapy with benzodiazepine or non-benzodiazepine agents. Only 2 of 6 trials reported a statistically significant difference in favour of valproic acid on endpoints of alcohol withdrawal. However, these differences were of marginal clinical significance. The number of patients included in these studies did not allow for adequate evaluation of safety. The authors conclude that the existing limited efficacy and safety data suggest that valproic acid should not replace conventional therapy or be used as adjunct therapy for management of mild-to-moderate alcohol withdrawal syndrome. Anticonvulsants: Randomised controlled trials Oxcarbazepine A pilot study of oxcarbazepine vs. carbamazepine was conducted in Germany (Schik, et al. 2005) with 29 patients. Results showed that the oxcarbazepine group had a significant decrease of withdrawal symptoms and reported significantly less 'craving for alcohol' compared to the carbamazepine group. Subjectively experienced side effects, normalisation of autonomic parameters and improvement in the cognitive processing speed did not differ between groups. Therefore, the authors suggest that oxcarbazepine might be an interesting alternative to carbamazepine, and having almost no addictive potential, no clinically relevant interaction with alcohol and no prominent sedatory effect, it might also offer an alternative to other drugs such as benzodiazepines or clomethiazole. A study by Koethe et al examined the role of oxcarbazepine’s efficacy and tolerability during alcohol withdrawal (Koethe et al. 2007), with limited results. The trial was conducted in 50 inpatients during a 6-day treatment of alcohol withdrawal in a 4-site, double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled pilot study. The amount of rescue medication of clomethiazole capsules needed was chosen as the primary variable. Results showed no differences in the need for rescue medication clomethiazole, decrease of withdrawal symptoms, or craving for alcohol between the oxcarbazepine and the placebo group. Subjectively experienced side effects, normalisation of vegetative parameters, craving, or improvement of psychopathological parameters 92 were not different between the groups. The authors state that despite the negative finding, which may be attributable to the design of the study, oxcarbazepine still poses an interesting alternative to carbamazepine and other drugs because other studies have found it not only as efficient but also as having no addictive potential, while additionally possessing an anti-craving effect. They also suggests that it may have been better to trial it against benzodiazepine instead of placebo. Gabapentin A small trial was carried out comparing gabapentin and phenobarbital for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal (Mariani et al. 2006). A randomised, open-label, controlled trial had 27 inpatient participants. Results showed no significant differences in the proportion of treatment completers between treatment groups or the proportion of patients in each group requiring rescue medication for breakthrough signs and symptoms of alcohol withdrawal. There were no significant treatment differences in withdrawal symptoms or psychological distress, nor were there serious adverse events. The authors suggest that gabapentin may be as effective as phenobarbital in the treatment of alcohol withdrawal. However phenobarbital is no longer used in the management of alcohol withdrawal. The small sample size and the choice of a comparison drug, make it difficult to draw any firm conclusions from this study. A recent double-blind study of 100 patients compared 2 doses of gabapentin (900 mg tapering to 600 mg or 1200 tapering to 800 mg) with lorazepam (6 mg tapering to 4 mg) for 4 days. They found that gabapentin was well tolerated and was clinically similar to lorazepam in reducing alcohol withdrawal symptoms, especially at the high dose. The gabapentin groups reported less craving, anxiety, and sedation compared to lorazepam (Myrick et al. 2009). Topiramate In a small study, Choi et al. (2005, cited in Ait-Daoud et al. 2006) found that topiramate 50 mg/day (N =25) was as efficacious as lorazepam up to 4 mg/day (N=27) at treating alcohol withdrawal symptoms in an inpatient setting. Anticonvulsants: Summary While some anticonvulsants, such as carbamazepine are effective in minimising alcohol withdrawal symptoms and in preventing primary withdrawal seizures, there is no clear evidence that anticonvulsants are effective in preventing secondary seizures or delirium. There is appears to be no advantage in adding anticonvulsants to benzodiazepines for preventing withdrawal seizures. Phenytoin and valproate are not effective in preventing the onset of alcohol withdrawal seizures. The role of newer anticonvulsants (e.g. gabapentin and topiramate) is yet to be demonstrated in controlled studies against gold standard treatment, such as diazepam.Anticonvulsant medications should be continued in patients who take them regularly (such as for epilepsy not related to withdrawal). Recommendation 5.29 Carbamazepine is safe and effective as an alternative to benzodiazepines, although it is not effective in preventing further seizures in Strength of recommendation Level of evidence A Ia 93 withdrawal episodes. 5.30 Phenytoin and valproate are not effective in preventing alcohol withdrawal seizures and are not recommended. 5.31 Newer anticonvulsant agents (such as gabapentin) are not recommended at this stage due to lack of clinical evidence. 5.32 There is no benefit in adding anticonvulsants to benzodiazepines to manage alcohol withdrawal. 5.33 Anticonvulsant medications should be continued in patients who take them regularly (such as for epilepsy not related to withdrawal). A Ia D IV A Ia S Antipsychotic medications: Meta-analyses Anti-psychotic medication when used alone may increase seizure risk (for example phenothiazines) and do not prevent the onset of delirium, as has been shown in the meta-analyses by Hillbom et al. (2003) (see above in Anticolvulsants) and MayoSmith et al. (2004) (see below, in Alcohol Withdrawal Delirium). Antipsychotics should only be used in conjunction with benzodiazepines in the management of hallucinations or agitation associated with delirium that have not responded to adequate doses of benzodiazepines. Antipsychotic medications: Randomised controlled studies There are no placebo-controlled studies of neuroleptics or newer atypical antipsychotics (such as olanzapine and risperidon) for treatment of alcohol withdrawal. Nevertheless, neuroleptics, especially haloperidol, are commonly used (with sedative-hypnotic drugs) in patients with alcohol withdrawal delirium. Studies reported below provide evidence for safety and effectiveness of some antipsychotic medications either alone or in combination with anticonvulsants in treatment of alcohol withdrawal. These studies, however, are relatively small and the results should be interpreted with caution. Cyamemazine Cyamemazine is a phenothiazine derivative with a pharmacological profile close to that of atypical antipsychotics and with some anxiolytic effect. It is not available in Australia. It has been shown to reduce convulsions in animal studies and there is one clinical trial of its efficacy and safety in alcohol-dependent patients (Favre et al. 2005). This was a small multicentre, randomised double-blind study investigating cyamemazine for its efficacy and tolerability in alcohol-dependent patients electing an alcohol withdrawal procedure, in comparison with diazepam. Eighty-nine alcohol dependent patients were randomised to receive cyamemazine or diazepam to compare it for efficacy and tolerability. On day 1, cyamemazine or diazepam (50 mg and 10 mg capsule, respectively) were administered at hourly intervals, with effects measured by reduction in CIWA-Ar (withdrawal scale) scores, up to a maximum of eight administrations. Starting from day 2, the compounds were given twice a day in progressively decreasing doses during a maximum period of 13 days. Similarity of 94 therapeutic effects and safety were confirmed in both medications. The authors’ conclusions were that cyamemazine showed similar efficacy and tolerability to diazepam for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal symptoms at therapeutic doses in the range 100-300 mg. The incidence of delirium tremors or alcohol withdrawal seizures after initiation of treatment was 2.3% (one patient out of 44 for each). It is not clear from the protocol how many patients had a previous history of alcohol withdrawal seizures. Tiapride/carbamazepine combination Benzodiazepines can cause respiratory depression, especially in combination with alcohol. Administration of diazepam to patients with blood alcohol concentrations above 0.1% is usually discouraged. Because intoxicated patients quite often seek treatment for alcohol withdrawal, the search for alternative medications continues. Tiapride is an atypical neuroleptic with a dopamine receptor-antagonist activity, often used in treatment of hyperkinesias, including tremor. Tiapride does not prevent delirium or withdrawal seizures and has been studied in a combination with carbamazepine for treatment of alcohol withdrawal. One small open-label study has compared four treatment conditions for alcohol withdrawal in intoxicated and non-intoxicated patients (Lucht al. 2003). Patients were assigned in blocks of 10 to one of the following: tiapride and carbamazepine (group A) vs clomethiazole (group B) vs diazepam (group C) in non-intoxicated patients and vs tiapride/carbamazepine in intoxicated patients (group D). Findings were that efficacy and safety were not different between groups (total group: delirium, 3.9%; seizure, 0.8%). While treatment could be initiated safely in intoxicated patients, in 18% of cases the tiapride/carbamazepine combination was ineffective in controlling withdrawal symptoms after the blood alcohol concentration fell below 0.1% and a change of medication was required. The authors’ conclusions were that treatment with tiapride/carbamazepine can be used in alcohol-intoxicated and in nonintoxicated patients without delirium. Soyka et al. (2006) used a retrospective study, pooling data from 540 patients to examine the efficacy, practicability and medical safety of a combination of tiapride and fast-acting formula of carbamazepine. Details of alcohol history and comorbid disorders were extracted from patient files. Patients had a long-term history of alcohol dependence and a significant alcohol intake before detoxification. Most patients were still intoxicated at the moment of hospitalisation (median respiratory alcohol 1.6g/l). Most patients had moderate-to-severe withdrawal (baseline CIWA-Ascore 12.3). A pooled analysis of the results showed that, in general, medication safe and effective. Withdrawal symptomatology as indicated by CIWA-A scores decreased from baseline to 3.9 on day 5 and 2.6 on day 9). A total of 5 (0.9%) patients developed seizures, 5 on the initial, 2 on the second and 1 on the fourth day. Of the 151 patients who had a previous history of alcohol withdrawal seizures, only 4 developed seizures during treatment. Although a significant number of patients had a history of alcohol withdrawal delirium (103), only 5 of these patients developed delirium. Three patients had first episode of alcohol withdrawal delirium. Only 24 (4.4%) patients dropped out because of lack of efficacy or change of medication, and 15 (2.8%) because of side effects. No case of malignant neuroleptic syndrome was recorded. Severe withdrawal complications were more frequent in men compared to women and in patients with repeated inpatient treatment. 95 The authors conclude that, in line with previous research, the results from this study give further evidence that a combination of the anticonvulsant carbamazepine and tiapride is an effective and safe combination for the treatment of alcohol withdrawal. Antipsychotic medications: Summary Antipsychotic medications should not be a stand alone treatment of alcohol withdrawal but can be used in conjunction with benzodiazepines to treat hallucinations or agitation in patients who do not respond well to benzodiazepines alone.There is insufficient evidence at this stage to recommend cyamemazine or tiapride/carbamazepine combination for treatment of alcohol withdrawal. Recommendation 5.34 Antipsychotic medications should only be used as an adjunct to adequate benzodiazepine therapy for hallucinations or agitated delirium. They should not be used as stand-alone medication for withdrawal. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence A Ia Anti-hypertensive agents Elevated blood pressure during alcohol withdrawal is usually well managed by adequate doses of benzodiazepines. In cases where blood pressure remains markedly elevated despite adequate benzodiazepine loading, a beta-blocker (e.g. atenolol or propranolol) is recommended. However, the use of propranolol in these patients is limited due to its association with hallucinations (Zilm et al. 1980; Saitz 1998). Recommendation 5.35 Anti-hypertensive agents (beta-blockers) should be used for managing extreme hypertension that has not responded to adequate doses of diazepam for alcohol withdrawal. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence D IV Symptomatic medication Despite the absence of an empirical evidence base in alcohol withdrawal, symptomatic medications are commonly used in the management of alcohol withdrawal. Recommendation 5.36 A range of symptomatic medications may be used for addressing specific symptoms (such as paracetamol for headache, anti-emetics, antidiarrhoeal agents). Strength of recommendation Level of evidence D IV 96 Electrolyte disturbances Hypokalaemia and hypomagnesaemia should be corrected using oral supplements (Saitz and O’Malley 1997; Myrick and Anton 1998). Hyponatraemia is usually selflimiting and should not be aggressively corrected because of the risk of central pontine myelinolysis (Laureno and Karp 1997; Leens et al. 2001). Recommendation 5.37 Electrolyte replacement may be a necessary adjunctive treatment for patients with electrolyte abnormalities (such as hypomagnesaemia, hypokalaemia). Hyponatraemia should not be aggressively corrected due to the risk of central pontine myelinolysis. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence S Other medications Chlormethiazole (also spelled as clomethiazole) is a short-acting sedative and anticonvulsant medication that was historically widely used for treating alcohol withdrawal before the advent of benzodiazepines. It is no longer recommended for managing alcohol withdrawal due to its risk of respiratory depression and death in overdose or in combination with alcohol or other sedatives. The use of barbiturates, clonidine and beta-blockers is not recommended for routine management of alcohol withdrawal, based on the meta-analysis by Mayo-Smith (1997). Alcohol (ethanol) (Mayo-Smith 1997; Saitz and O’Malley 1998; Weinberg et al. 2008) and GHB currently have no role in the treatment of alcohol withdrawal. Studies on effectiveness of GHB in reducing alcohol withdrawal symptoms have been published, but there is no evidence to suggest that they are effective in preventing alcohol withdrawal seizures or delirium. Magnesium is used to correct hypomagnesaemia in patients with alcohol withdrawal, but is not a stand alone treatment (Mayo-Smith 1997). Recommendation 5.38 Chlormethiazole, barbiturates, alcohol, beta-blockers, clonidine and gammahydroxybutyric acid (GHB) are not recommended in the routine management of alcohol withdrawal. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence A Ia 97 Treatment of Severe Withdrawal Complications Severe complications of alcohol withdrawal include seizures, hallucinations and alcohol withdrawal delirium. Alcohol Withdrawal Seizures Alcohol acts on the brain through various mechanisms that influence seizure threshold, including calcium and chloride ion flow through glutamate (N-methyl-daspartate, NMDA) and gamma aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptors. Chronic alcohol use results in adaptive changes to the effects of alcohol, and the seizure threshold is lowered as a rebound phenomenon when alcohol intake is stopped. Clinical presentation and prevalence Alcohol withdrawal seizures (AWS) typically occur 6 to 48 hours after the last drink is consumed (50% between 13 and 24 hours, 90% within 48 hrs), and are usually generalised (tonic-clinic) seizures (Rueff 1995, cited in Prescrire 2007). New-onset alcohol withdrawal seizures are linked to heavy alcohol consumption (Hillbom et al. 2003). Withdrawal seizures occur as blood alcohol levels fall, and in some severely dependent drinkers, seizures can occur even if the patient is still intoxicated or has consumed alcohol recently and the blood alcohol level is high (for example, greater than 0.10) (Victor and Brausch 1967). Hillbom et al. (2003) reviewed the placebo arms of four studies of secondary prevention of seizures and estimated that the risk of seizure recurrence within 6-12 hours after a seizure was between 13% and 24%. Whilst the incidence of status epilepticus is low, alcohol withdrawal is major cause of status epilepticus. The prevalence of alcohol-withdrawal seizures is estimated at between 2 and 9% of alcohol dependent individuals (8% in placebo arms in controlled studies of heavy drinkers in inpatient studies. Individuals who have experienced an alcohol withdrawal seizure are more likely to experience further seizures in subsequent alcohol withdrawal episodes (Hillbom et al. 2003). The prevalence of seizures in alcohol dependent individuals when all causes are included is up to 15% (Chan 1985). This is at least three times higher than the general population. It is estimated that alcohol-related seizures account for one third of all seizure-related hospital admissions (Chan 1985; Bråthen et al. 2000). Other causes of seizures in heavy drinkers Heavy alcohol use can also contribute to seizures through other conditions including concurrent metabolic, infectious, traumatic, neoplastic or cerebrovascular conditions, or through concomitant use of other substances (particularly benzodiazepines). Furthermore, it has been suggested that long-term neurotoxic effects of alcohol may lead to epilepsy (Hauser et al. 1988). Seizures under these circumstances may be atypical of alcohol-withdrawal seizures in onset or type (e.g. partial-onset seizures). 98 However, other causes of seizures can present clinically as alcohol withdrawal seizures. In a series of 259 individuals with recent alcohol abuse and first onset seizures with no obvious cause other than alcohol withdrawal, 6% showed intracranial lesions on CT scan (Earnest et al. 1988). Pharmacological approaches to prevention of seizures Systematic reviews indicate that benzodiazepines effectively prevent alcohol withdrawal seizures, and are effective in preventing recurrent (further) seizures in a withdrawal episode (Mayo-Smith 1997; Hillbom et al. 2003). In patients with prior seizure history, or in severe alcohol withdrawal diazepam loading is recommended. Carbamazepine effectively prevents alcohol withdrawal seizures, but is not effective in preventing recurrent (further) seizures in a withdrawal episode (Hillbom et al. 2003). There appears to be no advantage in adding anticonvulsants to benzodiazepines for preventing alcohol withdrawal seizures (Hillbom et al. 2003). Phenytoin and valproate do not effectively prevent the onset of alcohol withdrawal seizures and are not recommended (Hillbom et al. 2003). The role of other anticonvulsants (such as gabapentin, topiramate) is yet to be demonstrated, and while their GABA-ergic actions suggest they may be useful, they are not recommended at this stage. See ‘Medications for managing alcohol withdrawal’ above for more detail. Assessing and managing seizures in heavy drinkers Many heavy drinkers present to services (e.g. hospital, paramedic) following a seizure, and can pose a diagnostic dilemma for clinicians. The diagnosis of alcohol withdrawal seizures is one of exclusion of other causes of seizures, such as epilepsy, seizures due to head injury, subdural hematoma or metabolic, neoplastic, infectious, cardiovascular and other causes (Saitz 1998; Rathlev 2002, cited in Hughs 2008; Hillbom et al. 2003; Bråthen et al. 2005). Studies investigating the diagnosis and management of alcohol withdrawal seizures have been reviewed by Hillbom et al. (2003) and the European Federation of Neurological Societies task force (Bråthen et al. 2005). An alcohol withdrawal seizure can be diagnosed if none of the following criteria are present: • clinical features or suspicion of other causes of seizures (such as head injury, metabolic, infectious, neoplastic, cerebrovascular disorders) • no previous seizure history • the patient experiences two or more seizures in succession • partial-onset (focal) seizures • seizure occurring more than 48 hours after last drink 99 • no recent heavy alcohol use or other features of alcohol withdrawal. • If any of the above criteria are present, alcohol withdrawal seizures should not be assumed. (Hillbom et al. 2003; Bråthen et al. 2005) • The patient should be admitted into hospital, assessed for other causes of seizures, and monitored for at least 24 hours. Careful collateral history should be taken where possible (Bråthen et al. 2005). • Clinical examination should focus on differentiation between epileptic and alcohol withdrawal seizures. • Table 5.2 identifies common differences between alcohol withdrawal seizures and epileptic seizures. Table 5.2 Post-ictal signs and symptoms: comparing epilepsy and alcohol withdrawal seizures Epilepsy Alcohol withdrawal seizures Consciousness level Post-ictal sleep/drowsy Sleeplessness Mood Tremor Sweating Calm No No Anxiety, agitated Yes Yes BP, PR Temperature Arterial bloods Normal Normal/slight fever Normal Elevated Fever (lower than 38.5°C) Respiratory alkalosis EEG Pathology Normal, low-amplitude Notes: EEG – electroencephalogram; BP, PR – blood pressure, pulse rate Source: EFNS guideline on the diagnosis and management of alcohol-related seizures: Report of the European Federation of Neurological Societies task force (2005) .available at <http://www.guideline.gov/summary/summary.aspx?doc_id=9648> Where the likely diagnosis is alcohol withdrawal seizures, patients should be administered benzodiazepines to prevent further (secondary) seizures (see Loadingdose therapy above). Where the diagnosis of alcohol withdrawal seizures can be established against criteria (above), the patients should be admitted into a supervised withdrawal setting for at least 48 to 72 hours and monitored for vital signs, alcohol withdrawal symptoms and neurological symptoms. Thiamine administration (100 mg three times daily intramuscular or intravenous) before carbohydrate is recommended as prophylaxis of Wernicke’s encephalopathy. Supportive management, including nursing in a quiet environment away from excessive sensory stimuli and rehydration should be provided. Diazepam loading to prevent further alcohol withdrawal seizures is recommended as described above, in Loading-dose therapy. Recommendation 5.39 Alcohol withdrawal seizure should only be Strength of recommendation Level of evidence B II 100 assumed if the clinical presentation is typical of an alcohol withdrawal seizure, no other causes of seizure are suspected, and the patient has a history of previous alcohol withdrawal seizures. All other cases need full investigation. 5.40 Heavy drinkers with a seizure of unknown cause should be admitted to hospital and monitored for at least 24 hours. Investigations include biochemical tests and neuro-imaging, and possibly EEG. 5.41 Loading with benzodiazepines (diazepam, lorazepam) and close monitoring for at least 24 hours is recommended after an alcohol withdrawal seizure. 5.42 Anticonvulsants are not effective in preventing further seizures in the withdrawal episode. C III A Ia A Ia Role of long-term anticonvulsants for patients with alcohol withdrawal seizures Patients should not be initiated on long-term anticonvulsants unless there are other causes of seizure activity. Alcohol withdrawal seizures will not recur if the patient remains abstinent, and most patients have very poor adherence with anticonvulsants if they recommence alcohol use, and indeed may even increase the risk of seizures due to erratic anticonvulsant use (Hillbom et al. 2003). Recommendation 5.43 Long-term anticonvulsant treatment is not recommended to prevent further alcohol withdrawal seizures. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence D IV Hallucinations Patients may experience hallucinations or other perceptual disturbances (e.g. misperceptions) at any stage of the alcohol withdrawal phase and are not a predictor of alcohol withdrawal delirium (Holloway 1984, cited in Turner et al. 1989). Hallucinations may be visual, tactile or auditory. Visual hallucinations commonly reported by patients include bugs crawling on the walls or patient’s bed. Auditory hallucinations are often voices that are accusatory in nature and patients appear frightened and paranoid. Visual and auditory hallucinations may occur simultaneously. Hallucinations occur on the background of clear sensorium in contrast with the clouded consciousness characteristic of alcohol withdrawal delirium (Turner et al. 1989). The autonomic symptoms of withdrawal may be absent. Assessment and monitoring Thorough psychiatric evaluation is required in order to exclude concomitant medical or psychiatric conditions. 101 Medication There are no controlled trials demonstrating the superiority of different antipsychotic medications, and practitioners should use medications with which they are most familiar. Antipsychotic medication should not be used in isolation (i.e. without adequate benzodiazepine loading) as they do not adequately prevent the onset of alcohol withdrawal delirium and may lower seizure threshold. Alcoholic hallucinosis Chronic alcohol use can result in an organic psychotic disorder, most commonly with hallucinatory features (alcoholic hallucinosis), that can be difficult to differentiate from other causes of psychosis, such as paranoid schizophrenia (Soyka 1990; Glass 1989a). Hallucinations (usually auditory) occur whilst patients are drinking, although may persist during withdrawal, and can be mistaken for alcohol withdrawal hallucinations. Alcoholic hallucinosis is a rear syndrome, compared to alcohol withdrawal delirium, with estimated prevalence of 0.6% (Soyka 2008). Treatment with antipsychotic medications is recommended until long-term abstinence is achieved and symptoms ameliorate. The prognosis is usually good if long-term abstinence is maintained, although a minority (10-20%) will develop a chronic schizophrenia-like syndrome (Glass 1989b). Treatment of alcoholic hallucinosis with sodium valproate has been investigated in a double-blind placebo-controlled study (Aliyev and Aliyev 2008). The results of the study suggest that valproate reduces auditory hallucinations in patients with alcoholic hallucinosis. Alcohol Withdrawal Delirium Alcohol withdrawal delirium is also referred to as delirium tremens or DTs and the terms can be used interchangeably. Clinical presentation and prevalence The features of alcohol withdrawal delirium are disturbance of consciousness and changes in cognition or perceptual disturbance developing in a short period of time during or shortly after alcohol withdrawal syndrome (American Psychiatric Association 2000). It is accompanied by other symptoms of withdrawal, such as high fever, tachycardia, hypertension and diaphoresis (Mayo-Smith et al. 2004). The incidence of alcohol withdrawal delirium in placebo-treated alcohol dependent patients entered into inpatient clinical trials averages at 5% (Mayo-Smith 1997). Early studies reported mortality rates as high as 15%, however, mortality rates have fallen with advances in management to less than 1% (Mayo-Smith et al. 2004), 102 Concomitant medical conditions are common and may include dehydration, electrolyte abnormalities, renal failure, unrecognised head trauma, infections (including meningitis), gastrointestinal haemorrhage, pancreatitis, liver failure, Management The initial treatment goal in patients with AWD is control of agitation. Rapid control of agitation reduces the incidence of subsequent adverse events. Hospitalisation is recommended. Mayo-Smith et al. (2004) have reviewed 49 studies investigating treatment of alcohol withdrawal delirium and conducted a meta-analysis of nine randomised clinical trials. Sedative hypnotics were found more effective than neuroleptics in reducing mortality from alcohol withdrawal delirium (relative risk of mortality with neuroleptic treatment compared with sedative-hypnotic treatment was 6.6 (95% confidence interval, 1.234.7). Sedative-hypnotic agents were superior to neuroleptic agents in reducing the duration of alcohol withdrawal delirium. The authors recommend that control of agitation should be achieved using parenteral rapid-acting sedative-hypnotic agents. Adequate doses should be used to maintain light somnolence for the duration of delirium. Coupled with comprehensive supportive medical care, this approach is highly effective in preventing morbidity and mortality. Monitoring and assessment There are no controlled studies assessing these issues, the literature includes recommendations from clinical experts and case reports reviewed by Mayo-Smith et al. (2004). Thorough medical evaluation is required in order to identify complications of alcohol withdrawal delirium (such as electrolyte disturbances) and concomitant medical conditions. Close monitoring and supervision (preferably one-to-one) may be needed to ensure safety of the patient from harm to self or others. Vital signs (including pulse, blood pressure, temperature) should be monitored frequently. Patient should be managed in a quiet room with minimal sensory stimulation. Recommendation 5.44 Alcohol withdrawal delirium requires hospitalisation, medical assessment, and close monitoring. 5.45 Patient should be managed in a quiet environment with minimal sensory stimulation. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence A I C III IV fluids and nutritional supplements Electrolyte abnormalities should be corrected. In particular, hypomagnesaemia is often reported in patients with AWD, and magnesium administration may help reduce neuromuscular activity and agitation (Saitz and O’Malley 1997). Recommendation 5.46 Dehydration and electrolyte imbalance should be corrected. Strength of recommendation Level of evidence S 103 Medication Benzodiazepines are recommended as the primary medication in managing AWD, reducing mortality, duration of delirium and with fewer complications than with neuroleptics in controlled trials (Mayo-Smith et al. 2004). Controlled studies are lacking with regards to the most effective benzodiazepine, or route of administration. Antipsychotic medications should be used as second-line medication in controlling agitation of AWD, as an adjunct to (not instead of) adequate benzodiazepine doses (Mayo-Smith et al. 2004). There are no controlled trials demonstrating the superiority of different antipsychotic medications, and practitioners should use medications with which they are most familiar. The newer antipsychotic agents (e.g. risperidone, olanzapine, quetiapine) have a better safety profile. Recommendation Strength of recommendation Level of evidence A 1a A 1a 5.47 Benzodiazepines should be used to achieve light sedation. Oral diazepam or lorazepam loading until desired effect is the treatment of choice. Intravenous diazepam or midazolam is appropriate if rapid sedation is needed. 5.48 Antipsychotic medications should be used to control agitation of alcohol withdrawal as an adjunct to (not instead of) adequate benzodiazepine doses. Wernicke’s Korsakoff’s Syndrome Wernicke’s encephalopathy is a form of acute brain injury resulting from a lack of thiamine (vitamin B1) that most commonly occurs in chronically alcohol dependent individuals (Victor et al. 1989). In alcohol dependent patients thiamine deficiency occurs due to poor dietary intake and due to intestinal malabsorption. It is estimated that healthy subjects absorb 4.5% of an oral dose of thiamine, compared to 1.5% in alcohol-dependent patients (Thomson et al. 2002). The condition is initially reversible, but if untreated or inadequately treated can lead to Korsakoff’s syndrome, a chronic and disabling condition characterised by severe anterograde amnesia and often presents with confabulation. Korsakoff’s is not associated with dementia or delirium. Approximately one quarter of patients with Wernicke’s encephalopathy recover completely, a quarter show significant improvement, a quarter only partially recover, and one quarter no improvement with time. Approximately one quarter require longterm institutional care (Cook et al. 1998). There is no effective treatment of Korsakoff’s Syndrome. 104 Clinical presentation and diagnosis The initial diagnosis of Wernicke’s encephalopathy remains clinical. The classic triad of signs of Wernicke’s encephalopathy syndrome are: Confusion or mental impairment (estimated to occur in 80% of cases) Ataxia (approximately 20-25% of cases) Eye signs - nystagmus, opthalmoplegia (approximately 30% of cases) (Harper 1986). Only a minority of patients with Wernicke’s encephalopathy (estimated at 10%) exhibit all three signs. In rare cases, untreated Wernicke’s encephalopathy may result in hypothermia, hypotension, coma and death (Harper et al. 1986). Wernicke’s encephalopathy is grossly under-diagnosed (Thomson et al. 2002). Postmortem studies reveal changes diagnostic for Wernicke’s encephalopathy in 12.5% of heavy drinkers (compared to 1.5% of general population). Fewer than 80% of these cases are diagnosed before post-mortem (Harper et al. 1986; Cook et al. 1998). Clinical features of Wernicke’s encephalopathy may be misinterpreted as alcohol intoxication, alcohol withdrawal, head injury, or other causes of confusion in heavy drinkers. Whilst there are no specific routine diagnostic tests for Wernicke’s encephalopathy, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) remains a valuable technique (Sechi and Serra 2007). It can usually detect symmetric alterations in the mamillary bodies, medial thalami, tectal plate, and periaqueductal area (Chung et al. 2003; Estruch et al. 1998; Sechi and Serra 2007). In patients with a history of alcohol abuse, contrast media and other methods of enhanced MRI can often identify mamillary body lesions typical for Wernicke’s encephalopathy, even in the presence of normal unenhanced MR images. MRI has low sensitivity (53%) but high specificity (93%) for Wernicke’s encephalopathy (Antunez et al. 1998). Valuable adjuncts for an early diagnosis of Wernicke’sencephalopathy are MR fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) sequence and diffusion-weighted MRI (Sullivan and Pfefferbaum 2009). Diagnosis of Wernicke’s encephalopathy requires a high index of suspicion in heavy or chronic drinkers, especially if there are any clinical features consistent with Wernicke’s encephalopathy or Korsakoff syndrome (e.g. memory impairment). Recommendation Strength of recommendation Level of evidence D III 5.49 Clinicians should consider MR contrast neuro-imaging where the diagnosis of Wernicke’s encephalopathy is not clinically established. Preventing and treating Wernicke’s encephalopathy The most recent meta-analysis of studies examining efficacy of thiamine in preventing and treating Wernicke’s encephalopathy in patients with alcohol dependence (Day et al. 2009) found insufficient evidence to guide clinicians in the 105 choice of thiamine dose, frequency and route of administration or duration of treatment. Only two randomised controlled studies were identified and only one contained data sufficient for quantitative analysis. The current approach described in this section, is based on uncontrolled trials and expert opinion (e.g. Thomson et al. 2002; Lingford-Hughes et al. 2004; Thomson and Marshall 2006; Feeney and Connor. 2008). Is recommended that: • all heavy or chronic drinkers should be considered at risk of Wernicke’s encephalopathy • all patients undergoing alcohol withdrawal should be treated with thiamine to prevent Wernicke’s encephalopathy and • all patients with any features of WE should be treated as though Wernicke’s encephalopathy is established. Prophylaxis In patients showing no clinical features of WE or memory impairment, thiamine is recommended as a prophylactic measure. See Section on Thiamine and other supplements in this chapter. Treatment All heavy drinkers with any features of WE (e.g. confusion, ataxia, eye signs), coma, memory impairment, hypothermia with hypotension, or delirium tremens should be treated as though WE is established (even if intoxicated). Thiamine should be given BEFORE any carbohydrate load (e.g. IV glucose). Parenteral doses of at least 500mg per day thiamine (IM or IV diluted in saline over 30 minutes) should be administered daily for at least 3 to 5 days, with subsequent doses of at least 300mg (oral or parenteral) per day for 1 to 2 weeks. Any electrolyte disturbances, including hypomagnesaemia, should be corrected. Recommendation Strength of recommendation Level of evidence 5.50 All patients exhibiting any features of Wernicke’s encephalopathy should be treated as though Wernicke’s encephalopathy is established. D III 5.51 All patients suspected of Wernicke’s encephalopathy should be treated with highdose parenteral thiamine (at least 500 mg daily) for at least 3 to 5 days. The intramuscular route should not be used for patients with coagulopathy. Subsequent oral thiamine doses of 300 mg per day for several weeks. 5.52 Patients suspected of Wernicke’s encephalopathy should have hypomagnesaemia corrected in order for thiamine supplements to be effective. 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JAMA 239(14): 1409-1410. 112 Weinberg, JA, Magnotti LJ, Fischer PE, et al. 2008, Comparison of intravenous ethanol versus diazepam for alcohol withdrawal prophylaxis in the trauma ICU: results of a randomized trial. J Trauma. 64(1): 99-104. Zilm, DH, Jacob MS, MacLeod SM et al. 1980, Propranolol and chlordiazepoxide effects on cardiac arrhythmias during alcohol withdrawal. Alcohol Clin Exp Res 4(4): 400-405. 113 Chapter 6 Psychosocial Interventions for Alcohol Use Disorders Overview of Psychosocial Interventions Psychosocial interventions for treatment of alcohol and drug problems cover a diverse array of treatment interventions (Raistrick and Tober 2004; Carroll and Onken 2005; Raistrick et al. 2006; Bottlender et al. 2006).These interventions generally focus on the individual (their beliefs, feelings and behaviour), their social context, including family, community and cultural factors and the interaction between these two domains. Psychosocial interventions encompass treatment content (that is, the skills, strategies and the theoretical orientation of treatment) and treatment process (that is, the interaction between the clinician and patient which includes the strength of engagement, interpersonal processes and ability to work on shared treatment goals (Marsh and Dale 2006). The effectiveness of treatment depends not only on the treatment itself but also who delivers it and how it is delivered (Raistrick et al. 2006). The process of natural change also has a part to play, as most people (estimated 70-80%) experience major changes in their substance use without any formal help or treatment. However, the evidence shows that people who receive substance abuse treatment do better than those who do not (Raistrick and Tober 2004) . The most widely used empirically supported psychosocial approaches are brief interventions (discussed in Chapter 4), motivational interviewing and cognitivebehaviour therapy (CBT), including coping skills training, relapse prevention and behavioural couples therapy (Miller et al. 1995; Miller and Wilbourne 2002; Raistrick and Tober 2004; Carroll and Onken 2005). When to Use Psychosocial Interventions Psychosocial interventions can be used in a variety of treatment settings. They can be implemented individually or in groups and delivered by a range of health workers. Psychological treatments can be brief or intensive and specialised (e.g., cognitive behaviour therapy, couples therapy). Brief interventions are most suited for nondepended drinkers (see Chapter 4). Motivational strategies are often used early in treatment and engage patient into the process of change. Cognitive behavioural or other specialised therapy is added as appropriate to provide patients with necessary skills to maintain change. In general, low intensity psychosocial interventions are indicated for people with low dependence, increasing the level of intensity for those with more severe dependence and co-existing mental health concerns. 114 Choosing Psychosocial Interventions: A Stepped Care Approach Stepped care model is a practical approach to implementing psychosocial and other interventions in which patients are offered the least “restrictive” intervention appropriate to their presentation (Sobell and Sobell 2000; Raistrick and Tober 2004; Raistrick et al. 2006). The next level of intensity is offered if the first treatment fails to provide sufficient benefit to the patient. An adaptation of this model detailing a stepped care process for the application of psychosocial interventions has been developed. This adaptation presupposes that issues relating to risk management, withdrawal, and rehabilitation options have been ruled out and a psychosocial intervention is indicated (NSW Health Department, 2008). There is no published literature evaluating effectiveness of the stepped care approach. However, this model has been accepted as a useful guide in selecting treatment strategies and using resources efficiently (Raistrick et al. 2006). At present, there is limited evidence to support ‘patient–treatment’ matching based upon patient characteristics. The stepped care approach provides an adjunct to decision-making and does not replace clinical judgment and expert advice (NSW Department of Health 2008). Recommendation 6.1 A stepped care approach is recommended as a framework for selecting psychosocial interventions, incorporating assessment, monitoring, implementation of a treatment plan, regular review of progress, and increasing intervention intensity in the absence of a positive response to treatment. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence D IV Motivational Interviewing Motivational interviewing, introduced by Miller and Rollnick in 1991, is an interviewing style which employs empathic counselling skills in an attempt to alter patient views of the implications of continued alcohol use. As defined by Miller and Rollnick (2002), motivational interviewing is a “client-centred, directive method for enhancing intrinsic motivation to change by exploring and resolving ambivalence”. One of the key elements in motivation for change is self-efficacy. Self-efficacy refers to a person’s belief in their ability to carry out and succeed with a specific task. and is a reasonable predictor of change (Miller and Rollnick 2002). A clinician’s own expectations about a person’s likelihood of change can also have a powerful effect on outcome (Miller and Mount 2001). Motivational Interviewing: Meta-analyses A meta-analysis by Hettema et al. (2005) published in 2005 studied 72 clinical trials spanning a range of target problems, 31 of which focused on alcohol. The results of this meta-analysis indicate that there is a high variability in effectiveness of 115 motivational interviewing across providers, settings and target groups. Overall it shows small to medium effectiveness in improving health outcomes. Motivational interviewing is effective when used on its own when compared to no treatment or education, with the average short-term between-group combined effect size (dc,) of 0.77 (95% CI 0.35, 1.19) at 1 month post-treatment, decreasing to 0.39 (95% confidence interval, CI, 0.27, 0.50) at >1 to 3 months and 0.3 (95% CI 0.16, 0.43) at one year (where dc = 1.0 represents a between-group difference of one standard deviation). Motivational interviewing also appears to improve outcomes when added to other treatment approaches. Manual guided motivational interviewing does not appear to be an efficient way of delivering this intervention, particularly where a therapist strictly follows a manual’s instructions ignoring the patient’s current motivational status. The authors suggest that when motivational interviewing is offered as an independent intervention, its effect could be prolonged by offering booster sessions or stepped care. They also note that when motivational interviewing is used as a prelude to treatment, its effect remains significant over a longer period of time, ‘suggesting a synergistic effect of motivational interviewing with other treatment procedures’. Motivational interviewing is often more effective in patients who are more resistant to change at the start of treatment and is not effective in those who are already motivated to changing behaviour and are committed to begin treatment. A meta-analysis by Vasilaki et al (2006) of 22 studies reviewed the evidence for the efficacy of motivational interviewing as a brief intervention for excessive drinking. Of these studies, 7 were conducted among college students; six were tested in outpatient settings; five in emergency rooms or clinics; and two in specialist treatment agencies. They analysed a final sample of 15 studies (2767 participants), once others had been rejected for methodological problems. Brief motivational interviewing (of 87 minutes) was found to be statistically significantly more effective than no treatment in nine studies, with the aggregate Cohen’s effect size of 0.18 (95%CI 0.07, 0.29) (positive effect sizes indicate better outcomes for motivational interviewing). The effect size was largest at 3-month follow-up (0.6 (95% CI 0.36, 0.83)). It was also found that brief motivational interviewing of 53 minutes was more effective than other types of treatment in another nine studies, with aggregate effect size of 0.43 (CI 0.17, 0.7). Other treatments included brief advice/standard care in five studies, and one study of each, directive confrontational counselling, educational intervention, skill based counselling and cognitive behavioural treatment. The conclusions of this meta-analysis were that brief motivational interviewing was an effective treatment modality for reducing hazardous alcohol consumption, particularly in the short-term (within the first 3 months of treatment). It was more effective with young people, in those with occasional heavy drinking pattern and low dependence, than with older drinkers or those with a more severe dependence. Specifically, helpseeking low-dependent drinkers benefited the most. The authors suggest that future studies should focus on factors such as age, gender, employment status, mental health, marital status and readiness to change. Motivational Interviewing: Randomised controlled trials The largest randomised controlled study of psychosocial interventions for alcohol use disorders was the Project MATCH study (Project MATCH Research Group 1997; 1998a; 1998b). The effectiveness data from this study was included in both metaanalyses discussed above. Its aim was to assess benefits of matching of patients with the DSM-IIIR diagnosis of alcohol dependence or abuse (with at least 3 months of active drinking prior to entrance into the study) to three types of psychosocial treatments. It compared four sessions over 12 week period of motivational 116 enhancement therapy (a manual guided motivational interviewing) to 12 weekly sessions of either cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) or twelve-step facilitation. There were two groups of patients, one from outpatient clinics (n = 952) and the other involving clients receiving aftercare following inpatient treatment (n = 774). Participants in all treatment groups showed significant improvements on all drinking measures with no consistent differences between groups. Overall, in the first year there was an increase in days abstinent from 20-30% to 80-90% at 12-month follow up and the amount of alcohol consumed on a drinking day fell from 12-20 to 1-4 standard drinks (Project MATCH Research Group 1997). During the treatment phase, small but statistically significant differences among treatments were found only in the outpatient arm on measures of alcohol consumption and alcohol-related negative consequences. Abstinence or moderate alcohol consumption (without alcohol-related consequences) was reported by 41% of patients receiving CBT and twelve-step facilitation, compared with 28% of those receiving motivational enhancement therapy (Project MATCH Research Group 1998a). At 3-year follow up the reductions in alcohol consumption, observed in the first year after treatment, were sustained. Almost 30% of the patients were totally abstinent. Those who continued drinking reported abstinence on an average of two-thirds of the time in the last 3 months. There were no significant differences between the treatment groups (Project MATCH Research Group 1998b). No matching effect was found. It was concluded that the three treatments were equally effective. In the outpatient setting there appears to be a temporary advantage to assigning individuals to CBT or twelve-step facilitation rather than motivational enhancement therapy. The secondary analysis of data from the above study (Cutler and Fishbain 2005) showed that the drop out patients (that the authors used as a zero treatment/control group) also improved, showing 72% days abstinent at 1 year follow-up. Further, most of the effect occurred after the first session. The conclusions of the latter paper were that the current psychosocial treatments for people with alcohol problems are not particularly effective and untreated patients in clinical trials also show significant improvement. The improvements appear to be due to “selection effect’ whereby patients who are motivated to enter treatment are likely to reduce drinking regardless of treatment provided. The authors indicate that while treatments were not particularly effective when compared to the drop out patients, it is likely that many patients would benefit from them. The authors further suggest that these treatments should not be discontinued or reduced on the basis of these findings, but their effectiveness should not be over-emphasised and perhaps better attention should be paid to patient characteristics and beliefs. Two forms of motivational intervention (individual vs group treatment) were tested in alcohol-dependent patients by John et al. (2003). In this trial, 322 in-patients undergoing detoxification were randomised to group or individual counselling. The aim was to examine whether 3 sessions of individual counselling (40 minutes duration each) was more effective than the more costly 2-week group treatment program (9 sessions, 90 minutes each and four outpatient sessions after discharge) in enhancing motivation to seek help with alcohol problems and to live abstinently. At 6-month follow-up, group treatment participants showed a higher rate of participation in self-help groups; however this effect had disappeared at 12 months. Abstinence rates did not differ between groups (27.3 % and 29.2% were abstinent at 6 month follow up in the individual counselling and group treatment respectively). This study suggests that in patients with alcohol dependence, an intensive motivational 117 treatment may not provide any benefit over a less intensive counselling approach in the long term. Another large study of psychosocial treatment for alcohol problems, was the UK Alcohol Treatment Trial (UKATT ) (UKATT Research Team 2005a). It was a pragmatic randomised trial that compared socially based treatment (social behaviour and network therapy) with motivational enhancement therapy, with the hypothesis that they would prove equally effective. It was carried out in 7 UK sites with 742 participants. Social behaviour and network therapy comprised eight 50 minute sessions over 8 to 12 weeks that focused on cognitive and behavioural strategies to help clients build social networks supportive of change. The motivational enhancement therapy comprised three 50 minute sessions over 8 to 12 weeks. It combined counselling in the motivational style with objective feedback. Findings showed that both groups reported substantial reductions in alcohol consumption, dependence and problems and better mental-health-related quality of life at 12 months. The two therapies did not differ in effectiveness. Participants in both groups reported that the number of abstinence days increased from 29% to 43% at 3 months and to 46% at 12 months. Alcohol consumption reported by patients continuing to drink fell from 27 drinks per drinking day to 18 drinks at 3 months and to 19 drinks at 12 months (mean adjusted values). Therefore, total alcohol consumption decreased by 48% at 3 months and by 45% at 12 months. The Leeds dependence questionnaire score reduced from 17 to 12 at 3 months and to 11 at 12 months. The alcohol problem questionnaire score fell from 12 to 7 at 3 months and to 6 at 12 months. The mental component of the SF-36 score rose from 30 to 37 at 3 months and to 39 at 12 months indicating improvement in mental health (UKATT Research Team 2005a). The results of the trial have demonstrated effectiveness of the two treatment modalities in reducing alcohol consumption and associated problems and improving mental health of alcohol dependent patients. The cost-analysis study showed that both types of treatment were cost effective. Each saved ‘about five times as much in expenditure on health, social, and criminal justice services as they cost’ (UKATT Research Team 2005b). Monti et al. (2007) examined the effect of a motivational interview versus personal feedback in a hospital setting (emergency department) in young patients (18 to 24 years of age) who either tested positive on alcohol at admission and/or were identified on screening as having alcohol problems. Patients (n = 198) were randomly assigned to receive either a 35 - 40 minute motivational interviewing session (that included personal feedback), or personal feedback only. All patients received additional booster telephone calls at 1 and 3 months. At six-month follow-up, both patient groups showed reductions in alcohol consumption that were sustained at 12months follow up. Average number of drinks per week reduced from 13 standard drinks at baseline to 6 drinks at 12 months in the motivational interview group and from 11 to 9 respectively in the feedback only group. Patients who received the motivational interview drank on significantly fewer days, had fewer heavy drinking days, and drank fewer drinks per week, compared with patients who received feedback only. It was estimated that twice as many patients who received a motivational interview reliably reduced their alcohol consumption at 12 months as those who received a personalised feedback only. The results of this study provide support for effectiveness of motivational intervention in reducing alcohol consumption in young people in emergency department setting. In a study of rural community health care centres, 26 patients achieving an AUDIT score indicating hazardous alcohol use were randomised to receive a motivational interview session with a nurse practitioner or to a control condition (no treatment) 118 (Beckham and Beckham 2007). At 6 weeks, there was a significant reduction in number of drinks per day and also in GGT levels in the treatment group compared to the controls. The number of drinks reduced from 4.4 to 3.8 in the control group and from 4.7 to 2 drinks in the intervention group. The results of this small study indicate that one session of motivational interviewing can be effective in reducing hazardous alcohol consumption in patients attending rural community health care clinics. Motivational Interviewing: Summary The evidence base for motivational interviewing is still strong. It is effective as a stand alone treatment, as a prelude to treatment and as an adjunct to other treatment modalities in addressing patient’s ambivalence to change their drinking or other behaviours. It is effective in reducing alcohol consumption and associated problems and improving mental health of alcohol dependent patients. The effect is more evident in the short term (e.g. within the first 3 months of treatment). The effect varies between providers, settings and target groups. It is particularly effective in ethnic minority populations, young people and those with occasional heavy drinking pattern and in treatment-seeking populations with low level of dependence. There is some evidence to suggest that motivational interviewing is effective in emergency department and rural settings. The cost-effectiveness studies suggest that both motivational interviewing and CBT approaches can save ‘about five times as much in expenditure on health, social, and criminal justice services as they cost’ in the UKATT study. Motivational interviewing may be more cost-effective than other treatment modalities, such as CBT and 12step facilitation. For example, in the Project MATCH four sessions of motivation enhancement therapy were found to be equal in efficacy to twelve sessions of cognitive behaviour therapy and twelve sessions of twelve step facilitation. In the UKATT study, three sessions of motivation enhancement therapy were equivalent to 8 sessions of social behaviour and network therapy. Motivation enhancement therapy, in these studies, was less intensive, about one third the number of sessions but equally efficacious, hence it was more cost effective than other treatments. More intensive motivational interviewing approaches (e.g. 13 group sessions) may not provide additional benefit over a less intensive approach (e.g. 3 sessions of individual counselling). Recommendation 6.2 Motivational interviewing approaches can be used as a first-line or stand-alone treatment, or as an adjunct to other treatment modalities in addressing patient’s ambivalence to change their drinking or other behaviours. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ia Cognitive Behavioural Interventions Cognitive behavioural interventions, also called cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) comprise a range of approaches that are broadly based on learning principles and the idea that behaviour is influenced by cognitive processes (Dobson 2000). 119 The cognitive-behavioural approach implies that excessive alcohol use is a maladaptive way of coping with problems (Bandura 1986). Inability to cope with life stresses in general and alcohol cues in particular are thought to maintain excessive drinking and lead to a resumption of drinking following unsuccessful cessation attempts. This learned behaviour can be changed through the application of combined cognitive and behavioural interventions (Kadden 1994). Interventions are designed to enhance patient motivation to stop or reduce drinking, to increase patient understanding of alcohol effect and consequences of excessive drinking and to challenge maladaptive beliefs and thought patterns that lead to problematic alcohol use. CBT approach: Reviews The Mesa Grande project (Miller and Wilbourne 2002) is a review of clinical trials of treatment for alcohol use disorders. The trials cover treatment modalities such as brief intervention, motivational enhancement, pharmacotherapies, skills training, psychotherapy, marital and family therapies, mutual help approaches, aversion therapies, specific behavioural procedures, and milieu therapy (i.e. inpatient vs. outpatient). This particular paper describes the progress up to and including 2000 (59 new trials, 361 in total). The main finding at that date was that the strongest evidence of efficacy was found for brief intervention, community reinforcement, case management and cognitive behavioural approaches such as social skills training, behaviour contracting and behavioural marital therapy. Among pharmacological approaches naltrexone and acamprosate appeared most supported by evidence. Least supported were methods designed to educate, confront, or to foster insight regarding the nature and causes of alcoholism. The review suggests that CBT interventions such as social skills training, behaviour contracting and behavioural marital therapy are effective treatments of alcohol use disorders. CBT approach: Randomised Clinical Trials The Project MATCH (see above under Motivational Interviewing for more detail) was an earlier study aimed to assess benefits of matching alcohol dependent patients to three types of psychosocial treatments: motivational enhancement therapy and twelve-step facilitation (Project MATCH Research Group 1997; 1998a; 1998b). As stated above, CBT was as effective as motivational enhancement therapy and 12step facilitation in reducing alcohol consumption in patients with alcohol use disorders. With regard to patient-treatment matching it was found that: a) patients with high degree of anger were more likely to benefit from motivational enhancement than from CBT; b) patients with higher degree of alcohol dependence had better outcomes with 12 step programs than with CBT; c) patients with lower psychiatric severity at baseline did better with 12-step facilitation than with CBT; d) there was a trend (not statistically significant) for patients with high psychiatric severity at baseline to have better outcomes with CBT than 12-step facilitation. The UKATT study described above (UKATT Research Team 2005a) that compared socially based treatment (based on a CBT approach) with motivational enhancement therapy. According to this study, CBT is as effective as motivational enhancement therapy in reducing alcohol consumption and associated problems and improving mental health of alcohol dependent patients. 120 The COMBINE study (Anton et al. 2006) was designed to evaluate the efficacy or pharmacotherapy, behavioural therapy and their combinations for treatment of alcohol dependence and to evaluate placebo effect on overall outcome. This large RCT involved 1383 patients with the diagnosis of alcohol dependence, recently abstinent from alcohol. The treatments included naltrexone and acamprosate (alone or together), placebo (single or double), each with or without a combined behavioural intervention (CBI). The CBI integrated cognitive behavioural therapy, motivational interviewing and 12-step facilitation and was delivered by trained behavioural health specialists in up to 20 sessions of 50 min duration. All the above groups received medical management. One group received a CBI only (no pills or medical management). The treatment was of 16 weeks duration. It was found that by the end of the treatment period, participants in all nine different treatments and combined interventions showed reductions in drinking, including the placebo group. No combination was more effective than naltrexone or CBI alone in the presence of medical management. Patients who received CBI with placebo or naltrexone (both in conjunction with medical management) had higher percent days abstinent when compared to those receiving placebo with medical management without CBI. However, CBI alone was less effective (e.g. resulted in lower percent days abstinent) than medical management and placebo or when CBI was combined with medical management and placebo. At one year follow up the differences were similar but no longer significant. Overall the percent days abstinent declined across groups at 1 year follow up. The results of this study suggest that although CBI, consisting of cognitive behavioural therapy, motivational interviewing and 12-step facilitation, may reduce alcohol consumption, placebo pills and a meeting with a health care professional can have a stronger positive effect than CBI alone. The COMBINE study aimed to determine whether improvements in outcome could be achieved by combining pharmacotherapy and behavioural interventions, but no such combining effect had been detected. It has been suggested that the variability between treatment providers may be more important than the variability between treatments (Bergmark 2008; Buhringer and Pfeiffer-Gerschel 2008). Specific cognitive-behavioural interventions Despite core similarities of cognitive behavioural interventions, they differ in duration, modality, content and treatment setting (Kadden 1994). This section discusses the effectiveness of specific cognitive-behavioural interventions, including behavioural self-management (controlled drinking programs), coping skills training, cue exposure and behavioural couples therapy. We have also included a study investigating the effect of CBT for insomnia on relapse to heavy drinking. Behavioural self-management or self-control: Controlled Drinking Programs This approach teaches individuals to reduce their alcohol consumptions. It is most suitable for individuals at the less severe end of the dependence spectrum (Ambrogne 2002; Edwards et al. 2003). The components of behavioural selfmanagement include: goal setting; self-monitoring of daily drinking; controlling the rate of drinking; and identifying problematic drinking situations and triggers to drinking (Heather, 1995). 121 The controlled drinking approach is widespread in Australia, Norway, Britain and Switzerland but it has not receive much support from the treatment services in some countries, such as the USA and Canada until relatively recently (Ambrogne 2002; Gastfriend 2007). Behavioural self control: Reviews and meta-analyses Behavioural self control is ranked seventh in the Mesa Grander review of effectiveness of psychosocial interventions (Miller and Wilbourne 2002). A meta-analysis by Walters (2000) included 17 randomised controlled trials investigating the efficacy of behavioural self-control training for problem drinking and showed that this treatment modality was superior to no intervention in reducing both alcohol consumption and problematic drinking. It was also superior to alternative nonabstinence-oriented interventions. There was a trend (not statistically significant) towards higher effectiveness of behavioural self-control training over traditional abstinence-oriented treatment. Self-control training was equally effective for use with alcohol-dependent and problem-drinking subjects. The effect lasted at follow-ups spanning several months to several years. Behavioural self control: Other studies A consistent finding in a number of earlier studies, not included in the meta-analysis, is that patients with alcohol problems of various severity are able to maintain problem free drinking at least over the 1-2 years of follow up and that treatment outcomes are similar for patients who choose drinking moderation goal and for those with the goal of abstinence (Booth et al. 1984; Booth et al. 1992; Miller et al. 1992). Also, patients, who choose the goal of moderation and begin to learn behavioural self-management strategies, are likely to move towards abstinence by the 4th month of treatment (Hodgins et al. 1997). Behavioural self control: Summary Behavioural self control therapy is an effective treatment modality in reducing problematic alcohol consumption is patients with and without dependence. There is, however, a reason to believe that studies failing to find a benefit for BSCT were conducted mainly on alcohol patients with more severe problems. This treatment modality is currently recommended for patients with no or low level of dependence and those considered suitable for moderation goal (Berglund et al. 2003; Raistrick et al. 2006). Recommendation 6.3 Behavioural self-management (controlled drinking program) can be recommended as a treatment strategy for people with no or low level dependence and for when both patient and clinician agree that moderation is an appropriate goal. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ib 122 Coping Skills Training Based on Bandura’s (1969, 1997) Social Learning Theory, skills training assumes that developing effective coping skills can help individuals deal with stressful social situations (Dobson 2002). Coping skills training is based on the premise that drinking has become a way of coping with interpersonal stress (Monti et al. 1994). Skills training provides alternative strategies to cope with social skills deficits and teach clients to deal with interpersonal stress without drinking to excess. Examples of social skills training include communication skills, listening techniques, assertiveness, problem solving, drink refusal skills, coping with urges to drink, relaxation, anger management and stress management skills training. Skills training is usually delivered in conjunction with other interventions such as broad spectrum cognitive behavioural approaches, cue exposure and more recently, with pharmacotherapies such as naltrexone and acamprosate. Coping Skills Training: Reviews Coping skills training has been regarded as one of the best-established and empirically supported interventions. A number of earlier reviews have stated that there is consistent evidence that coping skills training is effective in reducing alcohol consumption among alcohol dependent people (Mattick and Jarvis 1993; Monti et al. 1994; Miller et al. 1995; Shand et al. 2003; Raistick et al. 2006). It has been suggested that skills training is more effective than other approaches when included as a component of a more comprehensive treatment, but not when delivered as a stand-alone treatment or as aftercare (Longabaugh and Morgenstern 1999). Social skills training was identified as the ninth best supported treatment for alcohol use disorders in the Mesa Grande review discussed above (Miller and Wilbourne 2002). There are no recent reviews or meta-analyses of coping skills training. Coping Skills Training: Randomised controlled trials Randomised clinical trials provide some more evidence in support of coping skills training as an effective treatment modality. The form of CBT, evaluated in the Project MATCH (Project MATCH Research Group 1997), included coping skills training as a prominent part of the treatment intervention. As discussed above, this approach was as effective as motivational interviewing and 12-step facilitation in reducing alcohol consumption in patients with alcohol use disorders. Ferrell and Galassi (1981) specifically selected alcohol dependent patients with poor social skills for their study. Patients who received assertion training had better interpersonal skills and a longer period of sobriety as compared to those who received human relations training. Therefore, there may be additional advantages in offering skills training to patients who are identified at assessment as specifically lacking in social skills. 123 A prospective cohort study assessed the effectiveness of coping skills training in 2376 participants treated in community residential facilities (Forys et al. 2007). Patients completed self-efficacy measures at baseline and at one year follow-up. Findings were that alcohol-specific and ‘general approach coping’ was significantly associated with less alcohol consumption and drug use at follow-up and ‘avoidance coping’ was associated with more alcohol use and drug problems. Patients who had greater participation in life skills and vocational training were more likely to rely on alcohol-specific and general approach coping than on avoidance type coping at one year follow up. Authors conclude that life skills and vocational training is an effective way to promote healthy coping in patients with substance use disorders. Ball et al (2007) have compared brief coping skills training, brief motivational enhancement (each comprising 3 weekly sessions) and a waiting list control group (who received delayed brief intervention of their choice in the 3-week post-treatment phase of the study) in a clinical trial with non-dependent heavy drinkers (n = 98). The authors chose to compare the coping skills and motivational enhancement treatments because they considered them the two brief psychotherapies with the most empirical support (Carroll et al. 2004). They found that all study participants reduced their drinking. The control patients had more drinks per drinking day at all study phases, i.e. before, during and after the treatment period. All three groups reduced their drinking in the first phase (3-week pre-treatment monitoring). The lack of difference between the two treatments could be attributed to an intensive preintervention monitoring that used a hand-held computer and included an extensive baseline and daily assessment of alcohol consumption. It appears that this intensive pre-intervention monitoring in the first 3 weeks of the study had a positive effect of its own and may have rendered the three-session brief interventions of limited additional benefit (Ball et al. 2007). This is in agreement with the findings of the project MATCH study (Project MATCH Research Group 1997) suggesting that a cognitivebehavioural intervention, motivational enhancement and 12-step facilitation were equally effective in reducing alcohol consumption. The results of the secondary analysis of the data (Cutler and Fishbain 2005) showed that most of the effect also occurred prior to the treatment intervention in all groups, including the drop-outs (secondary analysis control group). In addition, there is some evidence that teaching coping skills to spouses of alcohol dependent patients may help improve the mental health and wellbeing of spouses but may not have much effect on patients’ alcohol consumption. Hansson et al. (2004) individual coping skills training (4 monthly 90-minutes sessions) and group support (12 fortnightly 90-minute sessions of CBT focusing on communication skills, coping with partner’s drinking and stress management) were found to be significantly more effective than an ‘information only’ session of 60 minutes duration for spouses (n=38) of alcohol-dependent individuals, with most improvement in spouses’ mental health and wellbeing shown in the first year. There were no significant changes in the second year and no differences between the treatment groups in the effect on partners’ drinking levels. Of the 38 participants, 16 (2 of these had divorced) reported that their partners had improved (drinking less or less often) by 24 months, and 22 (7 divorced) reported no reduction in drinking. In general, divorce was commoner in the treatment groups than in the information only group. One of the drawbacks of this study is the small sample size; however the follow-up rate was very high (38 out of 39 spouses participated in the 24 months follow up). 124 Recommendation 6.4 Coping skills training is recommended for people who appear to lack the relevant skills to achieve and remain abstinent. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ib Cue exposure Cue exposure is a variant of cognitive behavioural intervention. It is based on the associative learning principle (Gossop et al. 2002), which assumes that people, places and events that regularly precede drinking (or drug-taking, for example) become associated with the pleasant effects of taking the drink or drug, and consumption becomes a conditioned response to these cues; the Pavlovian effect (Pavlov 1927). Repeated exposure to these stimuli (such as the sight and smell of alcohol) with instructions to resist craving and without subsequent reinforcement in a laboratory/clinic setting, eventually leads to extinction of some of the conditioned responses in real life situation, thereby reducing craving, expending time to first relapse and reducing alcohol consumption. However, some conditioned responses are difficult to extinguish and the effect is of a variable duration. There are earlier reports of spontaneous and rapid re-instatement of previously extinguished conditioned responses after a priming dose of alcohol (Drummond et al. 1990). Later studies incorporated priming doses before patients attempted to resist drinking (Sitharthan et al. 1997; Dawe et al. 2002). Negative effective states have been shown to trigger relapse. Adding negative emotional cues to cue exposure therapy is a useful approach, but it does not seem to add to effectiveness of this therapy compared to standard CBT (Kavanagh et al. 2006). Using virtual reality environments in cue exposure treatment may achieve more effective extinction of responses to cues in rehabilitation settings. However, at present there are only a few small studies investigating this approach in alcohol dependent patients (Kuntze et al. 2001; Lee et al. 2007). Cue exposure therapy usually consists of 6-12 sessions, each of 50-90min duration. Sessions can be run on a daily basis or less frequently (Conklin and Tiffany 2002). Cue Exposure: Meta-analyses Cue exposure can be applied with a treatment goal of either abstinence or moderation with moderately good results. In their meta-analysis of 9 studies investigating effectiveness of cue exposure therapy, Conklin and Tiffany (2002) have reported effect sizes ranging from 0.17 to 0.74, indicating variable effectiveness. Authors suggested that evidence from animal studies should be better utilised to increase effectiveness of cue exposure therapy in humans. A number of studies have been published since the time of this meta-analysis, showing that cue exposure therapy is effective in reducing alcohol consumption, but not more effective than other cognitive-behavioural treatments. At present cue exposure therapy is often used in conjunction with coping skills training to increase the patient’s ability to deal with cravings if they arise, but the effectiveness of this approach remains equivocal (Dawe et al. 2002, Kavanagh et al. 2006). 125 Kadden’s (2001) status report and review of research priorities for NIAAA stated that: “A number of gaps in knowledge and consequent research opportunities were identified. Additional work on cue exposure is needed to identify the most potent cues for drinking, and strategies for reducing the impact of drinking cues. … research should identify its most effective elements and ways to sustain gains following treatment. The mediating role assigned to coping skills in the cognitive-behavioral model needs to be substantiated, and the effectiveness of various coping skills components must be determined”. The gaps identified in this statement appear not to be fully closed. Cue Exposure: Randomised controlled trials In a study examining the efficacy of cue exposure, Sitharthan et al. (1997) compared cue exposure (with a priming dose) to standard cognitive behavioural therapy consisting of goal setting, self-monitoring and behavioural and cognitive strategies to moderate drinking. This was a randomised controlled trial that recruited patients without severe alcohol dependence (n = 53). Both interventions were delivered in six 90-minute sessions. Cue exposure produced significantly greater reductions than standard cognitive behavioural therapy in participant reports of drinking frequency and consumption at six month follow-up, suggesting that cue exposure was an important component of cognitive-behavioural approach. Heather et al. (2000) conducted a randomised controlled trial comparing ModerationOriented Cue Exposure (MOCE) to Behavioural Self-control Training (BSCT). Patients (N = 91) were randomised to receive either MOCE or BSCT and had weekly sessions with trained therapists for 16 weeks. At six-month follow-up, both MOCE and BSCT were effective in reducing alcohol consumption. From the results, it is unclear whether MOCE and BSCT are both effective cognitive-behavioural interventions, or whether treatment itself, regardless of type, is effective in reducing consumption. Using the same interventions, Dawe et al. (2002) compared the effectiveness of moderation-oriented cue exposure (following a priming alcohol dose) with cognitivebehavioural intervention in a community sample of problem drinkers including those with severe dependence. Participants (n = 100) were randomly assigned to one of the two treatments and received a mean of 5.84 sessions. At eight-month follow-up, there were significant decreases in alcohol consumption, severity of dependence, impaired control, and alcohol-related problems in both groups compared to pretreatment levels. Both treatments were as effective in patients with a mild-tomoderate level of dependence as they were in those with severe dependence. Negative effective states have been shown to increase the risk of relapse. One recent study explored the effect of negative emotional states as an additional cue of the cue exposure therapy. The study looked at the addition of two variants of cue exposure to cognitive-behaviour therapy for alcohol misuse (Kavanagh et al. 2006). This was conducted with 163 outpatients of treatment centres in Brisbane and Sydney. The selection criteria included reports of an increased desire to drink when dysphoric. Eight weekly 75-minute sessions were given to all participants. One group received CBT and a moderation-oriented cue exposure and another received CBT and an emotional cue exposure (with negative cue induction). The groups were compared to CBT alone. The CBT sessions focused on developing skills in selfcontrol of alcohol use. Average improvements were highly significant across all conditions (including reduction of alcohol consumption, related problems, alcohol expectancies and depression and increase in self-efficacy), with an acceptable level 126 of maintenance of all effects at 12 months. However, treatment retention and effects on alcohol consumption were progressively weaker in groups that received additional cue exposure or emotional cue exposure compared to CBT alone. The authors conclude that the results do not indicate that the addition of either versions of cue exposure to CBT improves outcomes. Cue exposure: Other study designs As discussed in Shand et al. (2003), Rohsenow et al. (2001) compared the efficacy of cue exposure, coping skills and communication skills. In a 2 x 2 design, the effect of cue exposure (CE), in conjunction with coping skills (CS), (CE/CS) was compared to a meditation-relaxation control, and communication skills training was compared to an education control. These treatments were added to an intensive treatment program for persons dependent on alcohol. Both CE/CS and communication skills training appeared to be effective in decreasing number of heavy drinking days at six and twelve month follow-ups. In the second six months after treatment, those who received both CE/CS and communication skills training consumed a lower number of drinks on drinking days than did those in the other treatment combinations. CE/CS also resulted in reports of more use of coping skills during follow-up, and many of the strategies taught in the CE/CS condition were associated with reduced drinking. These results suggest that cue exposure, coping skills and communication skills are promising elements of comprehensive alcohol treatment programs. Loeber et al. (2006) tested cue exposure alone against standard CBT in a quasiexperimental study. Patients with a diagnosis of alcohol dependence (n = 63) were recruited from an in-patient alcohol-detoxification facility and were sequentially assigned to either treatment. Outcome measures were self-reports of craving and self-efficacy before and after treatment; drinking behaviour was assessed at 3 and 6month follow-up. It was found that both treatments were associated with a reduction of self-reported craving and an increase in self-reported measures of self-efficacy. A significant time x treatment interaction indicated a greater increase in self-reported measures of self-efficacy after cue exposure treatment. Measures of drinking behaviour showed clearly that both treatments were efficacious. For example, in the first 3-months period the number of days abstinent increased by 371 and 331 percent in the cue exposure and CBT group respectively, decreasing to 309 and 285 percent respectively at 6 months. The authors conclude that cue exposure and standard cognitive-behavioural treatment are equally effective on drinking behaviour for patients with a moderate severity of alcohol dependence. Virtual reality programs have been increasingly used in behavioural science research, including the field of substance abuse. The virtual reality cue reactivity programs appear feasible in nicotine, cocaine and alcohol dependent individuals (Kuntze et al. 2001; Bordnick et al. 2005; Bordnick et al. 2008; Cho et al. 2008). In a small study Lee et al. (2007) used virtual reality to create two lifelike situations and applied cue exposure therapy (CET) to 8 members of an Alcohol Anonymous group for 8 x 30-minute sessions. The scenes were a Japanese-style pub and a Western bar. This was a pre-test post-test design study with no comparison or control group. Outcomes were measured by the Alcohol Urge Questionnaire; mean score on the first session was 15.75 (SD = 10.91) which decreased to 11.50 (SD = 5.76) at the final session. These initial reports support the use of virtual reality settings in cuebased treatment for alcohol problems. 127 Cue exposure: summary There is evidence to suggest that cue exposure is at least as effective as standard CBT. Elements of self-control skills training and other supporting interventions are often included as part of cue exposure therapy. However, it should be noted that when standard CBT and cue exposure treatments are combined, the additive effect may be masked. This may occur due to excessive complexity of the resulting intervention (i.e. more may not necessarily be better) (Kavanagh et al. 2006) and some degree of overlap in the content of these therapies (Dawe et al. 2002). It has been suggested that cue exposure may be particularly effective in patients with stronger cue reactivity (Heinz et al. 2009). Imaging studies indicate that such heightened sensitivity of neuronal circuits to alcohol related cues in some patients may be partly genetically influenced (Heinz et al. 2005). Identifying such patients may provide opportunities for targeted use of cue exposure treatment and enhance treatment effectiveness in this subgroup of patients in future. Ways to increase the effectiveness of cue exposure therapy are continued to be explored (Taylor et al. 2009). Based on studies of cue exposure in treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and phobias, disruption of re-consolidation of memories related to drug cues using pharmacological agents, such as propranolol or glucocorticosteriods, appears a feasible treatment strategy but it has not yet been tested in patients with alcohol problems (Taylor et al. 2009). Recommendation 6.5 Cue exposure in conjunction with other psychosocial interventions can be an effective intervention for treating alcohol dependence. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ib Behavioural couples therapy (BCT) Behavioural couples therapy is based on an assumption that problematic alcohol use and relationship functioning are reciprocal. Excessive alcohol use causes deterioration of relationships in a family unit which often results in further increase in drinking. However, functional relationships can help patients to achieve abstinence or controlled drinking, and reduce a risk of relapse (O’Farrell and Fals-Stewart 2000; O’Farrell et al. 1993). BCT has a long standing evidence of effectiveness in reducing alcohol consumption and improving marital and partner relationship functioning when compared to treatments that do not include spouses (Epstein and McCrady 1998; O’Farrell and Fals-Stewart 2000). BCT: Meta-analyses Evidence from a meta-analysis presented by Powers et al. (2008) further supports the conclusions of the narrative reviews quoted above and indicates that BCT is an effective treatment. Their meta-analysis of 12 randomised controlled trials (total of 128 754 participants; including 8 trials of alcohol use disorders, published in 1985-2008) concludes that there is a clear overall advantage of including BCT compared to individual-based treatments (Cohen’s effect size, d = 0.54). Immediately posttreatment BCT showed an advantage only in the relationship satisfaction measure, however, at 3 months the advantage was evident across all 3 outcome domains: (frequency of use, d = 0.45; consequences of use, d = 0.50; and relationship satisfaction, d = 0.51). The difference was maintained for at least a year. BCT was more effective than CBT with the focus on relationships (d = 0.44). There was no dose-response effect (i.e. the number of consecutive BCT sessions did not influence the outcome). The authors therefore conclude that behavioural couples therapy is more effective than individual treatment. It appears that relationship improvement evident immediately post-treatment later lead s to reduction of patient’s drinking and its consequences. Compared to individual-based treatment BCT produces better child adjustment, reduced interpersonal violence and higher cost-effectiveness (Powers et al. 2008). However, BCT is a more costly intervention, given that treatment sessions lasted almost twice as long as individual CBT sessions (Vedel et al. 2008). It suggests that BCT is an option that should be explored if available. Recommendation 6.6 Behavioural couples’ therapy, which focuses on drinking behaviour as the problem, can improve drinking outcomes following treatment and should be delivered by an appropriately trained clinician. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ia CBT for adolescents Thush et al. (2007) have investigated the effectiveness of a targeted intervention program designed to change cognitive determinants of drinking and thus reduce hazardous alcohol consumption in at-risk adolescents (n = 107). The program consisted of 7 weekly sessions that combined intervention methods which have been proven effective in reducing drinking in young adults, such as an alcohol social and sexual expectancy challenge, cognitive behavioral skill training (including drink refusal skills) and brief motivational feedback. The outcomes in the treatment group were compared to those of the control (information only) group. Results showed that the intervention was effective in changing several of the targeted cognitive determinants, such as a significantly increased perception of risk factors for developing alcohol problems and a significant decrease of positive expectancies for high dose of alcohol in the experimental group compared to control. However, despite these positive changes, the experimental group did not show a significant decrease or difference in decrease in drinking at post-test or at 6 and 12 months follow up, compared with controls. 129 CBT for treatment of insomnia Insomnia has a high prevalence in alcohol dependent patients (36-67%) compared to general population (17-30%) (Brower et al. 2001). Insomnia during early recovery has been linked to relapse (Foster and Peters 1999; Brower et al. 2001). One study has investigated the effect of CBT for insomnia on relapse to heavy drinking in a group of outpatients with a diagnosis of alcohol dependence who had at least one month of continuous abstinence and were suffering from insomnia (N=60) (Currie et al. 2004). This trial tested 5 sessions of CBT against a self-help manual with telephone support for the treatment of insomnia or a waiting list control condition. The quality of sleep improved in patients in both treatment conditions. Patients in the CBT group had better sleep outcomes than those in the self-group or placebo. Similar proportion of patients relapsed to drinking in all three groups. It should be noted that about 30% of participants had more than 12 months of abstinence prior to the study. The results indicate that the shorter period of abstinence pre-treatment predicted relapse at post-treatment and 3 and 6 months follow up. The conclusions of this preliminary study were that CBT assisted to reduce the insomnia but did not have an effect in reducing relapses to drinking alcohol. More intensive sleep interventions are needed for patients in early recovery. It should be noted that while it would be expected that CBT works through increasing cognitive and behavioural coping skills, a review of ten studies that examined the mechanism of action of CBT found it difficult to establish why CBT is an effective treatment for alcohol dependence (Morgenstern and Longabaugh 2000). Other Counselling Strategies Contingency management is based on operant conditioning theory that assumes that behaviour is controlled and shaped by its consequences. It is a strategy that uses positive reinforcement to improve treatment outcomes by providing incentives to encourage behavioural changes. Withholding incentives when desirable behaviour is not maintained (that is, negative reinforcement) may also be used. There is a strong evidence that contingency management is an effective strategy in treatment substance use disorders, particularly, opioids , tobacco, and polysubstance use (Griffith et al. 2000; Lussier et al. 2006; Prendergast et al. 2006). Its use in treatment of alcohol use disorders has been studied during the 1960s, 1970s, and 1980s. It has been shown to be effective in reinforcing abstinence and improving medication compliance (with disulfiram) and treatment attendance (Higgins and Petry 1999; Petry et al. 2000a). Most of the recent studies focus on the treatment of illicit drug problems. However, the research has not been routinely translated into clinical practice either in the USA or UK (Petry et al. 2000b) or in Australia (Cameron and Ritter 2007). This is largely due to perceived high costs of provision of such interventions, including the costs of reinforcers and additional staff involvement (Helmus et al. 2003). However, implementing contingency management for alcohol use disorders has additional difficulties. Unlike with most other drugs, it is difficult to reliably detect recent alcohol use as neither blood nor breath tests can detect alcohol use that occurred more than 12 hours previously (Kadden 2001). Providing reinforcement on the basis of other 130 factors, such as counselling session attendance, in addition to the negative breathalyzer test may be an effective strategy (Helmus et al. 2003). A number of other approaches are being increasingly used in counselling settings, including for patients with alcohol problems. Examples include: solution-focused approaches (such as solution-focus brief therapy) mindfulness-based stress reduction, psychodynamic, narrative therapy. Solution focused therapy focuses on patient’s strengths and successes rather than weaknesses and is aimed at helping the patient to look for exceptions to the problem patterns and to find new solutions. Mindfulness-based stress-reduction is an approach that utilises a specific meditative technique that focuses on increasing patient’s awareness of their feelings, emotions and thoughts by bringing conscious attention to what they experience at the present moment. Psychodynamic therapy focuses not only on the present problem but also on the patient’s life history and encourages them to look for unconscious drivers for their motivation and behaviour patterns. Interpersonal therapy is a variation of this approach. Narrative therapy encourages patients to talk about their problems in terms of personal life stories that define the meaning of their lives and relationships, assess the impact of these on the current behaviour and assists patients in the process of “re-authoring” or re-writing these stories in a way that would help overcome presenting problems. These counselling approaches are not supported by a strong evidence base, particularly in the field of treatment of alcohol use disorders, and so are not yet widely recommended. Relapse Prevention Strategies Relapse is a common problem in alcohol treatment, with approximately 60% of treated clients relapsing to problematic drinking within the first 12 months (Connors et al. 1996). It has long been observed that specific situations or mood states are associated with relapse, including negative emotional states (e.g. frustration, anger, anxiety, depression or anger); interpersonal conflict (e.g. relationships with partner, work colleagues, friends); and direct or indirect social pressure to drink (Marlatt and Gordon 1985). Relapse prevention is not so much a specific intervention but rather a set of strategies that aim to help the client maintain treatment gains (Jarvis et al. 2005). These include psychosocial interventions described above such as skills training and cognitive restructuring that deal with immediate triggers of relapse and more global strategies that address long-term factors of relapse such as lifestyle balancing and after care (Larimer et al. 1999) (see also Chapter 11). Relapse prevention may also incorporate medications for reducing alcohol use (e.g. naltrexone, disulfiram, acamprosate), or for addressing concomitant conditions linked to relapse (e.g. anxiety, depression) (see Chapters 7 and 10 respectively). 131 All moderately and severely alcohol dependent patients should be offered the opportunity to learn relapse-prevention strategies. These are best discussed after acute withdrawal symptoms have subsided. Relapse prevention addresses itself to the maintenance of change, and to the development of self-efficacy and coping skills (Edwards et al. 2003). Recommendation 6.7 Psychosocial relapse prevention strategies are recommended for use with all moderately to severely alcohol-dependent patients. 6.8 Psychosocial relapse prevention strategies are best delivered as soon as acute withdrawal symptoms have subsided. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ib C III Residential Rehabilitation Programs Residential rehabilitation programs (sometimes called therapeutic communities) are usually long-term programs where people live and work in a community of other substance users, ex-users and professional staff. Programs can last anywhere between 1 and 24 months (or more). The aim of residential rehabilitation programs is to help people develop the skills and attitudes to make long-term changes towards an alcohol- and drug-free lifestyle. Programs usually include activities such as employment, education and skills training, life skills training (such as budgeting and cooking), counselling, group work, relapse prevention, and a ‘re-entry’ phase where people are helped return to their community. The effectiveness data are sparse. The results of meta-analysis by Smith et al. (2006) of seven studies investigating the effectiveness of therapeutic communities for substance related disorders, including alcohol indicate that there is little evidence that residential rehabilitation programs are more effective than other residential treatments (such as community residence) in terms of treatment completion or drug use related outcomes or that one type of therapeutic community is better than another. Prison based therapeutic communities are effective in preventing reincarceration, criminal activity and alcohol and drug offences in the 12 month period after release from prison. No comparison could be made with other treatment modalities. The authors concluded that the use therapeutic communities for treatment of alcohol and drug use disorders is not based on sound evidence. Programs with directed treatment orientation are more effective that those with undifferentiated approach (e.g. safety and security oriented, mostly shelter and food provision with limited counselling and active treatment) (Moos et al. 1999). Program completion and a longer period of care are associated with better outcomes at one year (Moos et al. 1999). Some programs are based on 12-step Alcoholics Anonymous (AA) approaches (Forys et al. 2007; Polcin and Henderson 2008). An extended period of abstinence can be beneficial in reversing cognitive and physical harm arising from chronic heavy alcohol use. 132 Residential rehabilitation programs can be effective for people needing structured long-term support, and are more attractive to those with moderate to severe dependence, and limited social supports. Recommendation 6.9 Residential rehabilitation programs can be effective for patients with moderate to severe dependence who need structured residential treatment settings. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence D IV Summary In summary, there is strong support for the efficacy of motivational interviewing as a treatment intervention. There is also sufficient support for the efficacy of cognitivebehavioural treatment approaches, such as behavioural self-management, coping skills training, cue exposure and behavioural couples therapy, although there are variations in effectiveness across studies, settings and providers. 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In: WR Miller and S Rollnick (eds) Motivational interviewing: preparing people for change.New York: The Guilford Press. 141 Chapter 7 Pharmacotherapies for alcohol dependence Overview of Pharmacotherapies Three medications: acamprosate, naltrexone and disulfiram have been approved for use as part of a comprehensive treatment plan for alcohol dependence. Acamprosate and naltrexone have been shown to improve treatment outcomes when combined with a psychosocial intervention (e.g. Mann et al. 2004; Bauza et al. 2004). For patients who are motivated to take the medication, both are potential tools for reducing the core symptoms of alcohol dependence. The evidence for disulfiram is weaker, but the drug remains an option for relapse prevention in certain circumstances, and can be effective as part of a comprehensive treatment approach (e.g. Laaksonen et al. 2008). Pharmacotherapy should be considered for all alcohol-dependent patients following management of withdrawal. They are best used in association with psychosocial supports as part of an after-care treatment plan. Overview of Pharmacotherapies: Reviews and meta-analyses An extensive overview of the clinical data on pharmacotherapy for alcohol dependence was published by Mann et al. (2004). This review concentrates on naltrexone, acamprosate and disulfiram but also mentions SSRIs, tricyclic antidepressants, benzodiazepines and all other drugs for which data were available at the time, with results of all the published clinical trials. Acamprosate produced the most beneficial effects in maintaining abstinence, having been evaluated in 16 controlled clinical trials with 4500 patients. Naltrexone appeared to have different effects and proved to be useful in reducing craving (i.e. in reducing relapses rather than maintaining abstinence). The conclusions reached were that pharmacotherapy should be considered for all alcohol-dependent patients, and be used in association with psychosocial support. A systematic review and analysis of 33 studies was carried out by Bouza et al (2004). The number of patients involved was 4000 with DSM-III or DSM-IV criteria for dependence (all had undergone detoxification). Thirteen trials compared acamprosate with placebo; 19 compared naltrexone with placebo, and 1 compared acamprosate with naltrexone. The main findings were that acamprosate was associated with a significant improvement in abstinence rate and days of cumulative abstinence, and that short-term administration of naltrexone reduced the relapse rate significantly but was not associated with significant improvement in the abstinence rate. The side-effects of naltrexone were more numerous, but it was tolerated acceptably without compromising adherence to treatment. The overall conclusions were that acamprosate appeared to be better in achieving abstinence, whereas naltrexone seemed to be better directed at treatments where controlled drinking is the goal. 142 This thesis is discussed and elaborated on in a recent meta-analysis of unreported data (Rosner et al. 2008). The authors say that their primary objective was to complete the efficacy profiles for acamprosate and naltrexone and compare them with each other. Another (unstated) goal perhaps was to diminish publication bias, when negative trial results are less likely to be reported. Unreported results of registered clinical trials were requested from study investigators; they were restricted to randomised placebo-controlled trials of either acamprosate or naltrexone or both. Intention-to-treat analysis was carried out for all dichotomous variables. There were 21 trials of acamprosate, and 20 with naltrexone. Confounding and defining factors were that some patients were abstinent and a subgroup were not; some were outpatients and others not, recruitment procedures differed, and different types of psychosocial interventions were utilised. Conclusions reached were that there are specific therapeutic advantages in each drug, as they have different mechanisms of action: acamprosate is more effective in aiding abstinence and naltrexone in reducing of craving. Overview of Pharmacotherapies: Randomised controlled trials Efficacy of naltrexone and acamprosate were compared in a multi-centre, randomised double-blind, placebo controlled trial conducted in Australia (Morley et al. 2006). Results from 94 subjects who completed the study (of 169) showed that there were no differences between groups on outcome measure of drinking, craving or biochemical markers. Intention-to-treat analysis also showed similar results. A secondary survival analysis, on subjects with low baseline levels of dependence, did, however, demonstrate the efficacy of naltrexone in increasing the number of days to relapse relative to acamprosate. A further analysis comparing naltrexone to acamprosate in reducing craving showed that naltrexone had a greater effect on drinking when level of craving was high (Richardson et al. 2008). The COMBINE study conducted in the USA (Anton et al. 2006) was designed to evaluate the efficacy or pharmacotherapy, behavioural therapy and their combinations for treatment of alcohol dependence and to evaluate placebo effect on overall outcome. This large RCT involved 1383 patients with the diagnosis of alcohol dependence, recently abstinent from alcohol. The treatments included naltrexone and acamprosate (alone or together), placebo (single or double), each with or without a combined behavioural intervention (CBI). The CBI integrated cognitive behavioural therapy, motivational interviewing and 12-step facilitation and was delivered by trained behavioural health specialists in up to 20 sessions of 50 min duration. All the above groups received medical management. The treatment was of 16 weeks duration. It was found that at the end of the treatment period, participants in all nine different treatments and combined interventions showed reductions in drinking, including the placebo group. Patients who received naltrexone alone, naltrexone with CBI or CBI and placebo had higher percent of days abstinent (80.6, 79.2 and 77.1 respectively) when compared to placebo group (i.e. medical management only). Naltrexone significantly increased the time to the first heavy drinking day (Hazard Risk, 0.72; 97.5% confidence interval, CI, 0.53-0.98; p = 0.02). Patients receiving acamprosate either alone or in combination with CBI and/or naltrexone had not significantly reduce their drinking when compared to placebo group. At one year follow up the between group differences maintained a similar trend but were no longer significant. The results of this clinical trial are in contradiction with many previously conducted studies investigating the efficacy of acamprosate in treatment of alcohol dependence. 143 The study found no beneficial effect of combining pharmacotherapy and behavioural interventions on improvements in outcome. It has been suggested that the variability between treatment providers may be more important than the variability between treatments (Bergmark 2008; Buhringer and Pfeiffer-Gerschel 2008). A randomised open-label trial conducted in Finland compared the effectiveness of disulfiram, acamprosate and naltrexone in 243 treatment-seeking alcohol dependent patients over two and a half years (Laaksonen et al. 2008). In the first 12 weeks of the trial patients received supervised naltrexone, acamprosate or disulfiram (50, 1998, or 200 mg, respectively, per day) plus a brief manual-based cognitivebehavioural intervention. By the end of this period, 25% had dropped out. The second phase took place over weeks 13-52, during which patients were instructed to take the medication in connection with craving or when a relapse was imminent (a targeted medication phase). Intake during the targeted medication phase was relatively low, with 87% taking medication once a week. At the end of the second phase period, 52% of the original sample had dropped out, with no significant differences between medication groups, thereby diluting the power of the study. During the fist 12 weeks disulfiram was better than naltrexone and acamprosate in reducing time to first incidence of heavy drinking in reducing the number of heavy drinking days (p<0.001), increasing time to the first drink (p<0.0002) and increasing the number of abstinent days (p<0.0001). During the second phase there were no significant differences in most of the above measures between groups, but abstinence days were significantly more frequent in the disulfiram group than in the naltrexone group (p = 0.0005) and in the acamprosate group (p = 0.0097). The average alcohol consumption in all groups remained significantly lower than at the baseline. Over the entire 52-week period disulfiram was significantly better than naltrexone or acamprosate in increasing the time to first drink (p = 0.001). Supervised disulfiram appeared superior to naltrexone and acamprosate, especially during the continuous medication period. Summary There is evidence of effectiveness for all three types of pharmacotherapies in reducing alcohol consumption in patients with alcohol dependence. Evidence is stronger for naltrexone and acamprosate, but disulfiram remains an option for some patients. The majority of effectiveness trials of the pharmacotherapies involved some type of psychosocial interventions, or structured medical management. There is evidence of an additive effect of psychosocial interventions such as cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT), and naltrexone (see below). Recommendation 7.1 Pharmacotherapy should be considered for all alcohol-dependent patients, in association with psychosocial supports. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ia Naltrexone (NTX) Naltrexone is an opioid receptor antagonist. By blocking mu- opioid receptors, naltrexone reduces levels of dopamine (the major reward neurotransmitter in the brain) and reduces alcohol intake (Gonzales and Weiss 1998). 144 Effectiveness of naltrexone: Meta-analyses and reviews The most recent (and only) meta-analysis comes in the Cochrane review of 2004 (Srisurapanont and Jarusuraisin 2005). Articles selected for review were from the period 1966-2001. There were 2 trials of nalmefene and all the others (n = 27) were of naltrexone; the total number of participants was 3048. The authors’ findings were (i) that several lines of high-quality evidence supported the short-term treatment with naltrexone for preventing relapse- the relative risk ratio (RR) for decreasing shortterm relapse was 36%, with the number needed to treat (NNT) at 7, compared to placebo; (ii) that alcohol-dependent patients using naltrexone were more likely to accept the treatment program; and (iii) apart from its small benefits on time to first drink and craving, no available evidence supported a meaningful benefit after 12 weeks of treatment (Srisurapanont and Jarusuraisin 2005). There was no evidence to support the use of nalmefene in clinical practice for alcohol dependence. Roozen et al. (2006) conducted a systematic review of the effectiveness of naltrexone in the maintenance both of opioid and alcohol dependence, summarising the evidence existing up until March 2004. We only discuss the alcohol studies here. The aims were to study the effects of naltrexone compared to placebo in the maintenance treatment of dependence; and to study whether combining naltrexone with psychological treatment was more effective than naltrexone alone. Seventeen alcohol studies were identified as fitting the Cochrane quality criteria. Conclusions from the analyses were that there is: (i) strong evidence that naltrexone is superior to placebo regarding medium term relapse rates; (ii) strong evidence that there is no difference in terms of continuous abstinence; (iii) strong evidence in favour of naltrexone reducing percentage of drinking days; (iv) conflicting evidence regarding time to first relapse; and (v) strong evidence that there is no difference in time to first drink; (v) CBT increases effectiveness of naltrexone. In a number of individual studies treatment compliance was significantly correlated with positive outcomes. Six studies were included that reported follow-up or long-term results. Conclusions drawn from the pooled effects of these studies were that there is moderate evidence in favour of the use naltrexone concerning relapse rate, and there was no difference in the long-term effects of naltrexone on percentage of drinking days and time to relapse in when compared to placebo. Almost all studies provided some form of psychosocial treatment. Although it was not detailed in many cases, cognitive behaviour therapy including relapse prevention and coping skills were used in most. It is recommended in the review above that naltrexone should be delivered in combination with psychological interventions (Srisurapanont and Jarusuraisin 2005). Conclusions drawn from the analysis by Roozen et al. (2006) were that there was evidence that the combination with CBT increases the effectiveness of naltrexone treatment, as discussed above. Effectiveness of naltrexone: Randomised controlled trials Anton et al. (2005) conducted a USA-based randomised controlled trial with 4 arms (naltrexone or placebo combined with either CBT or with Motivational Enhancement Therapy, MET) among 160 outpatient alcohol dependent patients. The authors conclude that the CBT- naltrexone group did better than the others on a variety of outcome measures. Naltrexone increased the time to first relapse. They also state that although MET is easier to deliver, the combination of MET and naltrexone was less effective than CBT in this case. They also note that the positive CBT- naltrexone 145 outcomes emerged over time; it is possible that the skills acquired and augmented by CBT in conjunction with the pharmacological assistance provided by naltrexone have a complementary effect in mutually reinforcing the active ingredients of each. Another randomised controlled trial of naltrexone was conducted with 153 early problem drinkers, of whom 130 (86%) completed the 8-week program (Kranzler et al. 2004). This study compared naltrexone with placebo on a daily or targeted basis. ‘Targeted’ treatment was defined as encouraging patients to take at least 2 and a maximum of 5 tablets per week in anticipation of high-risk situations. All patients received additional brief skills training. Both the targeted and daily basis groups reduced their drinking days (14% fewer days) when compared to placebo. Patients receiving targeted naltrexone showed an initial decline in heavy drinking, followed by an increase when the number of tablets they had been given became fewer, while the daily naltrexone group continued their decline in heavy drinking all through the trial. Daily diaries were kept by all patients to record drinks and medications taken. Conclusions reached by the authors were that targeted naltrexone – providing adequate numbers of tablets are available – and combined with at least some skills training, is effective in reducing heavy drinking, at least in highly-educated and compliant patients. A substudy of this one examined the effects of daily interpersonal events on heavy drinkers (Armeli et al. 2006), and found that participants had at least one drink more on days that were characterised by higher levels of either positive or negative interpersonal events, especially events that were celebratory in nature. Tidey et al. (2008) randomised 180 non-treatment-seeking heavy drinkers 63% of whom were alcohol-dependent, to daily naltrexone or placebo for 3 weeks. Naltrexone was effective in reducing the percentage of drinking days in all participants and also decreased the percentage of heavy drinking days in those with the D4 dopamine receptor (DRD4) gene polymorphism (DRD4-L genotype). The muopiate receptor (OPRM1) gene polymorphism did not operate in any of the naltrexone effects. No counselling interventions were reported; however, participants received regular prompted messages on handheld computers reminding them to complete their daily diaries of alcohol consumption, mood and urge to drink, activity, location and setting for drinking and this may have helped to reinforce their treatment. Effectiveness of naltrexone: Summary Effectiveness of naltrexone in reducing the rate of relapse to heavy drinking and increasing the number of abstinence days in alcohol dependent patients has been supported by a number of meta-analyses and reviews. Meta-analyses suggest that compared to placebo, naltrexone reduces the relative risk ratio (RR) for relapse to heavy alcohol use by 36%, with the number needed to treat (NNT) at 7, suggesting a moderate effect size for maintaining abstinence (Streeton and Whelan 2001; Krantzler and Van Kirk 2001; Srisurapanont and Jarusuraisin 2005; Roozen et al. 2006). Naltrexone reduces the rate of relapse to heavy drinking and increases the number of abstinence days in alcohol dependent patients. Naltrexone decreases excessive drinking by reducing the reward associated with drinking alcohol. It reduces craving induced by environmental stimuli and decreases the amount and frequency of drinking when relapse occurs. It is, therefore, more effective in reducing rate and severity of relapses rather than in maintaining abstinence (Mann et al. 2004; Srisurapanont and Jarusuraisin 2005; Rosner et al. 2008). 146 Naltrexone is usually not prescribed without a support of some type of psychological counselling (Srisurapanont and Jarusuraisin 2005; Donovan et al. 2008). It appears to work best when supported by psychosocial interventions, particularly those aimed at relapse prevention (Roozen et al. 2006). While most controlled studies of naltrexone treatment have been in conjunction with intensive psychosocial services (such as counselling), it has nevertheless also been effective in physician-led treatment with regular monitoring, as has been shown in COMBINE study (Anton et al. 2006). Suitability for naltrexone There is still little evidence to directly inform decisions about what patient populations are more suitable for naltrexone. The following points should be taken into account (O’Malley 1998, Anton 2008): 1) Patients who are moderately to severely alcohol dependent and are medically stable are suitable for naltrexone. For example, a person who drinks on more than 50% of days, consumes more than five drinks a day, and has some alcohol-related problems (Anton 2008); 2) Naltrexone may be more effective for preventing relapse to heavy or problem drinking than for maintaining abstinence from alcohol (Rosner et al. 2008); 3) Patients currently using opioids or who require opiate-based pain relief are not suitable (Anton 2008). Due to its antagonist properties at the mu-opioid receptor, naltrexone will precipitate acute opioid withdrawal in patients currently using opioids. For the same reason, being on naltrexone will render opioid analgesia ineffective. 4) While hepatotoxicity has not emerged as a wide-spread problem (Croop et al 1997), naltrexone is contraindicated for people with acute hepatitis or severe liver failure. It is also contraindicated in patients with a history of sensitivity to naltrexone. 5) There are no well controlled studies of the safety of naltrexone during pregnancy or lactation. 6) There are some reports that patients with significant depression or more severe alcohol dependence respond less well to naltrexone treatment. Regular monitoring for depression is recommended (Latt et al 2002; Morley et al. 2006). Recommendation 7.2 Naltrexone is recommended as relapse prevention for alcohol-dependent patients. 7.3 Naltrexone is not suitable for people who are opioid dependent or who have pain disorders needing opioid analgesia. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ia S Interaction with other drugs Naltrexone is a mu-opioid receptor antagonist and induces precipitated opiate withdrawal in patients who are currently opiate dependent. It is contraindicated in patients with current or recent use of opioid medication (e.g. codeine, morphine, oxycodone, methadone). Naltrexone is a long-acting drug and will block the effects of opioids when they are used after commencement of naltrexone treatment. Naltrexone should be 147 discontinued 48-72 hours prior to any situation where opioid analgesia may be required (e.g. in patients undergoing elective surgery). Naltrexone does not appear to alter the absorption or metabolism of alcohol; however some patients have reported nausea after drinking alcohol while taking naltrexone. The interaction of naltrexone and most other medications has not been tested. However, caution should be exercised when combining naltrexone with other drugs known to have hepatotoxicity (e.g. disulfiram). Concurrent administration with antidepressants appears to be safe (Croop et al 1997). Starting treatment It is not known whether patients with a diagnosis of alcohol dependence achieve better outcomes if abstinent before taking naltrexone. However, some period of abstinence (at least 3 days) was the requirement of most clinical trials investigating the effectiveness of naltrexone. The patient’s ability to achieve abstinence in this period is a good indication of their motivation to adhere to a course of naltrexone. It has been suggested that such abstinence is the most judicious approach (Anton 2008). Naltrexone dosing is recommended to begin 3-7 days after the patient’s last drink and after resolution of acute withdrawal symptoms. In most randomised controlled studies (e.g. reviewed by Srisurapanont and Jarusuraisin 2005) investigating effectiveness of naltrexone, treatment was initiated within one week of completing managed withdrawal. Recommendation 7.4 Naltrexone should be started as soon as possible after completion of withdrawal (usually 3 to 7 days after last drink). Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ib Dosage Naltrexone is formulated in tablets of 50mg, with the recommended dose being 50mg (1 tablet/day orally) with meals. It may be preferable to commence with ½ tablet (25mg/day) for several days, and increase to 50mg after any adverse effects have subsided. There has been only one study comparing several doses of naltrexone (O’Malley et al 2008). This was a placebo-controlled dose-range study, investigating the effect of oral naltrexone (25mg, 50mg and 100mg) on alcohol consumption in hazardous drinkers (not seeking treatment), combined with open-label transdermal nicotine patch for enhancing smoking cessation. The lowest dose (25mg) was more effective in reducing levels of drinking. The authors conclude that given its efficacy, favourable side-effect profile and a lower cost when compared to higher doses, the 25-mg dose should be considered for future studies of combination therapy. 148 Adverse effects and their management Naltrexone is usually well tolerated. Common adverse effects include nausea, headache, dizziness, fatigue, nervousness, insomnia, vomiting, and anxiety in about 10 percent of patients. These generally subside with time (usually days) (e.g. Srisurapanont and Jarusuraisin 2005). Based on clinical practice, the following strategies may help reduce the impact of potential side effects on treatment outcome: 1) Patient education about expected side effects and duration 2) Timing of doses: establish a routine; ideally taken in the morning with food or splitting the dosage between the morning and evening 3) Gradual introduction of medication (25mg for 1-2 days) 4) Dose reduction (half tablets at 25mg/day), slow titration, and stopping the medication for three to four days before reintroducing it at a lower dose 5) Distinguishing between prolonged alcohol withdrawal symptoms and side effects of naltrexone by beginning treatment once the major features of alcohol withdrawal have subsided (generally 3-5 days after drinking cessation) may be important. Treatment duration The most appropriate duration of treatment continuation in an alcohol-dependent patient is not yet known. The usual treatment period used in majority of randomised controlled studies (e.g. Srisurapanont and Jarusuraisin 2005) as well as in clinical practice is 3-6 months and in some cases up to 12 months. However, the decision on the treatment duration should be made on a case-by-case basis between the patient and doctor, based on side effects, history of relapse, social and family circumstances, and other individual factors. Recommendation 7.5 Naltrexone is usually taken for at least 3 to 6 months. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence D IV Clinical considerations during treatment Treatment should continue even if the patient lapses; psychosocial relapse prevention techniques should be used to deal with the lapse or relapse (see Chapter 6a: Psychosocial interventions) Monitoring and attending to physical and mental health is important. Depression and dysphoria have been reported as side effects of naltrexone (Farren and O’Malley 1999; Mendelson et al 1978) Ending naltrexone therapy There is no evidence of a withdrawal syndrome or development of dependence following the use of naltrexone. Psychosocial relapse prevention should continue beyond the end of pharmacotherapy. 149 Acamprosate Acamprosate is thought to reduce drinking by modulating the brain GABA (gammaaminobutyric acid) and glutamate function which is implicated in withdrawal symptoms. The drug only reaches desired levels in the brain after one to two weeks (Wright and Myrick 2006; Mann et al. 2008). Effectiveness of Acamprosate: Reviews and Meta-analyses A meta-analysis by Mann et al. (2004) examined results of 17 randomised clinical trials investigating efficacy of acamprosate in the maintenance of abstinence in alcohol dependent patients. A total of 4087 patients were included, of whom 53% received the intervention medication. Findings showed that continuous abstinence rates at 6 months were significantly higher in the acamprosate-treated patients than in placebo group (36.1 and 23.4% respectively, with the relative risk ratio of 1.47 (95% CI, 1.29–1.69; p<0.001). At 12 months, the pooled difference in success rates between acamprosate and placebo was 13.3%, with number needed to treat (NNT) at 7.5. The conclusions of this study were that acamprosate had a significant beneficial effect in enhancing abstinence in detoxified alcohol-dependent individuals. Another study evaluated the results of 3 double-blind, placebo-controlled trials carried out in Belgium and France, France alone, and Germany (Kranzler and Gage 2008). Acamprosate was delivered in doses of either 1332mg or 1998mg per day. In one study of 48 weeks (in Germany), the doses were assigned according to body weight (as recommended) and in the other two (13- and 52-week studies) they were randomly assigned. All patients received counselling. Drinking outcomes were measured by blood tests (GGT and MCV), breath, blood or urine alcohol concentrations, and by reports from patients and family members. Results showed that 54% of patients receiving acamprosate completed the trials versus 39% of control group patients. Intention-to-treat analysis was used; patients with missing data or unknown status were assumed to relapse to non-abstinence. The intervention group reported significantly higher percentage of days abstinent than placebo patients in all 3 studies (p<0.01). Differences ranged from 18% in the 52week study (p = 0.001) to 38% in the 13-week study (p<0.001). Overall, the rate of complete abstinence was significantly higher with acamprosate than placebo (p<0.05). Acamprosate significantly increased percent days abstinent and time to first drink compared to placebo patients (p<0.01). Conclusions were that acamprosate is an effective medication and was also the first to demonstrate efficacy in maintaining complete abstinence, when combined with psychosocial support. Effectiveness of Acamprosate: Randomised controlled trials One pragmatic trial of acamprosate was undertaken over 149 general practices in France with 422 alcohol dependent patients (Kiritze-Topor et al. 2004). Patients were randomised to receive acamprosate with standard care (which in France includes a rehabilitation program, often with some type of psychosocial therapy) or standard care alone. The purpose of the trial was to test its efficacy in routine practice. The principal outcome measure was change from baseline on the Alcohol-Related Problems Questionnaire (ARPQ), a questionnaire that measures the influence of alcohol consumption on patients’ lives with respect to health, work, financial, family and relationship and legal/judicial problems. Secondary outcome measures were abstinence (measured by proportion of days abstinent during the trial), and the success of the treatment from the physician’s point of view. Results from the 12 150 month follow-up showed a level of significance in favour of acamprosate, with a relative risk ratio (RR) of 1.26. The number needed to treat was 7.14; i.e. 7 patients need to be treated to save one additional patient from alcohol-related problems. Half of all patients reported no alcohol-related problems during the study period. Study completion rate was high at 82.5%; intention-to-treat analysis was used. Conclusions of the study were that acamprosate is successful in reducing alcohol-related problems, and also that the treatment can be practically carried out in routine general practice with alcohol-dependent patients. Psychosocial treatment was the subject of two trials where it was tested with alcoholdependent patients and compared with acamprosate. A study conducted in Netherland compared acamprosate alone with acamprosate plus minimal motivational enhancement, and acamprosate plus brief cognitive behavioural therapy (de Wildt et al. 2002). Another similar study in Sweden compared two types of intervention: minimal psychosocial intervention and extended psychosocial intervention; both arms contained treatment with acamprosate (Hammarberg et al. 2004). The de Wildt et al. (2002) study was conducted with 248 alcohol-dependent outpatients from 14 addiction treatment centres in the Netherlands; the study period was 28 weeks. Minimal intervention (group 2) was 3 sessions of 20 minutes each in weeks 2, 3, and 4. Extended intervention (group 3) was 5 standard and 2 elective weekly 60-minute sessions of CBT in weeks 2-8. In contrast, ‘no intervention’ (group 1) patients were seen by the physician 6 times in 28 weeks. All patients were prescribed acamprosate for 28 weeks. At the end of the treatment period 114 patients (47%) remained in the study. Outcome measures were number of abstinent days, time to first relapse and number of drinks per drinking day. The results showed that adding a psychosocial intervention did not enhance drinking outcomes or medication compliance. Total number of abstinent days was 108.5 for group 1, 119.1 for group 2, and 108.1 for group 3; rates of continuous abstinence were 13%, 21% and 10% respectively; time to first relapse was 53.4, 65.5 and 55.4 days respectively. Intention-to-treat analysis was used. No statistical differences were found between the treatment groups; the authors suggest that this may partly have been explained by the ‘no intervention’ group spending the same amount of time in consultations as the ‘minimal intervention’ group. Although the protocol was strictly adhered to, sources of potential bias were addressed in the randomisation of patients to treatment arms, and the sample size was powerful enough to detect differences in outcomes, it remains unknown why the interventions did not produce a larger effect than expected. It concludes that this trial could not demonstrate an effect for brief psychosocial treatments and either a much more intensive treatment is needed or that acamprosate with medical management is adequate to produce decreases in drinking. The study by Hammarberg et al. (2004) compared two intensities of psychosocial interventions (extensive and minimal) with 70 alcohol dependent patients, all being treated with acamprosate. Results showed that the extended intervention was not more effective in prolonging time to first drink, with reducing either the number of drinking days or of heavy drinking days than the minimal intervention. There were no differences between groups in compliance to medication during the trial, or in AST, GGT or CDT levels in blood tests conducted after 24 weeks. There was a slight reduction in ALT levels in the minimal intervention group. The authors suggest that the extended intervention may not have been intensive enough to produce a doseresponse effect, or conversely (similar to the above study) medication with minimal intervention is sufficient to reduce drinking levels. 151 Patient motivation was found to have a significant effect on the outcome in a study conducted in the USA which tested the dose-dependent effectiveness of acamprosate in alcohol-dependent patients in a double-blind placebo- controlled trial (Mason et al. 2006). There were 3 arms to the trial; 3 placebo tablets (nil dose); 2 tablets of acamprosate and one placebo (2g); or 3 tablets of acamprosate (3g); all given twice daily. All patients received brief counselling and self-help materials at 8 study visits, for 24 weeks. The primary outcome measure was alcohol-free days, measured by the timeline follow-back method. Results show no statistically significant difference in alcohol-free days across all arms, although a slight trend was noticed (54% for nil dose, 56% for 2g, and 61% for 3g. However, by examining results from a subgroup whose goal at baseline was to be completely abstinent, it was found acamprosate had a significant linear dose effect, with 3g superior to 2g (p=0.01) and 2g superior to nil dose (p=0.04), using both intention-to-treat analysis and actual completers’ results. Reid et al. (2005) conducted a small randomised trial (n = 40) to evaluate the effectiveness of compliance therapy in increasing adherence to treatment with acamprosate in patients with alcohol dependence. Patients received acamprosate, with or without compliance therapy for 4 months (n = 20 in each group). All subjects received routine medical care (seven medical reviews each of 15 minutes duration over 4 months. Compliance therapy consisted of four to six individual sessions (60 minute duration) and included motivational interviewing and cognitive behaviour therapy techniques with the focus on exploration of beliefs about medication side effects, the benefits of treatment ambivalence and relapse prevention. Intention-totreat analyses of data showed no differences between the two groups in the number of days taking acamprosate, days to first drink, days to first relapse. However, it was found that participation in three or more sessions of compliance therapy was associated with better adherence to acamprosate and better overall treatment outcomes. The COMBINE study (Anton et al. 2006), described above, found that acamprosate was not more effective in reducing drinking than placebo (with medical management) either alone or in combination with psychological intervention or with naltrexone or both. It should be noted, however, that in this study percent days abstinent at the end of the 16-week treatment period was similar in placebo, acamprosate and naltrexone groups (mean, placebo acamprosate 77.6 vs acamprosate 78.4; placebo naltrexone 77.2 vs naltrexone 78.8). The assessment of interactions between treatment combinations showed that naltrexone, but not acamprosate, was significantly more effective than placebo in reducing the number of percent days abstinent, although the actual difference was small (mean, placebo naltrexone without CBI 75.1 vs naltrexone without CBI 80.6). There was a significant "placebo effect" in the COMBINE study resultingt from pill taking and meetings with a medical professional. The latter may have contributed by repeated advice to attend Alcoholics Anonymous and instilling sense of optimism about a medication effect (Weiss et al. 2008). Effectiveness of acamprosate: Summary Acamprosate is effective in maintaining abstinence from alcohol following withdrawal in dependent drinkers; the relative risk ratio is 1.3 to 1.5 in the first 6 months, and the number needed to treat is 7.5 over placebo (Mann et al. 2004). Acamprosate increases the number of days of continuous abstinence as well as the percent of days abstinent and time to first drink (Kranzler and Gage 2008). 152 Acamprosate is more likely to be effective in patients motivated to stay abstinent at the start of treatment (Mason et al. 2006). While there is no sufficient evidence to suggest that acamprosate is more effective when used together with psychosocial interventions, the current approach is to use acamprosate as part of a more comprehensive treatment plan that may include psychosocial interventions. Suitability for acamprosate There is still little evidence to inform decisions about what patient groups are most suitable for acamprosate. Verheul et al. (2005) pooled the results of 7 European trials with the aim of identifying if there was a particular subgroup of patients who responded better to acamprosate. They analysed the results of 1485 patients with alcohol dependence using the outcome measures of cumulative abstinence duration, continuous abstinence, and time to first relapse. The overall results concluded that acamprosate can be considered potentially effective for all patients with alcohol dependence, as despite the large sample size and sufficient statistical power to detect any variations, no differences were detected for any of the variables (craving, anxiety, study, and treatment) entered into the analysis. It is posited by the authors, however, that evidence from 2 other studies suggests that naltrexone or disulfiram combined with acamprosate would improve its effectiveness. Based on available evidence, acamprosate is a suitable treatment option for patients with alcohol dependence (usually, moderate to severe), who are medically stable and are willing to comply with the dosing regimen may benefit for acamprosate (Reid et al. 2005). Acamprosate may be more effective for patients with an abstinence goal rather than preventing excessive drinking in non-abstinent patients (Mason et al. 2006; Rosner et al. 2008). Acamprosate is contraindicated in patients with a known hypersensitivity to the drug, renal insufficiency or severe hepatic failure (Childs Pugh classification C) (MIMS 2008). The safety of acamprosate in pregnancy or lactation has not been established so it should not be administered to women who are pregnant or breastfeeding (MIMS 2008). Recommendation 7.6 Acamprosate is recommended as relapse prevention for alcohol-dependent patients. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ia Interaction with other drugs Acamprosate does not interact with alcohol. Tetracyclines may be rendered inactive by the calcium component in acamprosate. 153 Starting treatment Acamprosate dosing is recommended to begin 3-7 days after the patient’s last drink, and after resolution of any acute withdrawal symptoms. Acamprosate can be safely initiated during alcohol withdrawal (Gual and Lehert 2001) and its potential neuroprotective effect may be useful early in withdrawal (Koob et al. 2002). Starting acamprosate at the beginning of detoxification versus after completion of detoxification has not been shown to improve treatment outcomes (Kampman et al. 2009). However, pre-treatment with acamprosate 8 days prior to withdrawal management has been shown to improve sleep during withdrawal and in a post-withdrawal period (Staner et al. 2006). Medical history should be taken, as per Chapter 3: Screening and assessment. Physical examination may include assessment for signs of chronic liver disease and hepatic failure. Investigations may include tests of kidney function (urea and electrolytes), since 90 percent of acamprosate is excreted through the kidney, and liver function tests. Recommendation 7.7 Acamprosate should be started as soon as possible after completion of withdrawal (usually 3 to 7 days after last drink). Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ib Dosage Acamprosate is formulated in tablets of 333 mg, with the recommended dose for adults being 1998mg with meals (six tablets/day, orally in three doses: 2; 2; 2). Adults under 60kg should take 1332 mg/day (four tablets/day in three doses: 2; 1; 1). Adverse effects and their management Acamprosate is usually well tolerated. Its predominantly gastrointestinal adverse effects, commonly diarrhoea, usually resolve spontaneously within days. Mild abdominal pain, rash or isolated pruritus, parasthesiae, altered libido and confusion have been reported at low frequencies (Wilde and Wagstaff 1997). The following strategies are recommended: 1) Patient education about expected side effects and duration. 2) Distinguishing between prolonged alcohol withdrawal symptoms and side effects of acamprosate by beginning treatment once more pronounced features of withdrawal have subsided (after first 3-5 days). Treatment duration The usual treatment period is 3-6 months (Mann et al. 2004). However, the decision on the duration of treatment should be made on a case-by-case basis between the 154 patient and doctor, based on side effects, history of relapse, social and family circumstances and other individual factors. Recommendation 7.8 Acamprosate is usually taken for at least 3 to 6 months. Level of Strength of recommendation evidence D IV Clinical considerations during treatment Treatment should continue even if the patient lapses; psychosocial relapse prevention techniques should be used to deal with the lapse or relapse (see Chapter 6a: Psychosocial interventions) (Mann et al. 2004). Some clinicians do not prescribe acamprosate during continued drinking. This is not because of drug interactions but due to the belief that medication is of most use for patients that possess a higher motivation to change Regular monitoring and attending to physical, mental health and social issues is necessary. Some patients will have difficulty adhering to a medication regime that involves taking tablets three times a day for prolonged periods (Reid et al. 2005) (see also material later in this chapter on increasing medication adherence). Ending acamprosate therapy There is no evidence of a withdrawal syndrome following the use of acamprosate or developing dependence. Psychosocial relapse prevention interventions should continue beyond the end of pharmacotherapy. Combined Acamprosate and Naltrexone Some clinicians administer acamprosate and naltrexone concurrently given the different theoretical approaches of the two medications in reducing alcohol consumption. Studies have found this to be a safe and promising approach. Nonetheless, most evidence suggests that while combined naltrexone and acamprosate may be more effective than acamprosate alone, the combination is no more effective than naltrexone alone (Kiefer et al. 2003; Anton et al. 2006). Combined acamprosate and naltrexone: Meta-analyses and reviews An evidence-based risk-benefits assessment was carried out by Mason (2003) who assessed all published double-blind placebo-controlled trials of acamprosate and naltrexone. Sixteen studies of acamprosate were found, of which 15 used standardised methodology and were included; 14 studies were found of naltrexone and 3 of the two medications combined. The naltrexone trials differed more in their methodology than the others. The advantages of this were that the drug was evaluated under many conditions, from short- to long-term, and with and without accompanying psychosocial treatment. Based on this review, the conclusions were that both medications are useful in the treatment of alcohol dependence. However, 155 as the two drugs act in different ways and have different effects on the brain, there is a case for combining the two, and it was suggested that this may offer an advantage for some patients. Combined acamprosate and naltrexone: Randomised controlled trials Kiefer et al. (2003) compared naltrexone, acamprosate, and a combination of the two in a double-blind placebo-controlled study. After detoxification, 160 alcohol dependent patients were randomised to receive naltrexone, acamprosate, both, or placebo for 12 weeks. All patients attended group therapy weekly, utilising CBT and coping skills training. Full blood tests were also carried out, and breath and urine were randomly tested for alcohol. Results were that both medications were superior in achieving abstinence compared to placebo, with a tendency for a better outcome in the naltrexone group compared to acamprosate in maintenance of abstinence. There was no significant difference in time to first drink between naltrexone and acamprosate. Additional benefits were observed in combining naltrexone and acamprosate (p = 0.002). The combined medication group had a relapse rate of 25%. At follow-up (week 24) patients who received combined medication had rates significantly lower relapse rate than placebo, but not lower than acamprosate. Both naltrexone and acamprosate were superior to placebo. Relapse rates were 80% (placebo), 54% (acamprosate), 53% (naltrexone) and 34% (combined medication). The results of COMBINE study (Anton 2006), discussed above, showed no advantage of adding acamprosate to naltrexone. Disulfiram Disulfiram primarily works by inhibiting the action of an enzyme (aldehyde dehydrogenase) involved in the second step in the metabolism of alcohol, namely the conversion of acetaldehyde to acetate. This leads to the accumulation of acetaldehyde following consumption of alcohol while on disulfiram. The resulting symptoms are unpleasant including flushing, dizziness, nausea and vomiting, irregular heart beat, breathlessness and headaches. Disulfiram acts as a deterrent to drinking because the patient expects to experience these negative consequences (Heather 1989). Evidence indicates that the maximal effect of disulfiram is achieved when the medication is provided to the patient under supervision (Chick et al. 1992; Hughes and Cook 1997; Laaksonen et al. 2008). There is one recently reported trial of disulfiram and acamprosate (De Sousa and De Sousa 2005), which was randomised but not blinded. Better outcomes were noticed with disulfiram as the trial progressed, and it was found significantly better both at preventing relapse during the study (p = 0.0003), maintaining abstinence (p = 0.0002) and increasing days to first relapse (p = 0.0001). Another trial in Finland compared disulfiram, acamprosate and naltrexone in a randomised open-label study with 243 treatment-seeking alcohol dependent patients over two and a half years (Laaksonen et al. 2008). Results show that during the fist 12 weeks disulfiram was better than naltrexone and acamprosate in reducing time to first incidence of heavy drinking (p<0.001). During the second phase (dosing targeted to risk situations) there were no significant differences in these measures between groups, but abstinence days were significantly more frequent in the disulfiram group (p = 0.0005 in the naltrexone group; p = 0.0097 in the acamprosate 156 group). Supervised disulfiram appeared superior to naltrexone and acamprosate, especially during the continuous medication period. This trial is described in more detail in Section 1.2 above. Suitability for disulfiram Based on the results of the recent studies discussed above and previous clinical experience, disulfiram is an appropriate medication for patients who are motivated to abstain from alcohol. It is beneficial for patients that accept a need for an external control on their drinking and are prepared to be supervised in the daily dosing of the medication (Chick et al. 1992; Hughes and Cook 1997). Since it is most effectives with supervised administration, willingness of patient’s spouse, family member or a friend is an important factor. Disulfiram can cause significant toxicity if relapse occurs. It should only be prescribed to patients that display no medical or psychosocial contraindications as described below. Recommendation 7.9 Disulfiram is recommended in closely supervised alcohol-dependent patients motivated for abstinence and with no contraindications. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ia Precautions The intensity of the disulfiram-alcohol reaction varies amongst patients and in rare cases may result in cardiovascular collapse, myocardial infarction, respiratory depression, convulsion and death. Accordingly, treatment is contraindicated for patients with significant cardiovascular, hepatic or pulmonary disease. Several of the patients most suited to disulfiram in other terms may suffer from these problems. A risk-benefit analysis of the treatment should therefore be undertaken by the treating clinician. Careful monitoring of cardiac and liver condition is recommended if disulfiram treatment is started. The enzyme that metabolizes dopamine into norepinephrine and epinephrine is inhibited by disulfiram, which may result in an exacerbation of psychosis. Nonetheless, a trial in a psychotic population did not reveal significant problems (Petrakis et al. 2006). Interaction with Other Drugs Disulfiram interacts with the metabolism of alcohol. It increases the blood concentration of benzodiazepines, caffeine, phenytoin, the active ingredient in marijuana, isoniazid, barbiturates, anticoagulants, tricyclic agents and paraldehyde (MIMS 2008). Disulfiram should not be given concomitantly with paraldehyde because paraldehyde is metabolized to acetaldehyde in the liver. Disulfiram should not be combined with naltrexone as both medications are potentially hepatotoxic. 157 Starting Treatment Treatment should begin after detoxification, approximately 24-48 hours after drinking cessation. Medical history should be taken. It is important to discuss the effects of the drug when alcohol is taken, including potential severe, life threatening reaction. The patient’s anticipation of its effects will greatly enhance the drug’s effectiveness as a deterrent against drinking. Disulfiram should be seen as an aid that does not detract from the patient’s own responsibility in maintaining abstinence. Dosage Disulfiram is formulated in tablets of 200mg, with the recommended dose being 200400mg (1-2 tablets/day orally). Some patients can continue to drink on 200-400 mg without significant aversive effects, and the dose should be increased. The maintenance dosage should generally not exceed 600 mg a day. In many patients, two or three doses per week may be sufficient, and this approach may be more practical and easier to schedule with supervision. Clinical considerations during treatment Treatment should be suspended if the patient lapses; psychosocial relapse prevention techniques should be used to deal with the lapse or relapse (see Chapter 6a: Psychosocial interventions). Disulfiram may be recommenced after 48 hours abstinence. Supervision Based on the outcomes of the recent studies discussed above, disulfiram treatment is best suited to individuals with social supports (e.g. family) who will help supervise medication adherence (Chick et al. 1992; Hughes and Cook 1997; Laaksonen et al. 2008). Supervision has a marked effect on adherence and may greatly improve the effectiveness of this intervention. A spouse/partner is an obvious choice for married/de facto patients. It is important to stress that the spouse cannot be expected to control the other person’s drinking. A written ‘disulfiram contract’ should be considered between a carer and patient. This contract should include an outline of the likely effects of drinking and products that may need to be avoided (e.g. facial products), the recognition that the patient will allow the medication to be supervised, that the carer will be the supervisor and that the supervisory role includes contacting the health professional if medication compliance becomes a problem. Treatment duration Disulfiram is likely to be a useful treatment for the first 3-6 months of treatment. After that the benefits of continuing use are less clear and the patient should be encouraged to maintain abstinence without disulfiram. Recommendation 7.10 Disulfiram is usually taken for at least 3 to 6 months. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence D IV 158 Other medications Serotonergic agents There is minimal evidence for the efficacy of serotonergic agents (e.g. SSRIs, buspirone and ondansetron) for treating the main symptoms of alcohol dependence. However, these agents may have a role in certain patients that have concomitant symptoms of anxiety or depression and there is evidence they are effective for these symptoms in the presence of alcohol use (see Chapter 8: special population groups and Chapter 9: comorbidity). Other formulations and medications There are several new agents emerging in the literature. These include anticonvulsants such as gabapentin (Furieri and Nakamura-Palacios 2007) and topiramate (Johnson et al. 2007), a gamma aminobutyric acid type B (GABA-B) receptor agonist baclofen (Addolorato et al. 2007), a N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist memantine (Evans et al 2007) and antipsychotic medications such as olanzapine (Guardia et al. 2004) and aripiprazole (Anton et al. 2008). Whilst some of these medications appear promising as agents in reducing alcohol relapse, the need for further controlled trials and the cost of these agents means that they cannot be recommended for use as first line treatments for alcohol dependence at this time. A long-acting (monthly) depot intramuscular injected preparation of naltrexone has been developed and is licensed in the USA (e.g. Garbutt et al. 2005). This agent looks promising and avoids problems of poor adherence, however it is not yet available for use in Australia. Whilst benzodiazepines are commonly sought after by some patients, there are no studies to support the use of benzodiazepines beyond the immediate withdrawal period in reducing alcohol use, and indeed there may be adverse effects of benzodiazepines dependence and interactions with alcohol. Gabapentin The efficacy of gabapentin (an anticonvulsant) in reducing alcohol consumption and craving has been examined by Furieri and Nakamura-Palacios (2007) in a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial performed in a Brazilian public outpatient drug treatment clinic. Subjects (n = 60) with alcohol dependence who received routine management of withdrawal with diazepam were randomised on treatment with gabapentin (300 mg twice daily) or placebo for 4 weeks. At the end of the treatment period patients receiving gabapentin had a significant reduction in both number of drinks per day and mean percentage of heavy drinking days (p = 0.02 for both), and an increase in the percentage of days of abstinence (p = 0.008), compared to the placebo group. Gabapentin was well tolerated. 159 Topiramate Oral topiramate (an anticonvulsant) has also been trialled as an antagonist for alcohol’s rewarding effects. It was tested against placebo with 150 alcohol-dependent treatment-seeking individuals in a double-blind randomised controlled study (Johnson et al. 2003) in the USA, and later in an identical study with 371 individuals at 17 US sites (Johnson et al. 2007). Outcome measures of the first study were, using the timeline followback method: number of drinks per day; average number of drinks per drinking day; percentage of heavy drinking days, and percentage of days abstinent. Results showed that topiramate was significantly more effective than placebo on all outcome measures. Secondary outcome measures included plasma GGT levels and self-reported craving and these also fell significantly. The dosage of topiramate was increased slowly for the first 8 weeks and so a time effect cannot be separated from a dosage effect. The authors conclude that topiramate is a safe and effective medication for alcohol dependence. Other favourable results of this study have been reported elsewhere; namely one of improvement of quality of life and physical health associated with the use of topiramate (Johnson et al. 2008). The later and larger trial of more sites and subjects, but using more rapid titration of dose (Johnson et al. 2007), replicated the findings of the first trial but with more rigorous statistical testing and therefore was able to conclude that the therapeutic effect of topiramate was replicable. The dropout rate, however, was found to be higher in the intervention group due to side-effects and they recommend slower titration of dose, as in the first trial. One of the drawbacks of the trial, as they report, is that no follow-up was conducted and so it is not known if the effects on reduction of drinking persisted. Another study tested the effects of topiramate on urge to drink (Miranda et al. 2008) and found no conclusive effects on this feature, but did confirm others’ findings that it reduced the frequency of drinking; it also reduced the stimulating effects of alcohol but was only significant in the 200mg group. As the authors report, the sample size was small (n = 61) and was a preliminary study only. The scientific concepts and clinical evidence for the development of topiramate in the treatment of alcohol dependence have been reviewed by Johnson (2005). Baclofen The effectiveness and safety of baclofen (a muscle relaxant acting through activation of the GABA-B receptor) was assessed in a double-blind randomised controlled trial of 84 alcohol-dependent patients in Italy with liver cirrhosis (Addolorato et al. 2007). Results from this study showed that 71% of baclofen patients achieved and maintained abstinence compared with 12% of placebo. The drug was well tolerated. Memantine Memantine is an N-methyl-d-aspartate (NMDA) receptor antagonist that may have potential for the treatment of alcohol disorders. Memantine has been shown to decrease alcohol craving in moderate drinkers. A double-blinded pilot study in the USA of memantine with 34 patients randomised to medication or placebo produced inconclusive results (Evans et al. 2007). Eighty percent of patients completed the 16week trial; both groups significantly reduced their alcohol use, with no difference 160 between the groups. The authors conclude that there is no evidence from this pilot to support its use to reduce either alcohol consumption or relapse from abstinence. Olanzapine Similar results were found in a double-blind randomised parallel group trial of olanzapine (an antipsychotic) in Spain, where both placebo and treatment groups also received psychotherapy (Guardia et al. 2004). Olanzapine was well tolerated; side-effects were mostly weight gain (32%), increased appetite (25%), drowsiness (18%), constipation (11%) and dry mouth (11%). Both groups reduced drinking and no differences were found between groups on any of the measured psychological variables, in the relapse rate or in any other drinking variables. Another trial was carried out in the USA by Hutchison et al. (2006) with 128 patients who were randomised to receive placebo or olanzapine with the aim of reducing craving. The patients were further analysed by sub-groups (those who had and did not have a particular allele (described as the seven-repeat allele of the DRD4 variable number of tandem repeats). Results of this study show that olanzapine reduced cue-elicited craving for alcohol in the DRD4-L (positive) individuals after 2 weeks of treatment. It also decreased the quantity of drinking over 12 weeks. It did not have this effect on the DRD4-S (negative) individuals. Side-effects from olanzapine included weight gain, with average weight gain being 6.5 lbs (approx 3 kilos) in the treatment group. Aripiprazole Finally, trials of aripiprazole have been recently reported. Aripiprazole is a dopaminergic/serotonergic agent with partial agonist properties at the D2 dopamine receptor and 5-hydrdoxytryptamine 1A (5-HT(1A)) receptor and antagonist properties at the 5-HT(2A) receptor. Anton et al. (2008) conducted a randomised multi-centred double-blind, placebocontrolled study of efficacy and safety of aripiprazole in treatment of alcohol dependence. The primary efficacy measure was percentage of days abstinent over 12 weeks. Patients (n = 295) with DSM-IV alcohol dependence were randomised to placebo or oral aripiprazole in an increasing dose from 5mg to 30mg per day. Subjects also received weekly psychotherapy sessions. Time line follow-back method was used to measure alcohol consumption. More patients in the treatment group dropped out (41% vs 17% of controls); more dropouts in the treatment group were due to adverse effects than in the control group, and dropout also occurred sooner. Results indicated that aripiprazole patients consumed fewer drinks when they did drink and rated themselves as having fewer problems at study end. Statistically significant items favouring aripiprazole were ‘made me not want to drink’ (p = 0.034); ‘felt better the next day if I did drink’ (p = 0.010); and ‘felt less high or intoxicated when I did drink’ (p<0.0001). The authors conclude that this antipsychotic, or others, may be useful in treating alcoholism or other addictions. Martinotti et al (2008) compared aripiprazole with naltrexone in a double-blind comparison trial of 75 patients who were committed to abstinence. Outcome measures were maintenance of abstinence and relapse to drinking, defined as 5 or more drinks on 5 days in a week; secondary was time to first drink, number of abstinent days and reduction in craving. Intention-to-treat analysis was used. Results: number of subjects alcohol free and relapsed during the study period were not significantly different in the two groups. The authors conclude that aripiprazole 161 was effective at flexible doses in improving alcohol–related outcomes, with a relapse rate and number of patients retained in treatment not significantly different from naltrexone. Injectable naltrexone Two randomised controlled trials were identified that tested intramuscular injection of naltrexone. Kranzler et al. (2004) conducted a multicentre trial of 315 patients who received a monthly injection of naltrexone or placebo for 12 weeks. Patients also received 5 sessions of motivational enhancement therapy. Outcomes of interest were self-reported alcohol use and GGT levels; 74% completed all injections, which were well tolerated. Results favoured the naltrexone group in reducing alcohol consumption and lowering GGT levels but did not reach statistical significance; however, the naltrexone group did have significantly fewer drinking days than the placebo group and a significantly greater abstinence rate (18% vs. 10%). A study by Garbutt et al. (2005) was also a multicentre trial, which took place over 6 months at 24 hospitals and clinics in the USA with 624 participants. This study used two doses of long-acting naltrexone 380mg and 190mg, vs. placebo, delivered in monthly intramuscular injections. Patients also received 12 sessions of low-intensity psychosocial intervention. The principal outcome measure was the rate of heavy drinking days. Intent-to-treat analysis was used. Results showed that 380mg of naltrexone resulted in a 25% decrease in heavy drinking, while 190mg doses resulted in 17% decrease compared to placebo, with the medication being well tolerated. Patients who entered with the goal of abstinence had a greater degree of reduction in drinking than those who aimed to reduce their drinking. These patients in both groups benefited more from the trial (placebo vs. both doses of naltrexone); however, patients who had already abstained when entering the trial benefited the most (see the study by O’Malley et al. 2007 below). Authors conclude that longacting naltrexone is beneficial in the treatment of alcohol dependence. Furthermore, patients who received 380 mg extended release naltrexone as part of the Garbutt et al. (2005) trial had significantly greater improvements from baseline in mental health (p = 0.0496), social functioning (p = 0.010), general health (p = 0.048), and physical functioning (p = 0.028), compared with placebo. Reductions in drinking from the baseline (percentage of drinking days and percentage of heavy drinking days in the last 30 days) were significantly (p < 0.05) correlated with improvements in quality of life (Pettinati et al. 2009). O’Malley et al. (2007) analysed the data from a subgroup of patients who participated in the Garbut et al. (2005) study. The subgroup included patients with 4 days or more of voluntary abstinence before the injection of the extended release naltrexone (n = 82). Patients on 380 mg naltrexone (n = 28) has significantly better treatment outcomes when compared to placebo (n = 28), including a longer time to first drink (median of 41 days versus 12 days in placebo group) and to first heavy drinking event (>180 days vs 20 days respectively, p = 0.04). They also had only 0.7 drinking days per months, which is a 90% decrease when compared to 7.2 days in placebo groups (p = 0.005). The rate of continuous abstinence at six months was 32% versus 11% respectively (p = 0.02). The 190 mg dose of (n = 26) showed intermediate outcomes, indicating a dose-response effect. Therefore, a period of abstinence of as little as 4 days before commencement of treatment with the extended release naltrexone is sufficient to significantly prolong abstinence and reduce drinking in alcohol dependent patients. 162 Benzodiazepines Benzodiazepines are not recommended for use beyond the withdrawal management period (See Chapter 5). Antidepressants Despite an expensive research into the role of SSRIs in treatment of alcohol dependence, there is limited evidence of their effectiveness (Johnson 2008). Their use in treatment of comorbid depression and alcohol dependence is discussed in Chapter 10. Recommendation 7.11 A range of medications appear promising agents in reducing alcohol relapse (such as topiramate, gabapentin, baclofen, aripiprazole); however, need further research and are not recommended as first-line options at this stage. 7.12 Benzodiazepines and antidepressants are not recommended as relapse prevention agents in alcohol dependence. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence B II B II Integration with psychosocial treatments Pharmacological treatment is considered to be significantly more successful when the patient is receiving concurrent psychosocial treatment or structured medical supervision. Referral to a specialist alcohol and drug counselling service may be appropriate (see Chapter 6a: Psychological Interventions for more information). Pharmacotherapy for relapse prevention should always be accompanied by close follow-up by the prescribing doctor. Increasing medication adherence Alcohol pharmacotherapy has been shown to be more effective than placebo among highly compliant participants (Volpicelli et al. 1997). However, adherence rates of alcohol dependent patients are generally low. Poor medication adherence may be due to: adverse side effects; stigma attached to taking medication for an alcohol use disorder; no immediate reward for complying with these pharmacotherapies; fears about the safety and side effects of the medication (O'Malley 1998; Kranzler et al. 2000). Adherence to pharmacotherapies may be assisted by: 1) Eliciting the patient’s thoughts and concerns about taking medication and using cognitive restructuring techniques to help them change unhelpful or maladaptive thoughts about taking medication 2) Providing the patient with a realistic view of the way in which the medication can help, its side effects, and any risks associated with its use 163 3) Using motivational interviewing techniques to help the patient to identify their personal costs and benefits of taking the medication 4) Providing the patient with some take-home reading material about the medication 5) Tailoring the psychosocial intervention according to the patient’s drinking goal: some studies show that coping skills training combined with naltrexone is better for helping patients cope with lapses and relapses, whereas supportive therapy is more effective in helping patients to maintain abstinence. 6) Following up patients who miss appointments. Compliance therapy, based on these cognitive-behavioural and motivational interviewing techniques, has demonstrated effectiveness in increasing medication compliance in alcohol dependent patients (Reid et al. 2005) (for the manual see Teesson et al. 2003). Adherence may also be a problem in patients that suffer cognitive impairment from chronic drinking. Aids to enhance adherence in such instances include: family supervision, medication calendars, special containers, dispensing systems, reminders and follow-up monitoring from health professionals. Recommendation 7.13 Medication compliance can be improved with use of adherence enhancing strategies. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence B Ia Selecting medications for individual patients Available evidence does not enable clear recommendations as to which medication is best suited to different patients. 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Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat 2(4): 445-453. 169 Chapter 8 Self-help programs This chapter discusses self-help approaches for patients, including Alcoholics Anonymous and Smart Recovery®, and their families. Recommendation 8.1 Long-term participation in Alcoholics Anonymous can be an effective strategy to maintain abstinence from alcohol for some patients. 8.2 Assertive referral practices to Alcoholics Anonymous increase participation and improve outcome. 8.3 SMART Recovery® may be an effective self-help alternative to Alcoholics Anonymous for reducing alcohol consumption. 8.4 Self-help groups for families may provide support for those affected by people with alcohol dependence. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence B II A I D IV D IV Alcoholic Anonymous (AA) What is AA? Established in the US in 1935, over 100,000 groups exist worldwide with a total membership of approximately two million (Alcoholics Anonymous 2001). AA is founded on the assumption that shared experience and mutual support are necessary for recovery from addiction (Alcoholics Anonymous 2001). In particular, AA proposes that sobriety is only possible by first acknowledging one’s inability to control the drinking habit, committing to a comprehensive overhaul of one’s identity and lifestyle, and assisting new members in their recovery process (Alcoholics Anonymous 2001). AA is the prototype for many self-help groups, with its core program based around 12 steps (see Table 8.1) that promote increased selfawareness and heighten a sense of meaning in life. It is important to note that the concept of God or a ‘higher power’ includes anything of a transpersonal nature that can be drawn on for strength, including the AA group (Browne 1991; 1994). How it works AA is founded on the assumption that shared experience and mutual support are necessary for recovery from addiction. In particular, AA proposes that sobriety is only possible by first acknowledging one’s inability to control the drinking habit, committing to a comprehensive overhaul of one’s identity and lifestyle, and assisting new members in their recovery process. Several studies have also suggested that AAfacilitated abstinence is partly due to an increase in self-efficacy that arises from its recovery. 170 Table 8.1: The 12 steps of Alcoholics Anonymous 1. We admitted we were powerless over alcohol - that our lives had become unmanageable. 2. Came to believe that a Power greater than ourselves could restore us to sanity. 3. Made a decision to turn our will and our lives over to the care of God as we understood Him. 4. Made a searching and fearless moral inventory of ourselves. 5. Admitted to God, to ourselves and to another human being the exact nature of our wrongs. 6. Were entirely ready to have God remove all these defects of character. 7. Humbly asked Him to remove our shortcomings. 8. Made a list of all persons we had harmed, and became willing to make amends to them all. 9. Made direct amends to such people wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others. 10. Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it. 11. Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God as we understood Him, praying only for knowledge of His will for us and the power to carry that out. 12. Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these steps, we tried to carry this message to alcoholics and to practice these principles in all our affairs. Affiliation with Alcoholics Anonymous in addition to a structured aftercare program may benefit patients, as the AA program strengthens the individual’s sense of selfefficacy (see Tonigan and Connors 2008) and provides a social network supportive of abstinence (Bond et al. 2003; Litt et al. 2007; Vaillant, 2005). Research also suggests that patients who attend AA as part of a structured aftercare program in addition to individual outpatient sessions, and begin attendance early in the treatment process, demonstrate better outcomes than individuals attending either AA or treatment alone (Ito and Donovan 1990; Moos and Moos 2005; Moos Moos, 2006a; Moos and Moos 2006b; Ouimette et al.1998). In Australia, about 1,700 groups are currently in operation in all states and territories on a daily basis; for those unable to access physical groups, a number of groups are available online (http://www.alcoholicsanonymous.org.au/). Based on the 12 traditions adopted by AA’s organisational body (Alcoholics Anonymous 1978), the only requirement for membership is a desire to stop drinking, with meeting attendance incurring no cost. Evidence for AA effectiveness Whilst literally hundreds of studies that examine the effectiveness of AA have been conducted, it should be noted that the literature base is subject to several serious limitations. Very few randomised controlled trials exist, most participants have had exposure to other treatment programs in addition to AA, and naturalistic studies only include participants who have elected to attend treatment (suggesting a higher degree of motivation to change). 171 Further, the majority of studies have limited the examination of AA participation to the frequency and duration of meeting attendance, which fails to capture the breadth of involvement in the program. Several recent studies have suggested that the level of engagement with various aspects of AA are more important determinants of its effectiveness than meeting attendance alone (Timko et al. 2006; Timko and DeBenedetti 2007; Weiss et al. 2005). These studies have prompted a move away from attendance-only measurement of AA involvement, with a growing literature base adopting more refined measures of affiliation. Despite these limitations, a substantial body of methodologically sound naturalistic research suggests that AA is beneficial in promoting abstinence and facilitates the maintenance of long-term sobriety (see Moos and Timko, 2008, for a review). In a 16 year longitudinal study, Moos and Moos (2006a; see also Moos and Moos, 2005 and 2006b) examined how the duration of various treatment approaches in the first year of help-seeking behaviour influenced drinking outcomes. Whilst both professional treatment and AA affiliation for a period of 27 weeks or more in the first year of recovery were associated with better 16 year abstinence rates, the improvements gained by professional treatment were mediated by AA attendance; only participants who concurrently participated in AA showed better long-term outcomes. Further, continued involvement in AA (yrs 2-8) was associated with a higher likelihood of remission at each follow up point. Due to the difficult nature of running randomised controlled trials into AA’s efficacy, most RCTs have compared Twelve Step Facilitation Therapy (TSF) – a program designed to foster increased commitment to AA as part of an extended care strategy – to traditional treatment approaches (Nowinski et al.1995). To date, several studies have demonstrated that TSF is as effective as CBT and Motivational Interviewing in facilitating sobriety and is actually more effective than these modalities when abstinence is the goal (Ouimette et al. 1997; Project MATCH Research Group 1997; see Ries et al. 2008 for a review). One Cochrane review undertook to compare AA and other 12-step programs to other psychosocial interventions, looking for any evidence in reducing alcohol intake, achieving abstinence, maintaining abstinence, improving the quality of life of affected people and their families, and reducing alcohol associated accidents and health problems (Ferri et al 2006). Their main findings were that no experimental studies unequivocally demonstrated the effectiveness of AA or TSF approaches to reduce alcohol dependence or problems. However this does not detract from the social benefits of either of these approaches. Additionally, Timko et al. (2006; see also Timko and DeBenedetti, 2007) have demonstrated that therapists’ referral practices influence the depth of the client’s participation in AA. Intensive referral (IR) practices include providing meeting schedule and public transport timetables, finding a temporary sponsor and organising for AA volunteers to accompany the client to meetings, and asking the client to use a ‘meeting journal’ (signed off by the AA meeting convener) to record attendance and reactions to the meeting. Compared to the standard referral condition where only minimal information about local AA meeting schedules was provided, participants randomly allocated to the IR group were more fully involved in the AA program (e.g., service, sponsorship, ‘spiritual awakening’) and demonstrated significantly better substance use outcomes over the ensuing 12 months. Several studies have also suggested that AA-facilitated abstinence is partly due to an increase in self-efficacy which arises from its recovery program (Project MATCH 172 Research Group, 1997; Tonigan and Connors 2008). AA provides a new social network supportive of abstinence; for the patient who lacks such support in their home environment, this aspect of AA involvement plays an important role in relapse prevention (Bond et al. 2003; Litt et al. 2007; Vaillant, 2005). Clinicians using Twelve-Step Facilitation therapy to encourage AA involvement deepen their patients’ commitment to the use of AA as part of an extended care plan, resulting in improved abstinence rates and greater treatment retention (Ouimette et al. 1997; Nowinski et al. 1995; Project MATCH Research Group, 1997; Timko et al. 2006; Timko and DeBenedetti 2007). A recent study by Walitzer et al. (2009) illustrates one method that was effective in increasing AA involvement and abstinence from alcohol. A total of 169 alcoholic outpatients (57 women) were assigned randomly to one of three conditions: a directive approach to facilitating AA, a motivational enhancement approach to facilitating AA or treatment as usual, with no special emphasis on AA. The results showed that participants in the directive condition for facilitating AA involvement reported more AA meeting attendance, more evidence of active involvement in AA and a higher percentage of days abstinent than people in the treatment-as-usual group. The effect of the directive strategy on abstinent days was also somewhat influenced through the involvement in AA. The motivational enhancement approach to facilitating AA had no effect on the percentage of abstinent days or the percentage of heavy drinking days. For whom is AA appropriate? A common misconception concerning 12 step groups is that members need to be religious to benefit from the program. In a study of 3,018 male substance abusers, individuals involved with AA demonstrated improved outcomes whether or not they identified with a particular religious or spiritual belief system (Winzelberg and Humphreys 1999). AA may also be appropriate for dually diagnosed clients, although the efficacy of AA depends on the nature of the additional diagnosis (see Moos and Timko 2008). In particular, depressed clients require more intensive outpatient support, particularly in the early stages of aftercare treatment, to facilitate the social elements of AA involvement (including finding an appropriate sponsor) and to reduce the likelihood of dropping out of the program (Curran et al. 2002; Kelly et al. 2003; Moos and Timko, 2008). Clients who demonstrate a higher level of symptom severity are more likely to affiliate with AA (Tonigan et al. 2006) and appear to benefit more as the amount of involvement increases (Morgenstern et al, 2003). Further, AA provides a new social network supportive of abstinence that assists in promoting recovery. Litt et al. (2007) randomly assigned 210 participants to either a network support (NS), NS and contingency management, or case management experimental condition. In the NS conditions TSF was employed to promote AA attendance, thereby increasing the number of social contacts supportive of abstinence. As hypothesised, participants in the NS groups demonstrated heightened attitudinal and behavioural support for abstinence at post-treatment and a 15 month follow-up, with AA involvement correlated to improved drinking outcomes. Participation in AA would thus also be appropriate for clients with limited social support or a social network comprised of other substance users. 173 Referring to AA A growing body of research is demonstrating that the use of TSF and ‘intensive AA referral’ as part of outpatient treatment improves AA meeting attendance and involvement, and is associated with better long-term outcomes (Nowinski et al. 1995; Project MATCH Research Group 1997; Connors et al. 2001; Timko et al. 2006; Timko and DeBenedetti 2007; see Rieset al. 2008 for a review). TSF is designed to increase the client’s commitment to and involvement with AA; the clinician works through the core features of the AA ideology (e.g., acceptance of the inability to control the addiction) with the client over 12 sessions in 3 months. If adopted as part of an extended care plan following inpatient treatment, TSF and AA attendance can assist in helping the client through the initial 3 month ‘danger period’. Intensive referral practices can also be used as a means of removing barriers to aftercare participation, reducing the likelihood of treatment dropout, and increasing the level of AA involvement. These include providing meeting schedule and public transport timetables, organising for AA volunteers to accompany the client to meetings, using a ‘meeting journal’ (signed off by the AA meeting convener) to record attendance and reactions to the meeting, and organise for a temporary sponsor (Timko et al. 2006; Timko and DeBenedetti 2007). As each AA group is different in terms of its overall atmosphere, it is also recommended that clinicians attend several meetings across different groups to assist in matching the client to a suitable situation (Passetti and Godley 2008; Ries et al. 2008). A longer duration of AA attendance in the first year of treatment and sustained involvement across years 2-8 of a longitudinal follow-up study has been linked to better long-term outcomes (Moos and Moos 2006a), SMART Recovery® An alternative to the AA self-help approach is Self Management and Recovery Training (SMART), a not-for-profit mutual-aid group aimed at facilitating recovery from any addictive behaviour. SMART Recovery® (originally the non-profit Rational Recovery Self-Help Network) officially began in the US in 1994 and is a spin-off from the original. At present approximately 16 online and 300 face-to-face meetings are sponsored worldwide by SMART (http://www.smartrecovery.org/). Although relatively new to Australia, over 50 groups are currently operating across most states on a weekly basis (http://www.smartrecoveryaustralia.com.au/). Founded on scientifically validated addiction treatment principles (at present, the organisation adopts a Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT) framework), SMART Recovery® differs from AA in that it eliminates the focus on spirituality inherent to the 12-step approach (Li et al. 2000). Instead, it aims to tackle addiction through using a four-point recovery program designed to enhance members’ motivation and teach techniques that help to manage lifestyle and behavioural difficulties (Horvath and Velten 2000) (see also http://www.smartrecovery.org/intro/index.htm). Skills training involves exposure to (among other things) cost–benefit analyses, identifying and rectifying irrational thoughts, and role-playing. Although based on an empirically supported theoretical framework, SMART Recovery® is a relatively young organisation, and very little research has assessed 174 its efficacy in comparison to other self-help groups. The only two studies that have investigated SMART Recovery® and AA have done so with dual-diagnosis patients, rather than alcohol-specific patients in aftercare (Penn and Brooks 2000; Brooks and Penn 2003). The SMART (CBT) program was compared to 12-step program, with 112 patients alternately assigned to the two treatment conditions; 50 completed the 6-month treatment program. Assessments occurred at baseline, 3 months, and 6 months during treatment, and at 3- and 12-month follow-ups. Analyses were conducted at the 3 month follow-up. The 12-step intervention was found to be more effective in decreasing alcohol use and increasing social interactions; however, it was associated with a worsening of medical problems, health status, employment status, and psychiatric hospitalisation. Positive changes in health and employment were associated with the SMART intervention, and alcohol use also decreased, although not as much as in the 12-step group. Whilst the 12-step intervention in these studies appeared to impact more positively on alcohol-related outcomes than SMART, the findings indicate that SMART patients exhibited greater improvements to overall health and employment. It is necessary, however, to exercise caution in interpreting such findings, given that both AA and SMART Recovery® groups operate as self-help rather than as specialised inpatient treatment programs. Self-Help for Families Family therapy is a viable treatment for the patient and major changes often have to be made in the family to support the patient’s recovery (Higgins 1998). According to Higgins, the interpersonal dynamics of the family may support and maintain the addictive behaviour; this is why addressing the family unit as a whole is more productive than changing the addict’s behaviour in isolation. This change has the potential to be perceived as a threat, destabilising the family unit. Again, there is little empirical evidence in the form of randomised controlled trials to demonstrate the benefit of family involvement on treatment for alcohol use disorders. However, Barnett (2003) conducted an extensive review of current research, literature, and internet-based resources. The conclusion of her article was that alcohol dependency flourishes within the social context of the family system and is one of the leading causes of family dysfunction. She stresses that, therefore, understanding the impact of alcoholism on the family and being familiar with resources and referrals is critical to the management of treatment for the patient and family. It is imperative that the family be recognised as the unit of treatment and be included in the treatment plan. 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J Consult Clin Psychol 675: 790-794. 178 Chapter 9 Specific populations This chapter reviews management of alcohol problems in adolescents and young people, pregnant and breastfeeding women, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians as well as people from other cultures, older people and cognitively impaired patients. Adolescents and Youth Recommendation 9.1 NHMRC guidelines recommend that not drinking alcohol is the safest option for children and young people under 18 years of age. 9.2 Screening and brief intervention for tobacco, alcohol and other drug use should occur routinely. Binge drinking and polydrug use are common among adolescent problem drinkers. 9.3 A broad medical and psychosocial history is needed to work effectively with young people. 9.4 Engagement and therapeutic relationships require an understanding of adolescent development and a cognitively and developmentally appropriate approach. 9.5 Brief interventions may suit some young people drinking excessively and/or experiencing alcohol-related harms. 9.6 Motivational interviewing, cognitive behavioural and family therapies have been shown to be of benefit in reducing alcohol and other drug use and related harms. 9.7 Limited evidence exists on the role of pharmacotherapies in reducing alcohol use in adolescents. 9.8 Adolescent drinkers may experience a range of psychosocial crises. In these cases, outreach and crisis interventions should be engaged. 9.9 Mental health disorders, including depression, suicidal ideation, anxiety, sexual abuse and antisocial behavior, are common in young people with alcohol and other drug problems, and should be addressed in the treatment plan. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence D IV D IV S S A Ia A Ia B II D IV D IV 179 Introduction There has been considerable concern shown in the media, both in Australia and in the UK and Europe over youth drinking, especially binge drinking. However, as latest figures show, it is the young adult age group in Australia that has increased drinking at levels of risk for long-term harm, not the teenage group (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2008). More evidence for underage drinking is shown in data from the European School Survey Project, suggesting that young people in the UK are among the heaviest drinkers in the world (Hibell et al. 2004). The adolescent years are a period for experimentation and socialisation with peers, which may include engaging in high-risk substance abuse behaviours. The 2002 national survey on the use of alcohol by Australian secondary school students (White and Hayman 2004) found that experience with alcohol was high among secondary school students. Alcohol consumption became more common as age increased: • • • by the age of 14, around 90 per cent of students had tried alcohol; by the age of 17, around 70 per cent of students had consumed alcohol in the month prior to the survey; and the proportion of students drinking in the week prior to the survey increased with age, from 19 per cent of 12-year-olds to reach a peak of 50 per cent among 17year-olds. Experimentation is much more common than progression to regular use. Binge drinking and deliberate drinking to become intoxicated is common, with 8.8% percent of those aged 14-19 years and 16% percent of those aged 20-29 years drinking at risky or high risk levels for long-term harm (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2008). This rate has fallen in Australia in the 14-19 year age group, compared to 2001 figures, but has risen in the 20-29 year age group (see Chapter 2). Rates of drinking above NHMRC 2001 guideline levels among 14–19 year-olds are similar to the rates for the general population — about 9 per cent for alcoholrelated disease risk (longterm harm) and 39 per cent for accident and injury risk (shortterm harm) (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2008). People in the 20–29 year age group show the riskiest drinking profile. About 60 per cent of this group drink above NHMRC 2001 guideline levels for accidents and injuries and about 16 per cent drink above NHMRC 2001 guideline levels for alcoholrelated diseases (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2008). Among school students aged 16–17 years who report drinking in the past week, there has been a slight increase in numbers drinking above NHMRC 2001 guideline levels for accidents and injuries (White and Hayman 2004). This may be because of changes in the type of alcohol young people are drinking. The 2002 survey found that among male adolescent drinkers, the proportion consuming beer decreased while consumption of spirits, in either their un-premixed or their premixed form, increased. Among adolescent female drinkers, the proportion drinking premixed spirits as opposed to un-premixed spirits increased significantly (White and Hayman 2004). 180 Polysubstance use is common among young people and it is therefore important to screen for use of tobacco and other drugs in addition to alcohol. Around 16% of 1419 year olds smoke cigarettes (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2005). Uptake of cannabis use usually peaks around the age of 16-17 years. Around 25% of 14-19 year olds and 54% of 20-29 year olds report using cannabis in their lifetime. Weekly use occurs in 20% of 14 to 29 year olds and daily use in 10-15% (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2005). Excessive alcohol use in adolescence is also associated with a wide range of other co-existing problems, including difficulty with relationships (especially with parents), homelessness, poor school performance, low employment prospects. Early alcohol use also increases the likelihood of alcohol abuse and alcohol dependence continuing into adulthood; the risk highest appears associated with heavy alcohol consumption before 16 years. Early intervention with adolescents at risk of alcohol problems is therefore very important. The NHMRC Guidlelines 2009 recommend that children and young people under the age of 18 not drink alcohol at all (see Guideline 3 in Chapter 2) Assessment Working effectively with young people experiencing difficulties with alcohol requires the establishment of good rapport. Barriers to effective consultation with adolescents have been extensively described in the past two decades and can be classified into four broad categories: availability, accessibility, acceptability and equity of health services (Tylee et al. 2007). Concerns about confidentiality has been identified to be a particularly significant barrier to seeking professional assistance among young people (Sanci et al. 2005). A non-judgemental approach is needed that encourages the young person to be honest about reporting ongoing difficulties with alcohol. A broad medical and psychosocial history is needed to work effectively with young people. A familial history of heavy alcohol and drug use also impacts on adolescents. Social and environmental factors, such as being exposed to a family culture that accepts heavy drinking, may contribute to development of dependence in the children of heavy drinkers. DSM-IV criteria for alcohol use disorders have limitations when used with adolescents (Martin and Winters 1998). ‘Problem drinking’ in young people is variably defined and may refer to quantity of alcohol consumed, frequency of drinking and/or to adverse outcomes attributable to drinking. Adolescent alcohol problems commonly constitute recurrent binge drinking, and related short term adverse consequences, including trauma, assaults and memory loss. Adverse outcomes related to alcohol consumption in young people are highly correlated to male gender and conduct disorder (Toumbourou et al. 2007). A psychosocial history includes information about the social, cultural, educational and vocational background of the adolescent. There are different acronyms such as HEADSS that provide a framework for taking a broad psychosocial history from adolescents (see Chapter 9 of the Guidelines for the Treatment of Alcohol Problems). What is the difference between adult and adolescent drinking? Adolescents tend to take more than one drug at a time (polydrug use), are more inclined to binge drink, and are at a time of rapid social and physical change in their lives. Excessive alcohol or drug use in adolescence is implicated in a wider range of co-existing life problems such as homelessness, poor performance at school, difficult 181 parental relationships and low employment prospects. In addition, regular heavy alcohol or other drug use frequently inhibits adolescent development, especially in impairing cognitive maturation and reducing educational achievement (Bonomo et al. 2004). Early alcohol use also increases the likelihood of adult heavy drinking and dependence, with the risk highest if drinking begins before 16 years (Pitkanen et al. 2005; Bonomo et al. 2004). This provides motives for the importance of screening and early intervention with adolescents at risk before problems occur. Treatment Engaging adolescents and families in treatment Engaging adolescents in treatment is a critical issue.The principles are similar to treatment of other chronic disorders in young people. Establishment of good rapport is required (see Section on Assessment above). Engagement and therapeutic relationships require an understanding of adolescent development and a cognitively and developmentally appropriate approach. Young people are influenced by the ‘here and now’ rather than future benefits of changing current drinking patterns. It is also important for health professionals to remember that young people are more interested in achieving the goals of adolescence rather than focusing on improving their health. Given this, treatment goals need to be framed as ‘relevant’ to young people. Approaches include examination of how alcohol affects their appearance, peer-reputation, ability to socialize, recreational, educational, employment or sporting achievements, or impact upon finances. These discussions need to be delivered by the health professional at a level that is developmentally and cognitively appropriate. Working with the young person to develop concrete short term goals (weeks to months) is recommended. Encouraging the young person to participate in negotiation of treatment plans facilitates engagement in treatment and empowers change (Sawyer et al. 2007). In some cases, disengagement with family may have occurred as a result of heavy drinking and other drug use. Families are an integral part of the adolescent’s world and it is therefore important to try to assist the young person to re-build the connection. Depending on the individual circumstance this may be through mediation buy the health professional or more formally with family counselors. In cases where adolescents are not engaging well with alcohol or drug services, specific outreaching and proactive services that cater appropriately for their developmental stage and incorporate a consideration of their cultural background, lifestyle and in many cases their family are required. Psychosocial treatments Early intervention for alcohol problems in young people is important. Alcohol and other substance use intereferes with normal adolescent brain development, and neurodevelopment, especially in regions linked to regulation of behaviour and emotion is not complete until early adulthood (ref). Once young people have developed an alcohol use disorder, abstinence appears an unlikely outcome of treatment (Cornelius et al. 2003; Winters et al. 2000). Brief interventions may suit some young people drinking excessively and/or experiencing alcohol-related harms. Brief interventions, motivational interviewing, cognitive behavioural therapies and family therapies in general have been shown to 182 be of benefit, especially in conferring improved knowledge about alcohol related harms and at least a short term reduction in alcohol and other drug use (Toumbourou et al. 2007; Grella et al. 2001; Winters et al. 2000; Spooner et al. 2001). Certain factors pre-treatment predict outcomes. A poorer prognosis is associated with more severe alcohol problems at the outset (Anderson et al. 2007) and with other drug use problems (Chung et al. 2003). Poor psychosocial functioning pretreatment and lack of longer term engagement in health services are also associated with negative outcomes (Chung et al. 2003). Abstinent peers in a young person’s social network, on the other hand, increase the odds of remaining abstinent four-fold (Anderson et al. 2007). Few differences in outcome have been found when comparing treatment settings and types of adolescents (Winters et al. 2000; Spooner et al. 2001; Rice et al 1993), although as with adult services, longer treatment retention is associated with better outcomes (Winters et al. 2000). Studies of longer term outcomes from inpatient and outpatient treatment settings are less readily available. Many of the research studies on adolescents have examined treatment impact on substance abuse generally, not specifically alcohol, and the previous literature review included papers about other substances for this reason. We include only the studies on alcohol here. Psychosocial treatments: Earlier studies A Cochrane Review was published in 2002 (Foxcroft et al. 2008) which showed very mixed evidence for interventions for alcohol misuse with young people. Two of the US studies included in that review were Monti et al. (1999) and Marlatt et al. (1998); in these, brief and motivational interventions appeared to be effective for adolescent heavy drinkers. Monti and colleagues (1999) found that a brief intervention, used with older adolescents in an emergency department setting after an alcohol-related event, resulted in fewer alcohol-related injuries and reduced the likelihood to drink-drive compared with adolescents who received standard hospital care (Monti et al. 1999). Similar results were obtained by Marlatt et al (1998 in a high school setting. In addition, a study not mentioned in the Cochrane review, (Borsari and Carey 2000), found that college students who were binge drinkers and received a single-session of motivational interviewing exhibited significant reductions on the number of drinks consumed per week and the number of times drinking alcohol was recorded in the month. Also in the month to follow up, the frequency of binge drinking fell significantly on number of drinks consumed per week, the number of times drinking alcohol and the frequency of binge drinking when compared to a no-treatment group. All these trials had small sample sizes (from 60 to 94 participants). Psychosocial treatments: Recent studies During the past decade, much progress has been made in treating adolescent alcohol use disorders with evidenced-based modalities developed specifically for adolescents (Deas 2008). This review by Deas discusses psychosocial treatments such as family-based interventions, motivational interviewing, behavioural therapy and cognitive-behavioural therapy as well as the limited pharmacotherapy studies available. All of the studies used assessment tools validated for use in adolescent populations. The authors’ conclusions are that, overall, great strides have been made 183 in the area of adolescent alcohol treatment, and the treatment modalities used have more than adequate potential for replication. There is little recent rigorous evidence on youth-oriented interventions from the UK or Europe (McArdle 2008). However, we found some recent work from the Netherlands, Australia and the USA. A pilot randomised controlled trial in Australia (Bailey et al. 2004) aimed to identify whether a brief motivational interviewing and cognitive behavioural-based alcohol intervention group program was feasible with young people at risk of developing a problem with alcohol, and to assess the short-term effectiveness of the intervention. Sample size was 34 and the follow-up intervals were at 1 and 2 months posttreatment. The intervention took place over 4 weeks of group sessions. The Intervention group showed an increase in readiness to reduce their alcohol consumption and reduced their frequency of drinking both at post-treatment (4 weeks after randomisation) and the 1-month follow-up assessment, while the control group reported increased drinking at the 2-month follow-up assessment. The control group also increased hazardous drinking and frequency of binge drinking compared to the Intervention group. These results provide preliminary evidence for the effectiveness of the program in training young people to set limits on alcohol consumption and reduce consumption, and also to increase their awareness of safe drinking levels and the effects of alcohol abuse. Four US studies were conducted in different settings; one in the course of a family practice visit (Boekeloo et al. 2004) and three in emergency departments (Spirito et al. 2004) (Maio et al. 2005) (Monti et al. 2007). The Boekeloo trial aimed to determine whether office-based interventions changed adolescents' alcohol beliefs and alcohol use, with largely contradictory findings. Participants were 409 12- to 17year-olds seeing primary care providers for general check-ups, randomised to 3 groups. Most (79%) were African American, 44% male; 16% currently drank. All received a randomised audio program; usual care group (I) listened to self-selected music, group II had an audio program about alcohol with alcohol self-assessment just prior to check-up and group III had the same program with an additional brochure. At exit interview, Groups II and III reported they knew that less alcohol was needed for impaired thinking and also reported a greater intent to drink alcohol in the next 3 months than Group I. At 6 months, Group III reported more resistance to peer pressure to drink, and Groups II and III reported more bingeing than Group I. At 1year follow-up Groups II and III reported more bingeing in the last 3 months than Group I; Group II reported more drinking in the last 30 days and in the last 3 months than Group I. The authors’ conclusions are that brief office-based interventions were ineffective in reducing alcohol use but may increase adolescent reporting of alcohol use. Conflicting evidence is provided by three emergency department studies with adolescents; however the motivation may have been different between the participants. One trial (Spirito et al. 2004) tested whether a brief motivational interview (MI) would reduce alcohol-related consequences and use among adolescents treated after an alcohol-related event. Patients aged 13 to 17 years (N = 152) with a positive blood alcohol concentration were recruited in the ED and randomly assigned to either MI or standard care. Both conditions resulted in reduced quantity of drinking during the 12-month follow-up; alcohol-related negative consequences were relatively low at baseline and remained low at follow-up. Adolescents who screened positive for problematic alcohol use at baseline reported significantly more improvement, decreasing both the average number of drinking 184 days per month and the frequency of high-volume drinking if they had received MI. The authors conclude that that brief interventions are recommended for adolescents who present to an ED with an alcohol-related event and report problematic alcohol use. (Level Ib evidence) The other, also a randomised controlled trial (Maio et al. 2005) used a laptop computer to deliver both the screening and the intervention. It also had a much larger number of subjects (n=580) aged 14-18 years who attended ED with a minor injury. Main outcome measures were Alcohol Misuse Index (AMIDX) and binge-drinking episodes. Follow-up occurred by telephone at 3 and 12 months. Overall, there were no significant effects on alcohol misuse or binge drinking (effect size 0.04). Subgroup analysis suggested that the intervention may have had an effect among subjects who had experienced drinking and driving (5% of the sample). The conclusions of the study were that the intervention was ineffective in decreasing alcohol misuse. Another trial in ED was conducted by Monti et al (2007) with 198 18-24-year-old patients who were either alcohol positive upon hospital admission or met screening criteria for alcohol problems. Participants were assigned randomly to receive a onesession motivational intervention (MI) that included personalised feedback, or the personalised feedback report only (FO). All received telephone contact at 1 month and 3 months. Six months post-intervention MI participants drank on fewer days, had fewer heavy drinking days and drank fewer drinks per week in the past month than did FO patients. These effects were maintained at 12 months. Twice as many MI participants as FO participants reliably reduced their volume of alcohol consumption from baseline to 12 months. Reductions in alcohol-related injuries and driving offences and increases in alcohol treatment-seeking were observed across both groups at both follow-ups with no differences between conditions. This study provides new data supporting the potential of motivational intervention to reduce alcohol consumption among high-risk youth. Thush et al (2007) investigated the effectiveness of a targeted intervention program aimed at 107 at-risk adolescents in a randomised clinical trial in schools. This program combined intervention methods which have been proven effective in reducing drinking in young adults, such as an expectancy challenge, cognitive behavioural skill training and brief motivational feedback. The intervention contained the new element of discussing biological, cognitive and social risk factors for developing alcohol problems; outcome measures were cognitive determinants of drinking behaviour, moderating alcohol use and the development of alcohol-related problems. The intervention was effective in changing several of the targeted cognitive determinants; however, despite this, the intervention group did not show a significant difference in decrease of drinking at posttest compared with the control group. These results did not yield support for any differential long term effects of the intervention. The authors therefore conclude that although the intervention successfully changed important cognitive determinants of drinking, a more intensive intervention is needed to change subsequent drinking behaviour. These studies suggest that an alcohol-related injury that results in presentation to the acute hospital context provides more impetus for reducing drinking than does attendance at a family practice or participation in school-based program; however further research is required to confirm this. Pharmacotherapies 185 The evidence base for pharmacotherapy for alcohol use disorders in young people remains limited (Deas 2008). Naltrexone has been confined to case reports (Lifrak et al. 1997; Wold et al. 1997) and two small open label studies (Deas et al.2005; Leeman et al. 2008). Acamprosate was examined in one small RCT (Niederhofer et al. 2003). These studies demonstrate short term benefits; however, longer term outcomes were not described. Addressing comorbidity Treatment of young people with alcohol problems needs to include screening for a history of sexual abuse and screening and management of common mental health disorders especially depression, suicidal ideation, anxiety, and antisocial behavior. Reduced substance use has been noted when co-morbid mental conditions are appropriately treated (Toumbourou et al. 2007; Roberts 2007). Pregnant and breastfeeding women Recommendation 9.10 Women who are or may become pregnant should be advised of new NHMRC guidelines that recommend abstinence. Clinicians who provide advice to pregnant women should familiarise themselves with the risk analysis described in those guidelines. Women who drink alcohol sparingly (less than one standard drink per drinking day without intoxication) may be reassured that there is no consistent evidence this is harmful. 9.11 Breastfeeding women should be advised of current NHMRC guidelines that recommend abstinence from drinking. If a woman wishes to drink, it is recommended that she breastfeeds before drinking. Otherwise, wait until the blood alcohol returns to zero (one hour per standard drink consumed) before resuming breastfeeding. It is not necessary to express or discard milk before this time. 9.12 Brief interventions are recommended for use during pregnancy, including the partner where relevant. Follow-up evaluation of response to the intervention is important. 9.13 If a woman presents intoxicated during pregnancy, hospital admission is recommended to assess fetal safety, maternal safety, and for comprehensive assessment and care planning. 9.14 Alcohol withdrawal during pregnancy should be managed in a general hospital, ideally in a high-risk maternity unit in Strength of Level of recommendation evidence S S B II D IV S 186 consultation with a specialist drugs-inpregnancy team. Diazepam may be given as needed to control withdrawal. Nutritional intervention should be initiated, including parenteral thiamine, folate replacement and assessment for other supplementation in hospital. 9.15 Women who present during pregnancy with serious alcohol (and/or other drug) problems should be admitted to an appropriate hospital unit for stabilisation, comprehensive assessment and care planning. 9.16 Assertive follow-up is recommended for antenatal care, substance misuse treatment, and welfare support and child protection. 9.17 Pharmacotherapy to maintain abstinence from alcohol cannot be recommended during pregnancy due to insufficient safety data. 9.18 Assertive antenatal care, including monitoring of fetal growth and health, is recommended. 9.19 Management of infants with neonatal alcohol withdrawal should be undertaken in consultation with a specialist unit. 9.20 Infants born to women who have consumed alcohol regularly during pregnancy should be carefully assessed for fetal alcohol spectrum disorders by a pediatrician aware of the maternal history, with further management directed by the appropriate experts. 9.21 Assessment of the family unit is an essential aspect of managing substance use in women. Intervention should be directed to the whole family unit to reduce consumption of alcohol. 9.22 Indigenous women should be offered referral to culturally appropriate clinical services. 9.23 Comprehensive mental health assessment is an essential component of an integrated care plan for pregnant women with alcohol problems. S S S S S S S D IV S Introduction The negative effects of alcohol on the developing foetus were described about 40 years ago, with the first articles published in the 1970’s (Jones and Smith 1973; Ouellette et al. 1977; Cooper 1978). Jones was the first to coin the term foetal alcohol syndrome (FAS). More recently, the designation foetal alcohol spectrum disorder (FASD) has emerged, which characterises a spectrum of problems (Sokol et al. 2003). Characteristics include unusual facial features and poor physical, cognitive and behavioural outcomes; in addition, alcohol exposure is a strong predictor of premature or preterm birth and low birth weight for gestational age. Heavy drinking 187 (defined in one study as 1 or more drinks per day) was associated with a 5-fold increase in the likelihood of low birth weight (Jaddoe et al. 2007). Therefore it is imperative to advise all pregnant women, or those planning a pregnancy, to avoid drinking alcohol altogether. While low levels of drinking are not always necessarily associated with FAS, it seems sensible to advise every woman to abstain. Women who are or may become pregnant and should be advised of new NHMRC guidelines that recommend abstinence. Women who drink alcohol sparingly (less than one standard drink per drinking day without intoxication) may be reassured that there is no consistent evidence this is harmful. Similarly, breastfeeding women should be adviced that abstinence is recommended. Brief interventions are recommended for use during pregnancy, including the partner where relevant. Follow-up evaluation of response to the intervention is important. Brief interventions in pregnancy: Randomised controlled trials A subanalysis of data from ProjectTrEAT (Fleming et al. 2002) was carried out to evaluate the results of the intervention on the 205 women at 48-month follow-up (Manwell et al. 2000). A significant treatment effect was found in reducing both 7 day alcohol use (p = 0.0039) and binge drinking episodes (p = 0.0021) over the 48 month follow-up period. Women in the experimental group who became pregnant during the follow-up period had the most dramatic decreases in alcohol use. Another trial of a brief intervention with 304 pregnant women also studied the effect of including the woman’s partner in the single intervention session, given by a nurse practitioner or the doctor (Chang et al. 2005). All women had screened positive on the T-ACE questionnaire. Fewer than 20% of participants (median 11.5 weeks of gestation) were abstinent at study enrolment, averaging more than 1.5 drinks per episode. Nearly 30% had 2 or more drinks at a time while pregnant. Prenatal alcohol use declined in both the treatment and control groups, based on a 95% follow-up rate. Factors associated with increased prenatal alcohol use after randomisation included more years of education, extent of previous alcohol consumption, and temptation to drink in social situations. Brief interventions for prenatal alcohol reduced subsequent consumption most significantly for the women with the highest consumption initially (p<0.01). The effects of the brief intervention were significantly enhanced when the partner participated (p< 0.05). A study with 255 participants examined the efficacy of brief intervention given by a nutritionist and also assessed outcomes for the newborns (O'Connor and Whaley 2007). Women in the intervention group were 5 times more likely to report abstinence compared with women in the assessment-only (with no intervention) condition. Newborns whose mothers received brief intervention had higher birth-weights and birth lengths, and foetal mortality rates were 3 times lower (0.9%) compared with newborns in the assessment-only (2.9%) group. A larger trial used a brief motivational intervention delivered to 830 nonpregnant women at risk (defined as drinking more than 5 drinks per day, and not currently using contraception). They were randomised to receive four counselling sessions and one contraception consultation, or information only (Floyd et al. 2007), with the aim of preventing alcohol-affected pregnancies (AEP). Follow-up was at 3, 6, and 9 months. Results showed that across the follow-up period, the odds ratios (ORs) of being at reduced risk for AEP were twofold greater in the intervention group: 3 months, 2.31 (95% confidence interval [CI] =1.69-3.20); 6 months, 2.15 (CI=1.52-3.06); 9 months, 188 2.11 (CI=1.47-3.03). Between-groups differences by time phase were 18.0%, 17.0%, and 14.8%, respectively. These studies provide clear evidence for the effectiveness of intervention for alcohol with non-dependent women who are pregnant or contemplating pregnancy. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Australians Recommendation 9.23a Given late presentation of alcohol problems, active detection is recommended. 9.24 Indigenous Australians, like all other Australians should have access to the full range of treatment services, including early intervention and where appropriate, relapse prevention medications. 9.25 Indigenous Australians should be offered access to trained Indigenous health care workers and services where possible. 9.26 Non-Indigenous clinicians should work in partnership with Indigenous health professionals and/or agencies to improve treatment access and appropriateness for communities. 9.27 A respectful, holistic and integrated approach to assessment and management is necessary, considering the patient in the context of both the family and the community. 9.28 Indigenous cultures and customs vary. Use of language and approach to communication should be appropriate for both the individual and the community. 9.29 Given the high prevalence of physical and mental comorbidities in the Indigenous population, clinicians should consider the possibility of physical and/or mental comorbidity in all presentations. 9.30 The ongoing impact of colonisation should be considered and efforts to provide a range of treatment options for alcohol problems to Indigenous population should be combined with wider community measures addressing both alcohol misuse-related problems and underlying social determinants of alcohol misuse. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence D IV D IV D IV D IV D IV D IV A I D IV 189 Introduction The number of people identified as being of Aboriginal and/or Torres Strait Islander origin in the 2006 Census was 455,000, representing 2.3% of the total Australian population, of whom 90% identified as Aboriginal. Around three-quarters (76%) of the Indigenous population were living in major cities and regional areas in 2006, with the remaining 24% in remote areas (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and Australian Bureau of Statistics 2008). In contrast, only 2% of non-Indigenous people live in remote areas. Indigenous Australians are less likely to drink alcohol than are non-Indigenous Australians; however, among those who do drink, a greater proportion consumes alcohol at risky or high-risk levels, often resulting in serious harm to themselves and others. Indigenous Australian youth are nearly 2½ times more likely to die from alcohol-related causes than are non-Indigenous. Overall, 60% of Indigenous Australian drinkers are estimated to directly or indirectly experience some alcoholrelated harm compared with 35% of non-Indigenous Australian drinkers (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2008). Early intervention is required before serious harms and problems emerge. Evidence for the effectiveness of treatment specific to Indigenous clients is scant. However, guidelines have recently been developed for the management of alcohol problems in Indigenous primary care settings (Commonwealth Government Dept of Health and Ageing 2007). This practical guide provides recommendations for managing intoxication, withdrawal, medical and psychiatric comorbidity, and for providing screening, brief interventions and continuing care. A number of evaluations of individual clinics or programs have been undertaken (Gray et al. 2000) with mixed results, and limited data are available in some cases. We could not locate any completed trials for treatment of Indigenous clients with alcohol use disorders. Challenges in implementing randomised controlled trials in Indigenous settings have been described e.g. (Sibthorpe et al. 2002; Brady, M. et al. 2002). Appropriate ways to conduct research in Indigenous communities were highlighted in an article by Foster et al, emphasising that the communities need to take control over the research (Foster et al. 2006). The paper provides a model for conducting research for Indigenous community-controlled organisations and can inform nonIndigenous researchers about ways of working with those communities to address substance misuse and other health problems. There has been very limited research into the best approach for detecting alcohol problems earlier among Indigenous Australians. Qualitative research by Brady et al (2002) during their trial of brief intervention showed that they had limited success using AUDIT in an urban Aboriginal health centre. The Indigenous health workers said they felt ‘intrusive’ at first asking the questions; question 8 (How often during the last year have you had a feeling of guilt or remorse after drinking?) sometimes needed clarification, and health workers believed that clients sometimes ‘fudged’ their responses. This may have been influenced by the closeness of this particular community. Anecdotally, in other settings the AUDIT and its shorter form, AUDIT-C, have been used successfully. A number of constraints to delivering brief interventions in this particular health service included lack of time, crowded waiting rooms, patients who became irritated 190 when alcohol was raised as an issue, and the “…severity of illness and the complexity of the physical, social and psychological problems with which patients present” (Brady et al. 2002). However, again, anecdotally in other settings Indigenous Health Workers have delivered opportunistic brief intervention and found it acceptable to the patient. Indigenous persons with past alcohol dependence at times report having stopped because of the advice of a doctor (Brady 2001). Caution needs to be applied in using questionnaires and instruments designed for and by the dominant Australian culture, as they may give misleading results (Chikritzhs and Brady 2006). One brief questionnaire has been developed and validated specifically for use in the Indigenous setting. This questionnaire, known as the Indigenous Risk Impact Screen (IRIS), jointly screens for alcohol and other drug disorders, as well as mental health disorders (Schlesinger et al. 2007). It has been applied in a number of settings, particularly in Queensland, and an associated brief intervention has been developed. One survey of an Indigenous community-controlled health service revealed that nearly half (42.6 percent) of all consultations (N = 583) were with Indigenous health workers, not GPs, a finding with relevance for the implementation of alcohol screening and treatment services (Thomas et al. 1998). Further, almost all patients (96.1 percent) saw an Indigenous health worker before seeing a GP. Female patients made up on average 57 percent of all the consultations in the survey. In remote areas, the range and quality of general and specialist health care facilities are below the level of those in regional centres In addition, both distance and limited availability of qualified health workers present obstacles to treatment, including early intervention. Treatment in specialist settings There may be many barriers to Indigenous clients in accessing mainstream alcohol treatment services (Teasdale et al. 2008). While there are few data on how to improve access specifically to alcohol treatment services, methods used in services for injecting drug users including more flexibility, increasing Indigenous staffing and cultural appropriateness have increased service uptake. While indigenous-specific services may be more culturally acceptable, Brady (1995) found that the range of available services at that time was limited. She points out that Indigenous drinkers show varied patterns of alcohol use and it should not be assumed that one treatment approach will be appropriate for all Indigenous patients (Brady 1995). Available Indigenous treatment services have a strong orientation towards the disease model of alcoholism and the 12-step facilitation model. Brady (1995) stresses the need for a range of treatment options, including brief interventions and motivational interviewing. Brady also points out that approaches using ‘culture as treatment’ (the notion that reclaiming culture will in itself heal the alcohol problem) are more likely to work if “…they succeed in helping clients to form peer groups (both adolescent and adult) which disvalue drug and alcohol use and which assist individuals to deal with the persuasive pressures of their kin and associates”. Where studies exist, Gray (2000) found that effectiveness of specialised treatment programs was equivocal. There is some suggestion that sobering up centres have been a catalyst to further local actions to address alcohol misuse and associated harm and certainly the regular visitors present a pressing case for referral to 191 treatment. The sobering-up centres do not pretend to solve the problems of alcohol abuse in the community, but play a vital role in keeping people out of police custody, reducing alcohol-related harm and offering practical care in a safe environment for a short time (Brady et al. 2006). They also provide opportunities for brief interventions by drug and alcohol workers and other personnel. An evaluation of two residential programs and one non-residential program concluded that attendance at a family oriented program had modest effects on drinking behaviour and that communitybased field workers are an essential complement to residential programs (Gray et al. 2000; Gray et al. 2006). Community-wide measures to reduce alcohol problems Chikritzhs et al discuss the results of some strategies implemented in the Northern Territory (NT) to reduce alcohol-related harm (Chikritzhs et al. 2005). The Living With Alcohol (LWA) program incorporated education, increased control on alcohol availability, and expansion of treatment and rehabilitation services. An important component of this program was the support and engagement of communities to address alcohol (Chikritzhs et al. 2005). Trends in age-standardised rates of acute and chronic alcohol-attributable deaths in the NT were examined before, during and after the combined implementation of the LWA program and an alcohol beverage levy. The program was associated with significant declines in acute alcoholattributable deaths in the NT overall, as well as Indigenous deaths between 1992 and 1997. A significant but delayed decline in chronic deaths was evident towards the end of the study period (1998 – 2002). The authors conclude that the combined impact of the LWA program, the levy, and the programs and services funded by the levy reduced the burden of alcohol-attributable injury to the NT in the short term and may have contributed to a reduction in chronic illness in the longer term. The results of this study present a strong argument for the effectiveness of combining alcohol taxes with comprehensive programs and services designed to reduce the harm from alcohol, and underline the need to distinguish between the acute and chronic effects of alcohol in population level studies. Unfortunately, ongoing funding for this program was not provided. One of the most successful methods to reduce alcohol consumption and associated harm is to implement restrictions on the sale of alcohol, either by hours (of opening), persons (by residency) or quantity allowances, including complete bans on supply (‘dry’ areas) and reducing the density of outlets (Hogan et al. 2006). The best results are achieved by plans that have been initiated by the Indigenous communities themselves in consultation with residents, elders, and organisations such as Land Councils in partnership with other agencies such as police, hospital and health workers and tavern or club licensees; and often accompanied by State Government support (Martin and Brady 2004; Brady 2007; Conigrave et al. 2007) . Such ‘dry’ areas have only been feasible to set up and maintain in more isolated communities. Currently, measures are being trialled in urban areas such as families declaring their houses as dry and obtaining the support of agencies, such as Housing Commission to enforce this (anecdotal evidence). Research conducted in the general Australian population measuring the impact of the enforcement of responsible service of alcohol can reduce harms (Loxley et al. 2004), so this would be expected to also be effective in other specific population groups. 192 Older people Recommendation 9.31 Older Australians should be screened for alcohol use and related harms (such as trauma, exacerbation illness, drug interactions, violence or physical neglect) across a range of health and welfare settings. 9.32 Brief interventions should be employed for older people drinking at risky levels or experiencing alcohol-related harms (such as falls, driving 0impairment, drug interactions). 9.33 Concurrent physical or mental illness, medications, social conditions and functional limitations need to be considered when assessing older drinkers. 9.34 Abstinence can be associated with marked physical, mental and cognitive improvements; alternatively, alcohol use may have been masking underlying illness. Consequently, the severity and management of concomitant physical and mental conditions should be reviewed several weeks to months after cessation of drinking. 9.35 Withdrawal management of older dependent drinkers requires close monitoring, nutritional supplements, careful use of sedative medication, and management of comorbid conditions. 9.36 Caution should be exercised when prescribing medications to older drinkers. Short-acting benzodiazepines (such as oxazepam, lorazepam) are preferred for alcohol withdrawal management over longacting benzodiazepines (such as diazepam). 9.37 Psychological and pharmacological treatment approaches should be tailored to physical, cognitive and mental health of older patients. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence D IV A Ia D IV D IV S D IV D IV Introduction Australia, like other developed countries, has a rapidly ageing population. The 2006 national census indicated that the number of Australians aged 65 years and older was 2,644,374 representing 13.3% of the total population (Australian Bureau of Statistics 2007). Over the next 50 years the number of older people in Australia is expected to increase to 6.5 million, representing approximately 25% of the total population (Australian Bureau of Statistics 2000). 193 The term older-person has been defined by the United Nations (2003) as any person over 60 years of age. However, in Australia, the term older-person has been used to refer to anyone aged 65 years and older. As this definition can encompass people whose ages vary by many decades, the term older-person has been further divided into three age groups: people aged 85 years and older; people aged 75 to 84 years and those aged 65 to 74 years (Australian Association of Gerontology 2005; Broe 2004; Maddox 1985; Selvanathan and Selvanathan 2004). Based upon the 2007 National Drug Strategy Household Survey (Australian Instutute of Health and Welfare 2008), of Australians aged 60 years and older, it is estimated that: • • • 15.6% drank alcohol on a daily basis and 34.6% drank alcohol on a weekly basis; 14.9% of older men and 7.5% of older women drank at levels that potentially put their health at risk in the short term; 7.4% of men and 5.5% of older women drank at levels that put them at risk of long term harm. As with younger populations, older people drink alcohol for a variety of reasons. However, increased alcohol use amongst older people can be associated with later life events such as bereavement and loss, and related conditions such as social isolation and psychiatric co-morbidity. Retirement can also have an impact on drinking. Some authors (Alexander and Duff 1988; Ekerdt et al. 1989; Perreira and Sloan 2001) have argued that retirement can increase alcohol consumption as it is associated with a loss of status, a sense of rolelessness and feelings of social marginalisation. Although some people may increase their alcohol consumption after retirement, epidemiological evidence indicates that alcohol consumption does tend to decrease with increasing age and that declining health is an important predictor of declining alcohol use (Khan et al. 2006; Paganini-Hill et al. 2007; Moos et al. 2005). In Australia, depending on the methodology used to assess harm, the prevalence of women potentially at risk from alcohol varies from 1% to 26% (Fleming 1996). Amongst men, these figures vary from 7.9% to 23.8% (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2005; O'Halloran et al. 2003). The lower estimates of at-risk alcohol consumption have typically arisen from studies based upon NHMRC alcohol guidelines, whereas the higher estimates have occurred in those studies which have used screening tools such as the AUDIT (Saunders et al. 1993b). The issue of screening for the presence of alcohol-related problems amongst older people is however problematic, as some of the diagnostic criteria used in screening instruments may be inappropriate (e.g. employment) for use with older people (Dawe et al. 2002). In addition, harmful and hazardous drinking in elderly people is not adequately described by the use of quantity/frequency screening measures alone as older people have lowered tolerance to alcohol, may have chronic illnesses, be taking medications (Evans 2000) or have functional impairments that need to be taken into account as part of any comprehensive assessment. Benefits of light to moderate alcohol use in older adults There are a number of studies that suggest that light to moderate alcohol use (one to two drinks per day) may convey some health benefits to older adults, including: reduced bone loss in males and females (Bakhireva et al 2004; Mukamal et al. 2007); 194 reduced risk of cardiovascular conditions such as heart failure (Bryson et al. 2006), stroke (Mukamal et al. 2005) and atherosclerosis (e.g. Mattace-Raso et al. 2005). reduced risk of cognitive impairment and dementia in older adults (e.g. Mukamal et al. 2003; Cassidy et al. 2004; Ganguli et al. 2005; Deng et al. 2006; McGuire et al 2007). Although there have now been more than 100 epidemiological studies suggesting that moderate alcohol consumption is cardio protective (Gulbransen and McCormick 2007), recent critical literature has found that people who never drink were at no greater risk than light drinkers (Filmore et al. 2003) Because of the systematic error of misclassification that has occurred in much research (Fillmore et al. 2006), the contention surrounding alcohol’s cardio protective effects is likely to continue (e.g. (Ellison et al. 2007; Rimm et al. 2007). In addition, confounding factors such as diet need to be considered; in one study people who drank a little wine with meals tended to consume a more healthy diet (higher intake of fish, vegetables, and more use of olive oil) (Tjonneland et al. 1999). While research continues, the comment by Goldberg (2003) is relevant: ”If alcohol were a newly discovered drug (instead of one dating back to the dawn of human history) we can be sure that no pharmaceutical company would develop it to prevent cardiovascular disease”(p.164). In contrast, the mortality data from the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women’s Health (ALSWH) on the cohort of women aged 70 -75 years in 1996 demonstrated that women who did not consume alcohol or drank rarely had a higher rate of mortality than women in the low-level consumption category. Non-drinkers also scored lower on General Health, Physical Functioning, Mental Health and Social Functioning subscales of the SF-36 (Byles et al. 2006). US studies among men (Mukamal et al. 2003) and women (Stampfer et al. 2005) found protective effects from moderate drinking, and a reduced risk of Type 2 diabetes in both sexes (Djousse et al. 2007). Health risks of alcohol use in older adults Older people warrant special consideration in relation to alcohol use for a number of reasons. Four of these reasons include: the physiological changes that occur with ageing; medication use; the link between alcohol and cancer; alcohols impact on cognitive function and the conflict surrounding alcohol’s impact on coronary vascular disease. Important age-related physiological changes include a reduction in total body water and changes in hepatic metabolism of alcohol, producing a higher blood alcohol concentration for a given dose. A higher blood alcohol concentration (BAC) can be produced with a standard quantity of alcohol if it is absorbed more quickly, eliminated more slowly or the total body water (TBW) for distribution is less (Vogel-Sprott and Barrett 1984). While neither alcohol absorption nor elimination are affected with ageing, TBW does decrease with age (Schoeller 1989; Watson et al. 1980). TBW also varies across gender with females having a lower TBW (on average) than males. As women of all ages have less lean muscle mass than men, they are more susceptible to the effects of alcohol. With age there is a decrease in lean body mass versus total volume of fat, and the decrease in total body mass increases the total distribution of alcohol in the body (Blow and Barry 2002). 195 There is an increased possibility of drug interactions: many older people take medications that may have interactions (and may be contraindicated) with alcohol. While older people comprise between 12% and 15% of the population of most developed nations, it has been estimated that they use approximately 33% of all prescription medicines (Evans 2000). They also have a high use of over-the-counter medications, the most common of which are analgesics, vitamins, antacids and laxatives (Evans 2000). Problems can result from the concomitant use of many prescription drugs commonly used by older people and alcohol (Tanaka 2003). For example, alcohol increases the sedative effects of antidepressants, antihistamines, muscle relaxants, benzodiazepines and opioids (National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism 1995). This interaction can have serious consequences such as increasing the risk of falls, motor vehicle accidents and overdose (Tanaka 2003; Weathermon and Crabb 1999). Alcohol use in combination with non-steroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAIDS) can result in stomach bleeding, gastric inflammation and liver damage (Bush et al. 1991; Dart 2001; Kaufman 1999; Korrapati 1995; Tanaka 2003). There is an increased risk of falls and impaired driving ability in older people who drink alcohol (Chikritzhs and Pascal 2005). Cognitive function, and in particular memory, may be more vulnerable to the effects of alcohol in older drinkers. Between 1994 and 2003 over 10,000 Australians aged 65 years and older died from alcohol attributable injury and disease caused by risky and high-risk drinking (Chikritzhs and Pascal 2005). There is also evidence that over the past decade alcohol-attributable hospitalisations amongst older people have increased in Victoria, Tasmania and Western Australia. The most common causes of alcohol attributable hospitalisations were: falls, supraventricular cardiac dysrhythmias, and alcohol dependence (Chikritzhs and Pascal 2005). Long term alcohol use is also an important consideration in relation to cancer. In Australia in 2001, it was estimated that 2,791 (3.2%) of all new cases of cancer and 1,291 cancer deaths were attributed to alcohol consumption (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare and Australasian Association of Cancer Registries 2004). In their most recent publication, the World Cancer Research Fund and American Institute of Cancer Research (2007) expert panel concluded that since the mid-1990’s the evidence that alcohol is a cause of cancer has become stronger and that there is ample evidence from case-control and cohort studies of a dose-response relationship between alcohol and breast cancer. The panel also stated that ”the evidence that alcoholic drinks are a cause of pre-menopausal and post-menopausal breast cancer is convincing”(p.168) (World Cancer Research Fund/ American Institute for Cancer Research 2007). The issue of alcohol and cognitive function is also complex. Several longitudinal studies have shown an association of light drinking (up to 20/10grams of alcohol per day for men and women respectively) with a reduced risk of cognitive impairment and dementia (Bryan and Ward 2002; Cassidy et al. 2004; DeCarli et al. 2001; Deng et al. 2006; Ganguli et al. 2005; Lyndsay et al. 2002; McGuire et al. 2007; Rodgerset al. 2005; Ruttenberg et al. 2002; Zimmerman et al. 2004). Conversely, other research shows no association (Truelsen et al. 2002; Tyas et al. 2001) or an acceleration in cognitive deterioration (Anttila et al. 2004) and the development of early onset dementia (McMurtray et al. 2006). Complementing the psychometric testing on cognitive function has been research examining the association between alcohol use and brain atrophy. Anstey et al. (2006) conducted MRI brain scans on a sample of 196 478 persons aged 60 to 64 years and found evidence of a positive association between brain atrophy and alcohol consumption. Who to target for screening and interventions? Diagnosis of alcohol use disorders may be difficult, as alcohol use and related disorders may be mistaken for the effects of aging or other conditions. Every person over the age of 60 should be screened for their concomitant alcohol and other drug use, with a particular focus on patients on multiple medications, medications such as sedatives. Alcohol abuse or dependence may mimic the effects of aging and many conditions prevalent in this age-group. A high index of suspicion and thorough history taking can aid early detection and appropriate management. As with younger age groups, screening is recommended in general practice settings, general hospital wards, emergency departments and community counselling settings. As older people are unlikely to present at traditional alcohol or other drug treatment settings, it is important that opportunistic screening in mainstream and gerontology settings occur. What is effective? Older people have typically been excluded from large scale outcome studies, but there is some evidence that brief intervention and other treatment options are also valid with older people (Gordon et al. 2003). Brief interventions in this age populations are effective in significant reductions in overall alcohol use and frequency of excessive drinking. Bruef interventions for older people: Randomised controlled trials One randomised controlled trial evaluated the economic cost and benefits of brief intervention for at-risk drinking older adults (Mundt et al. 2005). This trial with 24month follow-up tested the effectiveness of brief physician advice in reducing alcohol use, health care utilisation and other consequences among adult problem drinkers aged 65 or more. Patients were screened for problem drinking in 24 communitybased primary care practices; 158 were randomised into control (n = 71) or intervention (n = 87) group. Intervention group patients received two 10- to 15-minute physician-delivered counselling sessions including professional advice, education and contracting using scripted workbooks. The intervention group demonstrated significant reductions in alcohol use (p= 0.001) and frequency of excessive drinking (p= 0.03) compared with the control group over 24 months, but no significant differences emerged in economic outcomes, including hospital days, emergency department visits, office visits, medications, lab and x-ray procedures, injuries, legal events or mortality. The authors conclude that the economic results of brief intervention in this age group are less certain than the effects on alcohol consumption; older adult problem drinkers may require more intensive and costly interventions to achieve economic benefits similar to those seen in younger adults. Another trial reproduced similar effects of brief intervention on alcohol consumption with the conclusion that brief intervention is as effective for elderly patients as for younger (Gordon et al. 2003). This study compared patients in 2 treatment arms (brief advice [BA] and motivational enhancement [ME] with one control arm [SC]. Patients were assessed at 1, 3, 6, 9 and 12 months. Post-hoc analysis compared the elderly (>65 years, n=45) with non elderly (n=256) patients over all outcome 197 measures. During the 12 months following intervention, the elderly in ME, BA, and SC intervention arms increased the number of days abstained, decreased the number of drinks per day, and reduced the number of total days per month drinking. There were trends toward decreases in the alcohol consumption measures in the ME and BA treatment arms compared to SC. The elderly patients’ response to all interventions was similar to that of the younger cohort. (Level 1a evidence) However, the refusal rate was high (75% of eligible patients) and the sample size was correspondingly small (Zimmerman et al. 2004). Assessment and screening Routine screening for alcohol consumption amongst older people is recommended as older people tend not to discuss their drinking and health professionals can often mistake the effects of alcohol for a physical or mental health problem. • • Attention should be given to assessing alcohol related harms in this agegroup (including falls, exacerbation of medical conditions, drug interactions, violence or abuse). Comprehensive assessment should include physical and mental health, chronic pain, social conditions, overall general functioning, and a review of medications. Older drinkers taking other medications, in particular those taking multiple medications or psychoactive medications (e.g. sedatives, anti-depressants), should have medications reviewed by their medical practitioner to assess for any drug interactions. See Appendix xx for alcohol-drug interactions. Withdrawal management for dependent drinkers Older dependent drinkers attempting alcohol withdrawal should be closely monitored, generally in a supervised withdrawal setting (detoxification unit or hospital). • • • Poor diet and housing, physical inactivity, and concomitant illness may make patients more vulnerable to complications during withdrawal such as dehydration, nutritional deficiency (e.g. Wernicke’s), hypertension or infections. Patients should receive adequate thiamine, rehydration and nutritional support, and close monitoring of other conditions (e.g. blood pressure, blood glucose, mental state). Diazepam has the potential for over-sedation due to accumulation in older people (delayed hepatic clearance of long-acting active metabolites). Shorter acting benzodiazepines such as oxazepam or lorazepam should be considered as first line medication for moderate to severe alcohol withdrawal (see Chapter 5). Doses should be titrated according to clinical effect. The severity and management of concomitant physical and mental conditions should be reviewed several (2 to 4) weeks after cessation of drinking and completion of withdrawal. Abstinence can be associated with marked improvements in other conditions (e.g. hypertension, cognitive function, mental state); alternatively, alcohol use may have been masking underlying illness. 198 Treatment of dependence Treatment is becoming of increasing importance as the population ages; however, to date there are very few experimental studies conducted with the older age groups, especially those aged over 70. Most studies are longitudinal studies or retrospective analyses of data. One retrospective study compared long-term outcomes for men and women (Satre et al. 2007). These authors examined participants at seven-year follow-up to assess the outcomes for women (n = 25) and men (n = 59) aged 55 and over in an outpatient addiction program. It measured demographic characteristics, alcohol and drug use, psychiatric symptoms, Addiction Severity Index, treatment length, and outcomes. At seven years, 76.0% of women reported abstinence in the prior 30 days versus 54.2% of men (p = 0.05). Logistic regression analysis found that longer treatment stay predicted abstinence. The authors conclude that their findings indicate that older women have better long-term addiction outcomes than older men, but treatment length is more significant than gender in predicting outcome. Cognitively impaired patients Recommendation 9.38 A brief assessment of cognitive functioning should be a routine part of assessment upon treatment entry. 9.39 More detailed diagnostic and functional assessment should be carried out where brief assessment suggests that a patient suffers from significant cognitive deficits. 9.40 The possibility of improvement in cognitive functioning should be taken into account by allowing a sufficient period of abstinence from alcohol to elapse before finalising treatment planning. 9.41 Where cognitive impairment is confirmed, information presented to patients should be concrete and patients should be given opportunities to practice behaviours taught in treatment. 9.42 Clinicians should engage cognitively impaired patients in treatment by providing information about treatment, discussing different treatment options and maintaining contact with the patient. 9.43 Cognitively impaired patients should be taught relapse prevention strategies. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence S S D IV B II S D IV Introduction Chronic excessive alcohol use has been consistently associated 199 with cognitive impairment, including impairements in decision making, problem solving cognitive flexibility and propensity for risky behaviour (e.g. Moselhy et al, 2001; Davies et al. 2005; Glass et al. 2009). Higher frequency and a longer duration of alcohol consumption are associated with greater decline of frontal lobe function of alcohol-dependent patients (e.g. Fein et al., 1990). It has been suggested that cognitive impairment in alcohol dependent patients is associated with frontal lobe dysfunction (Noel et al. 2001; Uekermann and Daum 2008; Chanraud et al. 2007). Many studies suggest that impaired cognitive functioning is related to poorer treatment outcome, particularly for treatments that require the acquisition of new skills. Thus, a brief assessment of cognitive functioning should be an integral part of the assessment procedure and results should be used to guide treatment planning (Allsop et al. 2000) (see below). If significant impairment is suspected, a more thorough assessment by an appropriately qualified professional is indicated. Where severe cognitive impairment is present, treatment in an inpatient facility may be more effective than outpatient treatment (Rychtarik et al. 2000). People who suffer from alcohol abuse or dependence may have difficulty processing all the relevant information about their problem and may be inflexible about changing behaviour (Goldman 1995). Cognitive impairment can impair motivation, attention span, the capacity to evaluate situations critically and the ability to acquire new skills, but they can and often do improve with a period of abstinence from alcohol (Goldman 1995). Where cognitive impairment is apparent, treatment elements that require heavy cognitive processing should not be used as they are likely to be ineffective (Allsop et al. 2000). There is significant variability in the severity of cognitive deficits present in patients (Harper 1998). Many studies suggest that a substantial minority or perhaps a majority of patients seeking treatment for alcohol dependence will exhibit signs of cognitive impairment after the withdrawal phase has passed (e.g. Parsons et al. 1994). Cognitive impairment is especially pronounced in early abstinence (Loeber et al. 2009). Wernicke-Korsakoff’s syndrome (WKS) is the most common form of cognitive impairment associated with alcohol abuse and dependence (See Chapter 5). WKS is a potentially fatal neurological disorder caused by thiamine (vitamin B1) deficiency (Harper et al. 1998). Much confusion persists regarding the existence of a separate alcohol related dementia, because of the under-recognition of the variability of cognitive impairment manifested in WKS (Sechi and Serra 2007; Torvik 1991). Although the hypothesis has aroused enormous interest, the tangible basis for ethanol neurotoxicity remains to be demonstrated. Further, thiamine deficiency is now recognised as a primary underlying cause of cerebellar degeneration and peripheral neuropathy associated with alcohol abuse (Sechi and Serra, 2007) although these conditions were for many years thought to be attributable to ethanol neurotoxicity. Of course, WKS may be seen in patients with thiamine deficiency from any cause. For example in patients with gastrointestinal tract disease, recurrent vomiting, malignancy, or other medical conditions, or even in people lost in the bush or at sea without food for some time (Donnino et al. 2007). One of the most common causes of WKS may be iatrogenic, arising from inadequate clinical management of patients at risk of severe malnutrition or requiring refeeding, 200 where dietary supplementation does not include sufficient thiamine (Sechi and Serra, 2007). To understand the wide variability in clinical manifestations of WKS, and therefore the importance of thiamine treatment in many patients with alcohol abuse or dependence, it is instructive to briefly review evidence regarding the variable spectrum of clinical symptoms in WKS. Although sometimes still described as though different conditions (Sechi and Serra, 2007), the neuropathology of Wernicke’s encephalopathy (WE) and Korsakoff’s syndrome (KS) is identical, recency of onset varying widely in individual patients (Harper et al. 1986; Torvik 1991). Most patients observed to have an acute episode of WE will display the severe cognitive impairment of KS at follow-up (Victor et al., 1989). Beyond the period of acute hospitalization and the well established benefits of high dose thiamine on the acute symptoms of WE (Thomson, et al., 2002; Victor et al., 1989) some patients with WKS recover from the severe illness, including from the severe cognitive impairment, although recovery may occur over months or years. It is surprising how little appreciated is the potential for cognitive recovery despite Korsakoff highlighting the potential for recovery in his original case descriptions (Korsakoff, translated by Victor and Yakovlev, 1954). At the present time we have poor understanding of the factors underlying recovery of cognitive impairment after severe episodes of WKS, the obvious explanation being refeeding and re-establishing adequate thiamine intake (Ambrose, Bowden and Whelan, 2001). Post recovery, obtaining a good selfreport history of past episodes of WKS is obviously difficult because many patients have little of no clear recollection of their periods of exacerbation. The stereotype of a severe, permanent Korsakoff’s amnesia requiring long-term, high-level care, although reiterated in recent editions of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (American Psychiatric Association, 2000) was recognised many years ago as an artefact of a clinical research strategy focussing on those patients with WKS who were most impaired. In contrast to patients suffering acute episodes requiring medical attention, many patients with WKS may have an insidious course with less obvious episodes of exacerbation and then recovery (Bowden, 1990; Lishman 1998). Perhaps the most important variant of cognitive impairment associated with WKS is dementia-like deterioration (Bowden 1990). Indeed, it has been suggested, on the basis of large retrospective post-mortem series, that the most common explanation for a clinical diagnosis of dementia associated with alcohol abuse and dependence is unrecognised WKS neuropathology (Lishman 1998). The classic diagnostic triad of WKS, namely eye signs, cerebellar signs and mental impairment is known to have low diagnostic sensitivity, perhaps somewhere between 1-20% (Torvik 1991). Some years ago, Harper and colleagues (Caine et al, 1997) published revised clinical diagnostic criteria for WKS in patients with a history of alcohol dependence. These criteria comprised any two of the following signs in patients with a history of alcohol dependence: dietary deficiencies, cerebellar signs, eye signs or cognitive impairment. This revised diagnostic approach was shown to have better that 90% diagnostic sensitivity and 90% specificity against the gold standard of post mortem identification. To date there is only one RCT cited in the Cochrane review of thiamine treatment for WKS and alcohol related dementia (Day et al. 2004). Clearly there is a need for further detailed study of these issues. Although thiamine fortification of bread making flour was recommended by the NHMRC in 1987, the poor diets of many alcohol abusing and dependent people may diminish the benefits of this initiative (Feeney and Connor 2008). In addition, in the 201 absence of systematic evaluation there is no tangible evidence that this initiative has led to changes in the incidence of WKS. Fortification elsewhere has not prevented a high prevalence of reported cases of WKS (Feeney and Connor 2008; Sechi and Serra 2007). It is likely that the perceived prevalence of WKS in diverse clinical settings still depends greatly on the vigilance of clinicians (Victor et al. 1989). The most important implications for treatment of WKS and cognitive impairment associated with alcohol abuse and dependence is to assume that WKS is the cause of any symptoms of cognitive impairment, instituting prompt with high dose intramuscular or parenteral thiamine (Thomson et al. 2002). Effect of cognitive impairment on treatment efficacy Although many studies have examined cognitive impairment in alcohol dependent patients, few studies have systematically examined the effect of cognitive impairment on treatment outcomes. However there is reason to believe that cognitive deficits may impact on some of the skills and behaviours taught in treatment because impaired cognitive functioning impacts on a variety of processes, such as impulsivity, planning and decision-making skills (Smith and McCrady 1991). There is some evidence suggesting that cognitive functioning relates to various aspects of treatment, including treatment outcome, but findings are mixed. In the late 1970s and early 1980s many studies claimed that cognitive impairment was one of the best predictors of poor treatment outcome (Allsop et al. 2000). Others have found no relationship between cognitive deficits and treatment success (Goldman 1995). Does cognitive functioning affect treatment outcome? Smith and McCrady examined the impact of cognitive impairment on drink refusal skills, acquisition and treatment outcome in thirty-three alcohol dependent males receiving inpatient treatment (Smith and McCrady 1991). Two month follow-up data indicated that patients with less cognitive impairment had better treatment outcomes. Overall, patients with less impairment tended to respond more rapidly than more impaired patients on a behavioural test of drink skills, patients higher in verbal abstraction were signif-icantly better in their ability to describe an effective drink refusal, higher abstraction patients and patients with generally greater learning ability demonstrated marginally different improvement on a quiz about effective drink refusal strategies from pre to post training and individuals higher in verbal abstraction evidenced greater outpatient aftercare involvement. These data suggest that cognitive deficits adversely affect treatment outcome. Further, the authors suggest that the relationship between cognitive impairment and aftercare involvement indicate that impaired individuals may be vulnerable to relapse. While suggestive, these data should be viewed cautiously due to the small sample size. One study examined the relationship between executive function impairment, change process factors and substance use outcomes in a sample of substance users (N = 118) participating in intensive 12-step treatment (Morgenstern and Bates 1999). Change processes were self-efficacy, commitment to abstinence, negative substance abuse expectancies and affiliation with Alcoholics Anonymous. More than half of the sample showed some form of executive impairment, but executive impairment did not predict worse substance use outcomes six months following treatment. However, change processes were strongly related to outcome for unimpaired individuals but weakly related for impaired individuals, suggesting that impaired and unimpaired individuals traverse different pathways in achieving equivalent outcomes. 202 Although Smith and McCrady reported that cognitive impairment adversely affected treatment outcome for drink refusal skills training, executive impairment was not found to adversely affect outcome for twelve-step treatment in Morgenstern and Bates’ study. Although these results could be taken to suggest that compared to 12step programs, cognitive behavioural interventions may be too difficult for cognitively impaired individuals, there is not enough evidence to make such a judgement. Outcomes could differ due to the treatments given, type of cognitive functioning assessed and the measures used, outcome measures, length of follow-up or type of patients participating, as Smith and McCrady examined alcohol dependent patients, whereas Morgenstern and Bates examined patients with substance abuse. Is cognitive impairment associated with an increased risk of relapse? In a study examining gender differences in reasons for relapse after treatment, Saunders et al. (Saunders et al. 1993a) found that the best predictors of a return to drinking were comparatively low cognitive abilities plus few prior periods of abstinence. The authors postulated that low neuropsychological scores may suggest the inability to acquire new skills during treatment, and/or could be indicative of past heavy drinking and acquired brain damage, with the concomitants of impulsivity and poor planning. Interestingly, in this study high scores on executive functioning were predictive of poorer outcomes for women but not for men. This finding is confusing, but suggests that cognitive functioning may affect treatment outcome differently for men and women. Allsop, Saunders and Phillips (Allsop et al. 2000) also investigated factors hypothesised to influence the relapse process, with a focus on the roles of selfefficacy, alcohol dependence and cognitive functioning. Participants (N = 60, male) were recruited from patients attending an alcohol treatment unit. Poorer cognitive functioning was significantly associated with being categorised as a problem drinker at six-month follow-up, which is consistent with results reported in other studies (Parsons et al. 1990). Poorer cognitive functioning was also associated with higher risk of lapse over the 12-month follow-up. The authors speculated that those with comparatively poor cognitive functioning might have had difficulty learning new skills. Further, poor cognitive functioning may impair the ability to make the decision to change and increase the likelihood of poor decision-making skills, which would increase the risk of relapse. Do outcomes for cognitively impaired patients differ according to treatment setting? In a study focused on the impact of treatment setting on treatment outcome, Rychtarik and colleagues (Rychtarik et al. 2000) found that patients low in cognitive functioning appeared to benefit more from inpatient than outpatient care. However, Alcoholics Anonymous attendance appeared to moderate and perhaps mediate this effect. Among this population of inpatients there was a tendency for low cognitive functioning to be associated with higher Alcoholics Anonymous attendance, whereas no significant relationship was suggested for patients who received outpatient treatment. The authors speculate that successfully increasing Alcoholics Anonymous attendance among outpatients low in cognitive functioning may negate any additional benefits derived from inpatient care. 203 Cognitively impaired patients: Randomised controlled trials In a study designed to test the patient-treatment matching hypothesis (Cooney et al. 1991), patients (N = 96) were randomly assigned to aftercare group treatment with either coping skills training or interactional therapy. Two-year outcome data indicated that patients with cognitive impairment had better outcomes in interactional treatment, and patients without cognitive impairment had better outcomes with coping skills treatment. An explanation of this finding is that cognitively impaired participants found the coping skills treatment too complex, whereas the interactional therapy may have been less cognitively demanding. This would suggest that keeping treatments simple would improve outcomes for persons suffering from cognitive impairment. In Project MATCH’s first post-treatment report (Project MATCH Research Group 1997), cognitive impairment was found not to interact significantly with treatment type on treatment outcome. That is, treatment outcomes for cognitively impaired patients were similar, regardless of whether patients received motivational enhancement therapy, cognitive behavioural therapy or 12-step facilitation. However, the 3-year follow-up (Project MATCH Research Group 1998) showed that patients whose social networks were more supportive derived greater benefit from 12-step facilitation compared to motivational enhancement therapy. Readiness to change and selfefficacy were the strongest predictors of long-term drinking outcome. It is further posited in another article by Buckman et al that cognitive impairment may increase the positive influence of the social network on drinking outcomes (Buckman et al. 2007). These findings suggest that patients with cognitive deficits respond in different ways, but almost equally well, to motivational enhancement therapy, cognitive behavioural therapy and twelve-step facilitation. In an attempt to replicate Project MATCH findings, a pragmatic, multi-centre RCT with blind follow-up at 12 months examined six matching criteria on drinking outcomes (Heather et al. 2008). Although specific aspect of cognitive impairment were not examined in this study, one treatment matching criterion was general psychiatric morbidity, but none of the matching variables were shown to enhance treatment outcome (Heather et al. 2008). 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Alcohol-related physical comorbidity Recommendation 10.1 Comprehensive assessment is indicated for patients with physical comorbidity related to alcohol, as multiple pathology is the rule. 10.2 Abstinence is recommended for those with physical comorbidity related to alcohol unless mild and reversible pathology is present. In particular, pancreatitis may recur after a single drink. 10.3 Comprehensive management requires a single practitioner with a broad range of clinical skills or close coordination between an appropriate team. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A 1 D IV S People with alcohol use disorders often have associated physical comorbidities. These include peripheral neuropathy, brain damage, liver disease, gastritis and pancreatitis; heart and vascular diseases, nutritional disorders (e.g. malnutrition or thiamine deficiency), metabolic disorders (e.g. hypoglaecemia), endocrine deficiencies (e.g. reduced fertility) and cutaneous problems (e.g. porphyria, psoriasis, excema); malignancies, and infections (see table). Accidents, injuries and poisonings are also associated with excessive alcohol use and intoxication (Adrian and Barry 2003). Adrian et al compared the nature and extent of treated health problems in patients with problems related to the use of alcohol and drugs (including both licit and illicit drugs) with the morbidity levels of all patients treated in Ontario, Canada, hospitals for 1985-86, using age-sex standardised morbidity ratios. The morbidities of all inpatients with alcohol or drug diagnoses (n = 52,200) were examined retrospectively through the medical records. Excess morbidity for alcohol patients affected more diagnostic categories and body systems, and was at a higher level than for drug patients. Both had particularly high morbidity for mental disorders, infectious and parasitic diseases, and injury and poisoning (Adrian and Barry 2003). Alcohol dependence and misuse is also implicated in the risk of suicide, especially in the elderly (Waern 2003). 217 Table 10.1: Alcohol use and physical complications Gastrointestinal Cardiovascular Neurological • Liver disease, including alcohol-related fatty liver, alcoholic hepatitis, alcohol-related cirrhosis and multiple complications of cirrhosis and portal hypertension • Liver cell cancer – hepatocellular carcinoma • Acute and chronic pancreatitis • Parotid enlargement • Gastro-oesophageal reflux • Peptic ulcer, gastritis, duodenitis • Oesophageal rupture from violent vomiting bouts • Small bowel damage leading to malabsorption • Altered bowel habit with diarrhoea predominating • Hypertension • High output cardiac failure • Cardiomyopathy • Acute rhythm disturbances in alcohol intoxication • Coronary artery disease • Cortical atrophy Cerebellar damage (midline structures maximally affected) • • Peripheral neuropathy • Autonomic neuropathy • Wernicke’s encephalopathy • Wernicke–Korsakoff syndrome • Central pontine myelinolysis • Marchiafava–Bignami syndrome • Myopathy • Cerebrovascular accidents • Withdrawal delirium and neuronal damage 218 Musculoskeletal Haematological • Rhabdomyolysis • Compartment syndromes • Gout • Osteopaenia • Osteonecrosis • Thrombocytopaenia from bone marrow suppression • Pancytopaenia from hypersplenism Haemolytic anaemia with advanced liver disease - spur cell anaemia • Immunological • Macrocytic anaemia • Folate and B12 deficiency anaemias • Coagulopathies from liver disease • Impaired B and T cell function mediated by alcohol toxicity • Autoimmune phenomena triggered by acetaldehyde adducts acting as immunogenic targets Respiratory Endocrine • IgA nephropathy • Increased predisposition to respiratory infection • TB as a common infection • Aspiration pneumonia • Sleep apnoea • Syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone secretion (SIADH) • Altered thyroid function • Altered oestrogen metabolism associated with liver damage Renal • Masculinisation in women • Pseudo Cushing’s disease • Altered calcium and bone metabolism • Hypoglycaemia • Aggravation of diabetes mellitus • Ketoacidosis • Hypertriglyceridaemia • Testicular atrophy • Hypoparathyroidism • IgA nephropathy 219 Infectious diseases Nutritional disorders • Hepatitis C virus • Pneumonia • Tuberculosis • Sexually transmitted diseases Vitamin and mineral deficiencies; B1, B6, riboflavin, niacin, calcium, phosphate, zinc, magnesium. • • Alcohol and malignancy Protein calorie malnutrition The risk of developing certain malignancies increases from base risk levels with any alcohol consumption. These include breast, oropharyngeal and oesophageal cancers. Other malignancies such as colon, pancreatic, hepatic and ovarian are more prevalent in those drinking more than 40 gm per day. Whereas low or moderate alcohol consumption can be cardioprotective, heavy drinking is associated with increased risks of hypertension, coronary heart disease, and ischemic stroke, possibly due to alcohol-induced sympathetic activation. Chronic excessive alcohol consumption is a strong risk factor for various types of cancer, particularly of the respiratory tract, but also of the digestive system, liver, breast, and ovaries, while heavy drinking is associated with various forms of alcoholic liver disease such as cirrhosis. Alcohol dependence is also a major cause of mortality and is associated with psychiatric conditions, neurologic impairment, cardiovascular disease, liver disease, and malignant neoplasms. Dependence also increases the risk of injury, possibly due to alcohol-related factors such as diminished coordination and balance, increased reaction time, and impaired attention, perception, and judgement (Cargiulo 2007). A meta-analysis carried out by Corrao et al on the risk of 14 major alcohol-related neoplasms and non-neoplastic diseases plus injuries showed, from 156 studies with 116,702 patients, strong trends in the risk for cancers of the oral cavity, oesophagus and larynx, hypertension, liver cirrhosis, chronic pancreatitis, and injuries and violence. Weaker direct trends were observed for cancers of the colon, rectum, liver, and breast (Corrao et al. 2004). For all these conditions, significant increased risks were found at ethanol intake of 25g per day. Threshold values were observed for ischemic and hemorrhagic strokes. For coronary heart disease, a J-shaped relation was observed with a minimum relative risk of 0.80 at 20 g/day, a significant protective effect up to 72 g/day, and a significant increased risk at 89 g/day. No clear relation was observed for duodenal ulcer. The authors conclude that there was no clear evidence of a threshold effect for both neoplasms and several non-neoplastic diseases. A European study investigated physical health problems among patients with alcohol use disorders at alcohol treatment agencies in six European cities (Gossop et al. 2007). The sample comprised 315 patients with a primary alcohol use disorder. Data were collected at admission to treatment using a structured research protocol, and ratings were made by a doctor after a physical examination of the patient. Physical health problems were extremely common: 79% of the sample had at least one, and 59% had two or more problems. These were often serious, and 60% had at least one problem that required treatment. The most common were gastrointestinal and liver disorders, but about a quarter of the sample had cardiovascular or neurological problems. Frequency of drinking, duration of alcohol use disorder, and severity of 220 alcohol dependence were associated with increased physical morbidity. Current smoking status and age were also associated with poorer physical health. Older drinkers had more physical health problems, although they were less severely alcohol dependent than the younger patients. The authors conclude that the high prevalence of physical health problems among problem drinkers provides opportunities of screening for alcohol use disorders, not only in specialist alcohol treatment services but also in other health-care settings. They recommend that alcohol treatment agencies should provide a full routine health screen of patients at admission to treatment with provision or referral to appropriate treatment. The most commonly alcohol-associated physical condition is alcohol-related liver disease, either fatty liver or cirrhosis. Alcohol-dependent individuals die from cirrhosis at a much higher rate than does the general population (Cargiulo 2007). However, patients with alcoholic liver disease have been considered less desirable liver transplant candidates than patients with other types of liver disease (DiMartini et al. 2004). These authors examined the pre-transplant prevalence of comorbid physical and psychological problems in 112 alcoholic liver disease patients who received a liver transplant. Fifty-six percent of the patients had comorbid hepatitis C or hepatitis B, 40% had used other substances in addition to alcohol, 25% met the criteria for a lifetime DSM-IV non-alcohol substance use disorder, 36% for a lifetime depressive disorder, and 12% for a lifetime anxiety disorder. They recommend that pretransplant psychiatric evaluation should be undertaken with alcoholic liver disease patients to identify other substance use disorders and other psychiatric disorders that may require treatment prior to admission. Vascular diseases are another complication associated with alcohol consumption. Epidemiologic studies have shown a J-shaped association between alcohol consumption and vascular diseases, as also demonstrated in the meta-analysis above (Corrao et al. 2004). However, only a few studies have reported on the association between alcohol intake and subclinical atherosclerosis. The aim of a German study (Schminke et al. 2005) was to investigate the relation between alcohol intake and carotid intima-media thickness (IMT) in participants in a very large study, the population-based Study of Health in Pomerania. In 1230 men and 1190 women, the mean IMT of the right and left common carotid arteries was measured by ultrasonography. Alcohol consumption was assessed at interview, calculating the quantities of alcohol consumed from the ethanol content of the specific drinks reported by patients. Linear regression controlled for age, diabetes, systolic blood pressure, physical activity, eating patterns and frequency, smoking status, and education revealed a significant inverse association between IMT and alcohol intake < 80 g/d in men (p<0.02), which became insignificant after further controlling for HDL cholesterol and fibrinogen. In women, no significant differences in IMT were found between the two groups. The authors can conclude that alcohol consumption was inversely correlated with carotid IMT in men but not in women; however, the reported total daily level of alcohol intake was above the threshold where severe alcohol related comorbidity and organ damage have been reported, and correspondingly any potential protective effect of alcohol was accordingly lost. Another study describes the relation between eating disorders and alcohol and drug abuse (Conason et al. 2006). Eating-disordered patients are already at an increased risk for morbidity and mortality, so that alcohol and drug use pose additional dangers for these patients. Anorexics, binge eaters, and bulimics appear to be distinct subgroups within this population, with binge eaters and bulimics more prone to alcohol and drug use. Impulsivity has also been linked to both bulimia nervosa and 221 substance abuse. The authors say that interviewing is generally the most useful tool in diagnosing alcohol and substance abuse disorders in these individuals (rather than questionnaires etc), and they also recommend obtaining information from third parties as patients may be unwilling to disclose their substance use. The above studies suggest that all patients with alcohol use disorders should be carefully assessed for physical (and psychological) comorbidities that would otherwise be overlooked in treating the primary presenting condition. Abstinence from alcohol is to be recommended for patients with comorbid physical problems, especially pancreatitis (Strum 1995; Pelli et al. 2008; Tsujimoto et al. 2008) to improve their quality of life and relief from pain. Co-occurring Mental Disorders Introduction In Australia, of the 10,641 people surveyed for the National Survey of Mental Health and Well Being in 1997, 1.9 percent met the criteria for alcohol abuse, and 4.1 percent met the criteria for alcohol dependence. Of this latter group around one in five (20 percent) met criteria for an anxiety disorder and almost one in four (24 percent) met criteria for an affective or mood disorder. Other disorders associated with alcohol dependence include other substance use disorders and psychosis (Degenhardt et al. 2000). One rural New South Wales health service’s data showed that 43% of inpatient and 20% of ambulatory mental health admission records indicated problem drinking or drug-taking. Information gathered from focus groups conducted with consumer groups and service providers indicated a reasonable level of awareness of comorbidity, and changes were underway to better meet patient needs; however, the results indicated a lack of formalised care coordination, unclear treatment pathways, and a lack of specialist care and resources to treat such patients (Hoolahan et al. 2006). Indig et al. (2007) looked at presentations to Emergency Departments (ED) in New South Wales and found that high-risk alcohol consumption, high psychological distress and current smoking were all significantly and independently associated with a greater likelihood of presenting to an emergency department in the last year. ED presentation was found to be three times more likely for women aged 30-59 years with all three risk factors, and ten times more likely for women aged 60 years or more who reported high risk alcohol consumption and high psychological distress, than similar-aged women without these risk factors. For individuals aged 16-29 years, being a high-risk drinker and a current smoker doubled the risk of presentation to ED. The authors conclude that the combination of being a high-risk consumer of alcohol, having high psychological distress, and being a current smoker are associated with increased presentations, independent of age and sex. Scher et al studied 505 depressed subjects with and without co-occurring alcohol use disorders (AUDs) between 2000 and 2005 (Sher et al. 2008). A total of 318 had DSM-IV major depressive disorder without a history of any alcohol or substance abuse/dependence and 187 had depression and a history of alcohol abuse/dependence. Demographic, clinical, and psychiatric history measures of patients in the two groups were examined and compared. Dual diagnosis patients 222 were significantly younger at their first psychiatric hospitalisation, their first major depressive episode, and their first suicide attempt. They reported more previous major depressive episodes, suicide attempts, and recent life events and had higher lifetime aggression, impulsivity, and hostility. These patients were also more likely to report tobacco smoking, a lifetime history of abuse, and a history of alcohol problems among first-degree relatives, compared to depressive patients. They also had significantly higher childhood, adolescent and adult aggression scores and reported more behavioural problems during childhood. Scher’s findings suggest that in addition to obtaining a history of depression and suicidal behaviour, clinicians should also assess for an alcohol use disorder; conversely patients with alcohol use disorders should be assessed for depression. Comorbididity may result from worse antecedents and lead to early onset, more comorbidity, and a more severe course of illness. Co-occurrence of anxiety and depressive symptoms with alcohol consumption/abuse was analysed by Almeida-Filho et al in a sample of 2,302 adults in Bahia, Brazil (Almeida-Filho et al. 2007). A cross-sectional household survey collected selfreported information on social and personal health, as well as individual psychological status. Prevalence was 15% for anxiety, 12% for depressive disorders and 7% for alcohol abuse/ dependence. Symptom co-occurrence was more frequent for depression (94% of cases), followed by anxiety disorders (82%), and alcoholism (20%). There was a 74% prevalence of anxiety symptoms among depressives, and a 61% of anxiety sufferers also suffered depression. The combination of depression plus anxiety was the most prevalent, ranging from 17% for women to 5% for men. Levander et al (2007) conducted a structured clinical interview for DSM-IV with bipolar men and women. They were then divided into (i) subjects meeting current or lifetime criteria for an alcohol use disorder (n = 213), and (ii) those subjects who did not (n=137). Lifetime rates of comorbid anxiety disorder were evaluated between groups. Their results showed that of 350 subjects, 163 (46.5%) met criteria for an anxiety disorder. Panic disorder and obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD) were the most common anxiety disorders in both groups. OCD and specific phobia were significantly less prevalent in patients with alcohol use disorders than those without, and bipolar women with an alcohol use disorder had a significantly higher rate of post-traumatic stress disorder than those without. Thus there is clear evidence for increased prevalence of mental disorders in people with alcohol use disorders. The co-occurrence of mental and alcohol use disorders presents special challenges in the treatment of individuals with alcohol problems. There is some evidence that the co-occurrence is associated with greater disability and poorer response to treatment (Schneider et al. 2001; Farrell et al. 1998; Project MATCH Research Group 1997; Terra et al. 2006; Tomasson and Vaglum 1996; Tomasson and Vaglum 1998a). In addition, a higher readiness to change problem drinking has been found in outpatients with dual diagnoses (Velasquez et al. 1999), although it could also be that the more psychiatric distress the person is experiencing, the more tempted they are to drink. There are diagnostic dilemmas. Some of the co-occurrence appears to be a direct or withdrawal effect of alcohol which remits with abstinence of at least three weeks duration (Schuckit and Hesselbrock 1994; Schuckit and Monteiro 1988). In other cases mental disorders are in parallel with alcohol use disorders. Still further cases show signs of mental disorders and alcohol interacting to cause greater problem severity, disability and poorer response to treatment. 223 Recommendation 10.4 Patients with comorbid disorders of alcohol use and persisting mental health comorbidity should be offered treatment for both disorders. 10.5 More intensive interventions are needed for comorbid patients, as this population tends to be more disabled and carries a worse prognosis than those with single pathology. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A 1b B I Assessment and diagnosis Firstly, given the high prevalence of other disorders amongst patients with an alcohol use disorder, it is essential that checking for particularly common problems such as anxiety and depression symptoms is a routine part of the assessment. Secondly, the AUDIT appears to be a suitable screening tool for identifying risky, problem and dependent alcohol consumption amongst psychiatric patients (Cassidy et al. 2008; Dawson et al. 2005). Physical comorbidities and sociodemographic factors have an effect on neurocognitive functioning and also need to be assessed (Durazzo et al. 2008). Recommendation 10.6 AUDIT is recommended for screening psychiatric populations. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence A Ib The key issue in the assessment of co-occurring mental disorders is whether they are an effect of alcohol or a separate comorbid disorder. Some epidemiological data suggest that social phobia but not panic disorder begins before alcohol consumption and may have a distinct genetic vulnerability (Merikangas et al. 1998) suggesting that the age of onset may be one way to determine whether co-occurring symptoms of mental disorders are an artefact of alcohol consumption or withdrawal. A period of abstinence is the most widely used method to make a differential diagnosis (Brown et al. 1991; Schuckit et al. 1994; Schuckit et al. 1988). It may be possible to differentiate between primary and secondary depressive disorders, which may have implications for treatment strategies, since secondary depression often abates once the alcohol use disorder is addressed (Schuckit et al. 1997). In this study, individuals who met DSM-III criteria for alcohol dependence were selected from a particular ongoing US cohort study. Almost 42 percent of dependent drinkers met criteria for a diagnosis of a concomitant major depressive episode. Of those, more than 60 percent reported a substance-induced period of depression. Those with primary depression also had a higher prevalence of independent depressive disorders in first-degree relatives. These individuals typically had experience with fewer drugs and less treatment for alcohol problems and were more likely to have attempted suicide. However, the clinical presentation of 224 symptoms did not differ substantially between substance-induced and primary depressive disorders. Recommendation 10.7 Assessment for comorbid disorders should take place once the patient’s withdrawal syndrome has diminished, since some anxiety and depressive symptoms may abate once alcohol consumption is reduced or ceased. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence B II Co-occurring alcohol dependence and mental disorders: Reviews and metaanalyses A study in the USA by Sullivan et al (2005) reviewed the literature looking for answers to the following questions. How common are alcohol problems in patients with depression? Does alcohol affect the course of depression, response to antidepressant therapy, risk of suicide/death, social functioning and health care utilisation? In which alcohol categories and treatment settings have patients with depression and alcohol problems been evaluated? Studies were selected using predefined criteria of reporting on either the prevalence or the effects of alcohol problems in depression. Thirty-five studies were included and revealed a median prevalence of current or lifetime alcohol problems in depression of 16% (range 567%) and 30% (range 10-60%), respectively, compared to 7% for current and 1624% for lifetime alcohol problems in the general population. The majority of the studies evaluated alcohol abuse and dependence, and 25 of 35 (71%) were conducted in psychiatric inpatients. They found evidence that antidepressants improved depression outcomes in persons with alcohol dependence. Alcohol problems were associated with worse outcomes with respect to course of depression, suicide/death risk, social functioning, and use of health care services. The authors conclude that alcohol problems are more common in depression than in the general population, are associated with adverse clinical and health care outcomes, and that antidepressants can be effective in treatment of depression associated with alcohol dependence. In addition, one of the drawbacks of their search was that the literature they found seemed to focus almost exclusively on patients with alcohol use disorders, including dependence, in psychiatric inpatient locations, and excluded individuals with less severe alcohol problems and in outpatient settings. Davis et al (2008) reviewed a recent systematic research on distinguishing baseline characteristics, including demographics and the influence of family history, clinical features such as depressive symptoms and suicidal ideation, and the outcome of treatment for depression, in patients with comorbid major depressive disorder and substance use disorders. They also addressed the possible explanations cited in the literature as to why these two disorders tend to co-occur and the implications of the comorbidity of these illnesses on treatment. Their findings showed that nearly onethird of patients with a major depressive disorder also had a substance use disorder, and the comorbidity resulted in a higher risk of suicide and greater social and personal impairment, as well as other psychiatric conditions. Although the treatment of comorbid major depressive disorder and substance use disorders with medication can often be effective, this has not yet been the subject of many rigorous studies to 225 date. The authors’ conclusions are that the emerging results of recent studies comparing the outcome of major depressive disorder patients with comorbid major depressive disorder and substance use disorders suggest that there are fewer differential effects based on comorbidity than previously anticipated by older assumptions from smaller, less methodologically rigorous studies. Degenhardt and Hall described patterns of co-morbidity between alcohol use and other substance use problems in the Australian population using data from the 1997 National Survey of Mental Health and Well-Being (Degenhardt, Louisa and Hall 2003). Multiple regression analyses examined whether the observed associations between alcohol and other drug use disorders were explained by other variables, including demographic characteristics and neuroticism. They also assessed whether the presence of co-morbid substance use disorders affected treatment seeking for a mental health problem. Alcohol use was related strongly to the use of other substances; those who did not drink alcohol within the past 12 months were less likely to report using tobacco, cannabis, sedatives, stimulants or opiates. Half (51%) of those who were alcohol-dependent were regular tobacco smokers and one-third had used cannabis (32%); 15% reported other drug use; 15% met criteria for a cannabis use disorder and 7% met criteria for another drug use disorder. Co-morbid substance use disorders (sedatives, stimulants or opioids) predicted a high likelihood of seeking treatment for a mental health problem among alcohol-dependent people. Anxiety: impact on treatment of alcohol dependence There are several studies that have addressed the impact of comorbid anxiety disorders on outcomes of treatment for alcohol dependence. Evidence from these is conflicting. Results from some of the earlier studies (Tomasson and Valgum 1996, 1998a, 1998b; Driessen et al. 2001) suggest that comorbidity is associated with worse alcohol treatment outcome, relapse and readmissions. Tomasson’s 1996 study (Tomasson and Valgum 1996) looked at the association between psychopathology and alcohol consumption in a sample of inpatient dependent alcoholics (n = 245) who were examined at intake and at 15 month follow-up. At baseline, men and women with antisocial personality disorder or cognitive impairment consumed more alcohol in the month prior to admission than those without these disorders. In contrast, men with panic disorder drank less than those not so affected. The prognosis for men consuming more than the median amount of alcohol was worse than that of women. However, after controlling for psychiatric distress and alcohol consumption at baseline, the prognosis of women was worse. Women who had stopped drinking had a higher degree of psychiatric distress at follow-up compared with those still drinking at a low level. Among men, panic disorder predicted continued drinking. Psychiatric distress and alcohol consumption at baseline both interacted to predict alcohol consumption at follow-up. Another study by the same authors (Tomasson and Valgum 1998a) was a prospective study over a 28-month period in Iceland using a representative sample (n = 351), examining the association among patients seeking detoxification between comorbid psychopathology and (1) number of lifetime admissions, (2) readmissions for detoxification, and (3) a repeating (revolving-door) pattern of admission (>4 admissions within 30 months). Patients with no comorbid diagnoses had the fewest lifetime admissions. Agoraphobia or panic disorder predicted readmission (odds ratio 5.8) for those with fewer than two prior admissions. For those with 3 or more prior admissions, readmissions were primarily related to polysubstance abuse. The development of the revolving-door pattern was rare (6%) among those with less than 226 4 prior admissions. Among others (27%), it was primarily predicted by polysubstance abuse. Another Tomasson study (Tomasson and Valgum 1998b) produced similar results in that polysubstance use had clear implications for worse outcomes. Controlling for alcohol consumption, polysubstance abuse predicted accidents (odds ratio, OR = 2.9) and fights (OR = 3.9) among men, while phobia (OR = 4.3) and antisocial personality disorder (OR = 3.0) predicted fights in both men and women. A cluster analysis by Driessen et al (2001) examined the association between drinking behaviour and the course of anxiety and depression in 100 alcohol dependent patients with and without these comorbid disorders during the early and late post-detoxification periods. At 6 months, abstinence rates differed significantly between groups: 60.5% non-comorbid vs. 30.5% comorbid anxiety and depression vs. 23.5% anxiety alone). Although not definitive, it appears that comorbid anxiety disorders may be associated with a poorer treatment outcome for alcohol dependence. However, in contrast, Marquerie et al (2006) examined whether the outcome of treatment-seeking alcohol dependent patients with a comorbid phobic disorder was worse than that of similar patients without comorbidity. The probabilities of resuming drinking and relapsing into regular heavy drinking in 81 alcohol-dependent patients with comorbid social phobia or agoraphobia were compared with 88 alcoholdependent patients without anxiety disorders. Their results showed that the risk ratio for the association of phobic disorders with resumption of drinking was 1.05, (p = 0.66) and the adjusted hazard ratio for the association of phobic disorders with a relapse into regular heavy drinking was 1.02 (p = 0.89). The findings of this study did not confirm the idea that alcohol-dependent patients who have undergone treatment are at greater risk of a relapse if they have a comorbid anxiety disorder. No differences were found in abstinence duration or time to relapse into regular heavy drinking between patients with and without comorbid phobic disorders. In addition, Terra et al (2006) in Brazil investigated the impact of social phobia on adherence to and outcomes 6 months following standard alcohol treatment and Alcoholics Anonymous group meetings among alcohol-dependent patients with and without social phobia. Alcohol-dependent patients (n = 300) were interviewed during admission for detoxification and at 3 and 6 months afterwards. At both follow-ups, treatment adherence was low and relapse rates were high among both groups of patients, and no significant differences were seen between the two groups in amount of relapse, adherence to AA, or adherence to psychotherapy. Although the social phobics showed a tendency to be less committed to treatment, or felt less integrated with their AA group, social phobia was not a significant risk factor for alcohol use relapse or loss of adherence to psychotherapy. Treatment Co-occurring mental and substance use disorders use disorders should be managed in parallel with evidence-based treatments provided for both problems (Horsefall et al. 2009). Comorbid mental disorders that do not abate within 3 to 6 weeks of abstinence (or significantly reduced drinking) or that emerge from such a period should be treated 227 according to the clinical practice guidelines for those specific disorders (Tiet and Mausbach 2007). Limited evidence supports integrating the content of treatment (Tiet and Mausbach 2007; Hesse 2009). Patient engagement in treatment planning and goal setting is particularly important in this population of patients. Adequate duration of treatment is essential to successful outcome. Clinicians should emphasise the patient’s education and rising awareness of the interaction between alcohol use and symptoms of mental disorder. Patients with comorbid mood and alcohol use disorder should be regularly assessed and monitored for risk of suicide. Brief interventions Grothues et al (2008b) examined the effectiveness of brief interventions in general practice patients with comorbid anxiety or depressive disorders, because of the recent strong evidence that brief interventions are effective in this setting (Kaner et al. 2007). In an RCT with two intervention groups and one control group, data were collected from 408 patients with alcohol use disorders, at-risk drinking or binge drinking; 88 patients were diagnosed with comorbid anxiety and/or depression. The effectiveness of brief intervention (BI) was assessed at a 12-month follow-up in relation to the presence and absence of comorbidity. Reduction of drinking in six ordered categories (g/alcohol) between baseline and follow-up served as the outcome variable. The brief intervention was significantly effective in reducing drinking in the non-comorbid (p = 0.03) but not in the comorbid patients (p = 0.76). As brief interventions are known to be less effective for dependent drinkers, a larger proportion of dependent drinkers in this group might have limited their effectiveness. Grothues et al also tested the theory that the comorbid patients would seek help more often than the others after brief intervention (Grothues et al. 2008a), using data from patients participating in the above study. At 12-months follow-up, differences in help-seeking for drinking problems were assessed between comorbid and noncomorbid individuals. In a logistic regression analysis, comorbidity (p = 0.01) and previous help seeking (p< 0.001) were found to be positive predictors for utilising formal help. The authors conclude that individuals with problematic drinking and comorbid anxiety or depressive disorders might benefit from more specialised support. Psychosocial interventions Comorbid mental disorders that last beyond a 3 to 6 week period of abstinence (or significantly reduced drinking) or that emerge from such a period should be treated according to the clinical practice guidelines for those specific disorders. The service that provides care should be integrated, but little evidence supports use of specific packages that integrate the content of psychological interventions. The psychosocial treatments discussed in Chapter 6 can be tailored to individual needs. Regardless of whether services follow integrated or parallel models, they should be well coordinated and provide for long-term follow-up (Tiet and Mousebach 2007; Harsefall et al. 2009; Hesse 2009). Depression In one study, cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) was shown to have greater benefits for depressed alcohol dependent patients than standard alcohol treatment combined with relaxation training (Brown et al. 1997). Thirty five participants with a diagnosis of DSM-III-R alcohol dependence and a Beck Depression Inventory score 228 of 10 or greater were recruited from an alcohol and drug treatment service day hospital program at a psychiatric hospital. Women made up 29 percent of the participants in the study. Participants received either CBT or relaxation training with the standard day hospital treatment. Post-treatment, patients in the CBT group had greater reductions in depressive symptoms and a higher percentage of days abstinent than the standard treatment group. At three and six-month follow-up, the CBT group also had significantly better outcomes for total abstinence (47 percent vs. 13 percent), proportion of days abstinent (91 percent vs. 68 percent), and drinks per day (0.46 vs. 5.71). Kavanagh et al (2006) reported that cue exposure and cue exposure with a negative mood induction did not significantly add to CBT, based on the work of Sitharthan in reducing drinking or depression (Sitharthan et al. 1996). The patients in this RCT drank when they were dysphoric, but those with current major depressive episodes were excluded. Anxiety The effect of anxiety management procedures such as relaxation training in more severely dependent drinkers has shown reductions in anxiety but not in drinking. Ormrod and Budd (1991) compared a multi-component cognitive behavioural anxiety management program and a progressive muscle relaxation program with a health education control group for outpatients with anxiety and alcohol problems. Both anxiety management and relaxation training reduced anxiety levels compared with the control group but there was no difference in drinking outcomes. Those who reported that they drank to reduce anxiety were no more likely to show reductions in drinking from an anxiety-reducing intervention than those who reported no such link. The study analysis was, however, limited by its small sample size (n=36). Lehman, Brown and Barlow (1998) report on three cases of people suffering panic disorder and agoraphobia and co-existing alcohol abuse who were treated with CBT for panic disorder and agoraphobia which ignored their alcohol use. At a six month follow-up only one had a diagnosis of alcohol abuse. These patients did not meet criteria for alcohol dependence, and, from their histories, it appears that the two whose alcohol use had declined from diagnostic levels had milder initial drinking patterns. These patients sought help from a specialist anxiety disorders clinic and were motivated to deal with their panic disorder and agoraphobia. Bowen et al. (2000) found that for alcohol dependent patients with comorbid panic disorder, CBT was no better than a standard alcohol treatment program in reducing problem drinking. Participants were randomised to receive either CBT (n = 146) or the standard alcohol treatment (n = 85). Follow-ups were conducted at three, six and twelve months. The CBT treatment consisted of six-two hour group-based panic management training sessions. The article does not describe the standard treatment program, but the authors suggest that it may have contained enough active anxietytreatment ingredients to reduce any differences between it and CBT. One sub-analysis of data reported that CBT delayed relapse for female, alcohol dependent patients with comorbid social phobia. Using data from Project MATCH, patients receiving CBT were compared with those who received 12-step facilitation. Socially phobic women, but not men, who received CBT had a longer time to relapse than matched counterparts in the 12-step group, and for socially phobic males, there was a trend towards better outcomes in the 12-step group (Thevos et al. 2000). 229 In contrast, Bowen, D’Arcy Keegan and Senthilselvan found that for alcohol dependent patients with comorbid panic disorder, CBT was no better than a standard alcohol treatment program in reducing problem drinking (Bowen et al. 2000). Participants were randomised to receive either CBT (n = 146) or the standard alcohol treatment (n = 85). Follow-ups were conducted at three, six and twelve months. The CBT treatment consisted of six-two hour group-based panic management training sessions. Unfortunately the article does not describe the standard treatment program, but the authors suggest that it may have contained enough active anxietytreatment components to reduce any differences between it and CBT. While the sample size was initially large, nearly a third (46) dropped out of the CBT group; however there was still sufficient power to compare groups. There were no statistically significant differences between the groups on anxiety or drinking outcomes. One of the possible explanations given by the authors is the resistance from other staff to introducing the program, and the relatively brief nature of the CBT intervention. They also raise the possibility that the anxiety disorder experienced by people with co-existing substance use disorders may be different from those who have no co-existing problems. One study found that treatment for both alcohol dependence and social phobia produced worse alcohol use outcomes than treatment for alcohol dependence alone (Randall et al. 2001). A total of 93 participants were randomised to either 12 weeks of CBT for alcoholism only or concurrent treatment for both alcohol and social anxiety problems. Participants were followed up after the 12 weeks and again three months after the end of treatment. Whilst both groups improved on alcohol-related and social anxiety outcomes, the dual treatment group had worse outcomes than the alcohol dependence treatment group on three of the four alcohol use measures. They also reported no significant correlation between reductions in drinking and social anxiety measures indicating the processes of change for these two outcomes were unrelated. A lack of integration between the CBT for social phobia and alcohol and resulting patient confusion may account for the lack of additional effects for additional anxiety treatment. The unexpected finding of worse alcohol outcome in the dual treatment group in the above study (Randall et al. 2001) was attributed to several limitations, including individual rather than group treatment when group anxiety treatment is regarded by some as the preferred mode; parallel presentation of two unintegrated manualised treatments, in which alcohol was addressed during the first 45 minutes of each session and social phobia in the next 45 minutes; and a loss of alcohol treatment time in the dual treatment condition. The authors comment that the sample was drawn from “severe population of treatment-seeking alcoholics”. Thus those with higher initial alcohol dependence may not do as well if they are distracted from a focus on their alcohol problems. In addition, the intervention for social phobia was based on an unknown treatment manual (Holmstrom and Thevos, 1993, unpublished) the efficacy of which cannot be determined. An intervention supported by empirical evidence may have yielded different results. Another study of alcohol dependence and social phobia (Schadé et al. 2005) was a randomised controlled trial of 96 abstinent alcohol dependent patients with comorbid anxiety disorder (social phobia or agoraphobia). The patients were randomly assigned to an intensive, comprehensive 32 week psychosocial program, involving 34 months of inpatient groups followed by up to 16 weeks of aftercare, relapseprevention and disulfiram on its own or in combination with an anxiety treatment program comprising CBT and optional pharmacotherapy. The anxiety treatment consisted of 12 weekly 60-minute sessions of cognitive therapy delivered individually 230 at an anxiety clinic; the first six sessions of treatment dealt with alcohol only. The authors found that additional therapy for anxiety significantly reduced anxiety symptoms and avoidance behaviour but did not affect the alcohol relapse rates. While 13 of the 49 (26%) who were allocated to Alcohol only treatment were abstinent for 30 days before each of the three assessments, 18 of the 47 (38%) who were allocated to alcohol and anxiety treatment were similarly abstinent, giving an effect size of 0.13. While this difference was not statistically significant there was only a 23% chance that this size of effect would be detected with this sample size. In addition there was a trend of greater reduction of heavy drinking days in the dual treatment group: the reduction in mean number of days drinking 5 or more drinks from baseline to follow-up, was greater (but not significantly) in the combined (mean reduction 9.4) than in the alcohol-only treatment (mean 7.1). The inclusion of both panic/agoraphobia and social phobia comorbidities with alcohol use disorder leaves the results less clear. Schade et al (2007) report on predictors of outcome in the 34 completers in their combined phobia and alcohol treatment groups. While severity of alcohol dependence did not predict anxiety outcomes, later age of onset for alcohol problems was related to better anxiety outcomes. One quasi-randomised experiment was carried out by Nielsen et al (2007). They theorised that personality-guided treatment for alcohol dependence, an approach that integrates cognitive therapy for addictive behaviours with a strategic intervention for certain personality traits, may be helpful for patients with co-morbid alcohol dependence and personality disorders. They compared patients admitted for alcohol dependence in Denmark (n = 108) and allocated them to either standard inpatient treatment with cognitive therapy for alcohol dependence, or to the personality- guided treatment. Follow-up was conducted by mail at six months after treatment. Personality-guided treatment was associated with better retention, longer time to first relapse, and less time spent drinking post-treatment, although few differences reached statistical significance. Differences in results were mainly found in the subgroup with higher levels of personality disorder. These results suggest that personality-guided treatment is a promising approach, directed at the particular personality disorders and the typical function fulfilled by drinking. This complex instrument is described in the article, but it is available only in Danish. Psychosis and chronic mental disorders A recent update by Cleary et al (2008) was conducted of Ley et al’s (2000) Cochrane Review of Psychosocial Interventions for people with both severe mental illness and substance misuse. They suggest that the evidence is poor at best, with very few studies. They examined 25 RCTs and found no compelling evidence to support one psychosocial treatment over another to reduce substance use or improve mental state for people with a serious mental health problem. We just mention a few positive studies here. Integrating motivational interviewing, CBT and family intervention with routine psychiatric care produced greater benefits for patients with comorbid schizophrenia and substance use disorders than routine psychiatric care alone (Barrowclough et al. 2001).Thirty-six participants and their caregivers were randomised to receive either (i) motivational interviewing, CBT and family intervention plus routine care or (ii) routine care alone. At 12-month follow-up, the integrated treatment group had better general functioning, a reduction in positive symptoms, and an increase in the percentage of days abstinent from alcohol or drugs. 231 Herman et al (2000) randomly assigned patients with a serious mental illness and a substance use disorder to either an integrated mental health and substance use treatment program or to a standard hospital treatment program. A total of 429 participants were randomised at a ratio of 2:1 into either the integrated treatment or the standard short-term treatment ward. Two months after treatment, those receiving integrated treatment had fewer days of alcohol use than those in the standard treatment program. This study also found that patients who had no family involvement, low intentions to stay sober and who had low attendance at self-help groups post-treatment had the worst outcomes. In a more recent study Salloum et (2005) reported on a 24-week double-blind placebo-controlled RCT of divalproex sodium (valproate) for alcohol dependence and bipolar I disorder. In 59 patients, valproate led to significant reductions in alcohol but had no differential effect on bipolar outcomes compared to placebo. Graeber et al (2003) conducted a pilot study with 30 patients who had comorbid schizophrenia and alcohol use disorders. They were randomly assigned to receive either a Motivational Interviewing (MI) or Educational Treatment (ET) intervention with treatment goals of abstinence and/or decreased alcohol use. Subjects were followed up at 4, 8 and 24-weeks after completing the interventions. Outcome measures included number of drinking days, abstinence rates, average blood alcohol concentration and standard ethanol content per drinking day. MI subjects had a significant reduction in drinking days and an increase in abstinence rates when compared to subjects receiving ET. These authors conclude that motivational Interviewing may be a useful adjunct to intervention for individuals with comorbid schizophrenia and alcoholism. Recommendation 10.8 Comorbid mood and anxiety disorders that do not abate within 3 to 6 weeks after alcohol withdrawal is complete should be treated with integrated/concurrent cognitive behavioural therapy for the comorbid disorder. 10.9 Cognitive behavioural therapy, behaviour therapy, cognitive therapy, and interpersonal therapy should be considered for treatment of patients with comorbid mental and alcohol use disorders because of their demonstrated effectiveness in non-comorbid cases. 10.10 Integrating psychosocial treatment for mood disorders and psychoses with psychosocial treatment for alcohol-use disorder may be beneficial in treating patients with such comorbidity. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence B II B Ib D IV Pharmacotherapy Pharmacological treatments have proved effective in treating anxiety, depression and psychosis in patients exhibiting co-occurring mental and alcohol use disorders. However they should not be used as primary treatments of alcohol dependence as 232 there is little evidence that treatment of co-morbid mental disorder alone leads to a reduction of alcohol intake. Depression A meta-analysiss of randomised controlled trials by Nunes and Levin (2004) indicates that antidepressant medication has a modest beneficial effect for patients with combined depressive and substance-use disorders. It is not recommended as a stand-alone treatment. Concurrent treatment directly targeting substance dependence is also indicated. The findings also suggest a clinical approach that begins with an evidence-based psychosocial intervention, followed by antidepressant medication if depression does not improve. Evidence for the capacity of SSRIs to reduce alcohol intake is mixed, and several trials have examined the effectiveness of SSRIs with comorbid patients. Three very early studies (Naranjo et al. 1995; Kabel and Petty 1996) found little advantage for SSRIs over placebo in reducing alcohol consumption in the long term (after 12 weeks); however fluoxetine was found to be effective in reducing depression symptoms (Kranzler et al. 1995). Cornelius et al. (1997) administered fluoxetine or placebo over a 12-week period to a randomised group of 51 alcohol dependent patients diagnosed with major depressive disorder in an inpatient setting. Depression and alcohol consumption ratings were collected weekly during the 12-week period. Both depressive symptoms and total alcohol consumption over the trial were significantly lower in the fluoxetine group than in the placebo group. One 12 week double-blind RCT of patients with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (Labbate, Sonne et al. 2004) investigated the role of sertraline in the treatment of patients with comorbid PTSD and an alcohol use disorder. Patients (n = 93) were stratified into four groups depending on presence or absence of additional anxiety or depressive disorders and evaluated for the effects of comorbidity on PTSD symptoms, depressive symptoms, and drinking behaviours, hypothesising that additional comorbidity would be associated with poorer outcomes. Patients in all four subgroups showed marked and clinically significant improvement in alcohol drinking behaviours over the course of the study (p<0.001). There were, however, no significant differences among groups. All patients showed moderate improvement in Hamilton Depression Rating Scale scores and a clinicianadministered PTSD scale scores. Hence, having additional anxiety or mood disorder comorbidity did not decrease their response to treatment. Gual et al. (2003) performed a double-blind, placebo-controlled randomised trial of sertraline in recently detoxified alcohol-dependent patients with current depressive symptoms. The objectives of the study were to evaluate the efficacy of sertraline at achieving stable abstinence, at ameliorating depressive symptoms and at improving quality of life in these patients. 83 patients received either sertraline (50-150 mg/day) or placebo for 24 weeks. The primary outcome criteria were the rate of relapse into alcohol consumption and the rate of response on the Montgomery and Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS). At the end of treatment, relapse rates were 23.1% in the placebo group and 31.8% in the sertraline group. Responder rates for depression were 38.5% for the placebo group and 44.2% for the sertraline group. There was no significant difference between treatment groups with either variable. However, when patients were stratified into severe (MADRS score >or=26) and moderate (MADRS score <26) depression at inclusion, a significant treatment benefit with sertraline was observed in the former group. Quality of life, determined by the SF-36, improved in both groups, with more benefit observed for the sertraline group 233 on mental health items. Sertraline was well tolerated, and the incidence of adverse events was similar in the two treatment groups. The authors conclude that the explanation for the overall good outcome in both treatment groups and for the inability to demonstrate a clear treatment effect may rest in the clinical features of the patients. In Kranzler’s 2006 study, following a 1-week, single-blind, placebo lead-in period, 328 patients with co-occurring major depressive disorder and alcohol dependence were randomly assigned to receive 10 weeks of treatment with sertraline (at a maximum dose of 200 mg/d) or matching placebo (Kranzler et al. 2006). Randomisation was stratified, based on whether initially elevated scores on the 17-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) declined with cessation of heavy drinking, resulting in a sample of 189 patients with HDRS scores >17 (group A) and 139 patients with HDRS scores < 16 (group B). Results showed that both the depressive symptoms and alcohol consumption decreased substantially over time in both groups. There were no reliable group differences on depressive symptoms or drinking behavior in either group A or B patients. Therefore this study did not provide consistent support for the use of sertraline to treat co-occurring major depressive disorder and alcohol dependence. Yet another study, of 42 subjects with social anxiety and a co-occurring alcohol use disorder, participated in a 16-week, double-blind, placebo-controlled clinical trial to determine the efficacy of paroxetine for social anxiety in patients with co-occurring alcohol problems (Book et al. 2008). Paroxetine proved to be superior to placebo in reducing social anxiety, as measured by the Liebowitz Social Anxiety Scale total and subscale scores and additional measures of social anxiety. However, SSRIS still do not appear to have any significant effects on the reduction of alcohol consumption, either during or subsequent to the trial periods of the studies. Most importantly, Nunes and Levin’s 2004 systematic review and meta-analysis which included 14 double-blinded RCTs and 848 patients to quantify the efficacy of antidepressant medications for treatment of combined depression and substance use disorders (Nunes and Levin 2004) reached the conclusion that antidepressant medication exerts a modest beneficial effect for patients with combined depressiveand substance-use disorders. Their principal measure of effect size was the standardised difference between means on the Hamilton Depression Scale (HDS); the pooled effect size from the random-effects model was 0.38 (95% confidence interval, 0.18-0.58). Heterogeneity of effect on the depression scale across studies was significant (p<0.02), and studies with low placebo response showed larger effects. It is clear from their results that when the medication is effective in treating depression, it helps diminish quantity of substance use; however, sustained abstinence or remission is harder to achieve. They conclude that antidepressant medication is not a stand-alone treatment, and concurrent therapy directly targeting the addiction is also indicated. Torrens et al reviewed the literature for randomised controlled trials on the efficacy of antidepressant drugs in subjects with drug abuse disorders, including alcohol, cocaine, nicotine and opioids, with and without comorbid depression (Torrens et al. 2005). They conducted a meta-analysis of studies that used common evaluation procedures in alcohol, cocaine and opioid dependence. Based on this review, the authors propose some recommendations: (i) the prescription of antidepressants for drug abuse seems only clear for nicotine dependence with or without previous comorbid depression (bupropion and nortryptiline); (ii) in alcohol dependence without 234 comorbid depression the use of any antidepressant seems not justified and the use of antidepressants in alcohol, cocaine or opioid dependence with comorbid depression needs more studies in well-defined samples, adequate doses and duration of treatment to be really conclusive. They also conclude that SSRIs do not seem to offer significant advantages compared with tricyclic drugs in substance abuse disorders. Some noradrenergic antidepressants show promise for reducing relapse or drinking in comorbid patients. For example, nortriptyline (a noradrenergic antidepressant) reduces drinking in patients diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder, but not in those patients with affective/anxiety disorders or those without a comorbid disorder (Powel et al 1995). A controlled trial with desipramine (a tricyclic antidepressant) showed reduced relapse in alcohol dependent patients diagnosed with major depression, but not in those without major depression (Mason et al. 1996). Tricyclic antidepressants should be used with caution in this population due to high risk of poor treatment adherence, abuse and overdose. There are two fairly recent trials of nefazodone. Hernandez-Avila and colleagues (2004) reported a reduction in alcohol use, but no reduction on depression symptoms (Hernandez-Avila et al. 2004). In contrast, Roy-Byrne et al. (2000) reported no effect on depression symptoms, substance use, or craving for alcohol. Ondansetron reduced depression in 161 early onset alcohol dependent patients but not in those 160 with late onset (Anton et al. 2006). The effect on drinking was not reported but there was no relationship between antidepressant effects in early onset drinkers and reductions in drinking. Those whose anxiety reduced during treatment also drank less (Sloan et al. 2003). In addition, Petrakis et al (2006) studied the effects of naltrexone and disulfiram on alcohol dependent veterans with current DSM-IV major depressive disorders, to find that their response was similar to those without current depression; subjects with PTSD had better alcohol outcomes with active medication (naltrexone, disulfiram or the combination) than they did on placebo, while overall psychiatric symptoms of PTSD improved. The results suggest that disulfiram and naltrexone are effective and safe for individuals with PTSD and comorbid alcohol dependence. In conclusion, antidepressants should not be the first line of treatment in patients with comorbid alcohol use disorders, unless there is high level of suicidal ideation, severe depressive symptoms or a history of pre-existing depressive illness. Recommendation 10.11 Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor antidepressants are not recommended as primary therapy to reduce alcohol consumption in patients with comorbid mood or anxiety disorders. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence B II 235 Anxiety Typical pharmacological treatments for anxiety and mood disorders also reduce anxiety and depression when they co-occur with alcohol use disorders. However, treating only a comorbid mental disorder usually does not lead to a reduction of alcohol consumption. Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRIs) reduce symptoms of anxiety in patients with comorbid anxiety and alcohol dependence. They are indicated for treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder and panic attacks in these patients. However, little sound evidence supports their capacity to reduce alcohol intake in the longer-term in patients with comorbid anxiety disorders. Buspirone, an anxiolytic, has been tested with anxious alcohol dependent outpatients with some success. Approximately half of the participants met current diagnostic criteria for an anxiety disorder; others had high levels of anxiety. Participants received either buspirone or placebo over a 12-week period, and weekly, manualised, individual CBT which focused on relapse prevention and skills training. Outcomes were measured at the end of treatment and at a six-month follow-up evaluation. Buspirone patients were more likely to remain in treatment for the 12 weeks, had reduced anxiety, a slower return to heavy alcohol consumption, and fewer drinking days during the follow-up period (Kranzler et al. 1994). Benzodiazepines are not recommended for treatment of comorbid anxiety in patients with alcohol-use disorders due to high risk of dependence and a potential synergistic interaction with alcohol. Recommendation 10.12 Benzodiazepines are not recommended for treatment of comorbid anxiety in patients with alcohol-use disorders due to high risk of dependence and a potential synergistic interaction with alcohol. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence S Psychosis A qualified mental health practitioner usually provides pharmacological treatment of psychotic illness. Atypical antipsychotics appear to be the first line of treatment of comorbid psychotic illness and substance use disorders (Wobrock and Soyka 2009). Limited evidence shows that among schizophrenic patients, two atypical antipsychotics (risperidone and clozapine) may reduce alcohol misuse, smoking, and possibly some other substance misuse (Kavanah et al. 2002). Addition of psychosocial support to pharmacological treatment has been shown to be effective in treatment of patients with comorbid psychosis and alcohol use disorders (Drake 2007). 236 . . Pharmacotherapy combined with psychosocial interventions In an early study, Kranzler et al (1995) tested the hypothesis that fluoxetine, when used in combination with relapse prevention psychotherapy, would reduce relapse frequency and severity for alcohol dependent patients. This was a randomised, placebo-controlled trial of fluoxetine (up to a maximum of 60 mg/day) for 12 weeks in combination with weekly psychotherapy for 101 alcohol-dependent subjects. Outcomes were measured at the end of treatment and 6 months later. Placebotreated subjects were more compliant with the medication regimen and remained in the study longer than fluoxetine-treated subjects. There was significantly less alcohol consumption in both groups during treatment than before treatment, and these effects persisted at follow-up. Although fluoxetine had no significant effects on alcohol consumption, it reduced Hamilton Depression Rating Scale scores more than placebo among subjects with current major depression. The authors concluded that Fluoxetine at a dose of 60 mg/day was not useful for relapse prevention in lowerlevel alcoholics without comorbid depression. In alcoholics with major depression, the drug may reduce depressive symptoms. There have been three placebo-controlled trials of sertraline in combination with psychological therapies (Deas et al. 2000; Moak et al. 2003; Oslin 2005). Deas et al undertook a 12-week double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of sertraline plus cognitive behaviour group therapy (CBT) to preliminarily evaluate the efficacy, safety and tolerability of the serotonin reuptake inhibitor, sertraline, in the treatment of adolescents with a primary depressive disorder and a comorbid alcohol use disorder. Subjects were 10 outpatient treatment-seeking adolescents. Baseline assessment included several psychiatric diagnostic instruments (K-SADS, HAM-D, SCID), and the Time-Line Follow-Back method of assessing alcohol consumption. The HAM-D and the Time-Line Follow-Back were performed weekly thereafter. Both groups showed a significant reduction in depression scores with an average reduction between baseline and endpoint HAM-D score of -9.8 (p< 0.001), although there were no significant group differences. There was an overall reduction in percentage of days drinking (p < 0.02) and in drinks per drinking day (p < 0.002); however, again there were no group differences. Depression patients who responded tended to have higher baseline percentage of drinking days than non-responders (p = 0.08) and the change in HAM-D scores tended to correlate with change in the percentage of drinking days (p = 0.09). These data support the evidence that sertraline is safe and well tolerated in the treatment of adolescents with depression and alcohol dependence. Small sample size and the CBT group therapy, which was given to all subjects, may have limited the group differences. Moak et al (2003) looked at the role of sertraline and CBT for depressed alcohol dependent patients, because while SSRIs have proved effective in the treatment of depression and decreased drinking in some studies, the reported effect of these 237 medications on alcohol intake had not been consistent. Also, at this time most previous studies had not investigated the use of an SSRI in the context of cognitive behavioural therapy, a known efficacious treatment for both alcoholism and depression. They conducted a randomised placebo-controlled 12-week trial of sertraline combined with individual CBT focussing on both alcoholism relapse prevention and depressive symptoms. There were 82 subjects with either primary major depression (70 subjects) or substance-induced mood disorder and at least 1 first-degree relative with an affective disorder (12 subjects). Depression and alcohol consumption outcomes were measured weekly over 12 weeks. Sertraline was well tolerated and all subjects had decreases in both depression and alcohol use during the study compared with baseline. Subjects who received sertraline had fewer drinks per drinking day than subjects who received placebo, but other drinking outcomes were not different between the 2 treatment groups. Treatment with sertraline was associated with less depression at the end of treatment in female subjects compared with females who received placebo. Lower alcohol consumption during the study was also associated with improvements in depression. The findings in this study suggest that sertraline, compared with placebo, may provide some modest benefit in terms of drinking and also may lead to improved depression in female alcohol-dependent subjects. Additionally, alcohol relapse prevention CBT, delivered with modifications that provide specific attention to depression, appeared to be of benefit to subjects, although this is limited by the study design. Oslin (2005) tested the efficacy of naltrexone combined with sertraline for the treatment of older adults with major depression and alcohol dependence. The sample was 74 subjects, age 55 and older, who met criteria for a depressive disorder along with alcohol dependence. All subjects were randomly assigned to 12 weeks of naltrexone 50 mg/day or placebo. All subjects also received sertraline 100 mg/day and individual weekly psychosocial support. Treatment response for alcohol consumption and depression was measured during the 12 weeks of treatment. At baseline, subjects were drinking an average of 10.7 drinks per drinking day. The overall results are encouraging; 42% of the subjects had a remission of their depression and had no drinking relapses during the trial. There was no evidence for an added benefit of naltrexone in combination with sertraline, but there was significant correlation between any alcohol relapse during the trial and poor response to depression treatment. The same group (Oslin et al. 2008) also undertook a 24-week double-blind placebocontrolled study of naltrexone to examine the impact of 3 types of psychosocial treatment combined with either naltrexone or placebo treatment on alcohol dependency over 24 weeks of treatment: (i) Cognitive-Behavioural Therapy (CBT) + medication clinic; (ii) BRENDA (an intervention promoting pharmacotherapy) + medication clinic; and (iii) a medication clinic model with limited therapeutic content. Two hundred and forty alcohol-dependent subjects were also randomly assigned to 1 of 3 psychosocial interventions. All patients were assessed for alcohol use, medication adherence, and adverse events at regularly scheduled research visits. There was a modest treatment effect for the psychosocial condition favouring those subjects randomised to CBT. Intent-to-treat analyses suggested that there was no overall efficacy of naltrexone and no medication by psychosocial intervention interaction. There was a relatively low level of medication adherence (50% adhered) across conditions, and this was associated with poor outcome. Results from this 24week treatment study demonstrate the importance of the psychosocial component in the treatment of alcohol dependence. Moreover, results demonstrate a substantial association between medication adherence and treatment outcomes. 238 Summary The evidence supports the assumption that antidepressants help to relieve depressive symptoms but have little effect on reducing alcohol consumption, unless accompanied and supported by psychosocial treatment. Naltrexone and disulfiram may be safely used to help reduce alcohol consumption in patients with comorbid psychiatric disorders. Psychosocial interventions are recommended for comorbid patients, with or without the addition of pharmacotherapy. Polydrug use and dependence Recommendation Strength of Level of recommendation evidence 10.13 All patients with alcohol-use disorders should be screened for other substance use using quantity–frequency estimates, or through structured screening instruments such as the ASSIST questionnaire. D IV 10.14 Polydrug dependence is typically associated with higher levels of physical, psychiatric and psychosocial comorbidity that should be addressed in comprehensive treatment plans. D IV 10.15 Use of other drugs can be affected by cessation or reduction in alcohol use, and treatment plans should address use of alcohol and other drugs together. D IV 10.16 Patients undergoing polydrug withdrawal need close monitoring, increased psychosocial care, and increased medication. Consider specialist advice. D IV 10.17 Fixed diazepam dosing regimens are preferred for managing alcohol withdrawal in the context of other drug withdrawal, with regular review of dosing regimens. Withdrawal scales (such as CIWA-Ar) need careful interpretation in patients withdrawing from multiple drugs, and should not be used to direct medication. D IV 10.18 Patients dependent on alcohol and benzodiazepines or opioids should be stabilised on substitution medications while undergoing alcohol withdrawal. D IV 239 Introduction There is published evidence from several countries that other substances; legal, illicit or prescribed, are commonly used in combination with alcohol (Martin et al. 1996; Barrett et al. 2006; Brecht et al. 2008; McCabe et al. 2006), but little has been published about the influence of polydrug use on alcohol withdrawal (Degenhardt and Dunn 2008). The last 40 years has seen a rapid expansion in the availability, range and popularity of psychoactive drugs, with lifetime experience of their use almost normalised as behaviour. A recent study of 3000 second year University students in the UK reported that over 50 % reported lifetime use of cannabis, with a third having used other drugs such as LSD or ecstasy (Webb et al. 1996). Although historically demonised by society, the true image of the average consumer of illicit substances is more benign. Drug policies driven by political will and social expectancies have compounded significantly the harm associated with their use. Polydrug users and alcohol While simultaneous polysubstance use is a common phenomenon among nonalcoholic populations, alcohol is most commonly one of the substances used in combination with other drugs, discounting tobacco (Barrett et al. 2006). The authors of this article recruited 149 drug-using university students to complete structured interviews about their use of various substances. For each substance ever used, participants provided details about the type, order and amount of all substances coadministered during its most recent administration. Alcohol, tobacco and cannabis were frequently taken with each other and with all other substances. Chi-squared tests revealed that when alcohol was consumed in combination with any of cannabis, psilocybin, MDMA, cocaine, amphetamines, or the prescription stimulant drug methylphenidate (p<0.01) or LSD (p<0.05), alcohol use preceded the administration of the other substance. Paired samples t-tests revealed that when alcohol was used with cocaine (p <0.01) or the stimulant, methylphenidate, (p <0.05) it was ingested in greater quantities than when used in their absence. Patterns of cannabis use were not systematically related to other substances. Tobacco use was demonstrated to increase relative to 'straight/sober' smoking rates when used with alcohol, cannabis, psilocybin, MDMA, cocaine, amphetamine (p<0.001), LSD (p<0.01) or methylphenidate (p<0.05). An earlier study of 3075 UK university students (Webb et al. 1996) showed that while 11% were non-drinkers, 61% of men and 48% of the women exceeded recommended limits of 14 units per week for women and 21 for men. Hazardous drinking (> 36 units per week for women, > 51 for men) was reported by 15% of the drinkers. Binge drinking was declared by 28% of drinkers. 60% of the men and 55% of the women reported having used cannabis once or twice and 20% of the sample reported regular cannabis use (weekly or more often). Experience with other illicit drugs was reported by 33% of the sample, most commonly LSD (lysergic acid diethylamide), amphetamines, ecstasy, and amyl nitrate which had each been used by 13-18% of students, and 34% of these had used several drugs. Problem drinkers and polydrug use Studying polydrug use among problem drinkers, Martin et al (1996) found that a majority (61%) of their 212 subjects reported simultaneous polydrug use (SPU) during the assessment interval of 120 days prior to admission for treatment, using Timeline Follow-back. Subjects who reported SPU were disproportionately younger, male, and unmarried, compared with those who did not report such use. 240 The most common alcohol/drug combinations were alcohol with cocaine (60% of subjects who reported SPU), alcohol with marijuana (51% of SPU subjects), and alcohol with sedatives (31% of SPU subjects). The most common three-drug combination was alcohol, cocaine, and marijuana (23% of SPU subjects). Alcohol use and drug use were associated at the event level, significantly more than associations predicted by the base rates of the individual behaviours. Their results suggest that polydrug use is an important focus for assessment and intervention in alcohol treatment programs. Population studies One US study examined rates of remission from substance-use disorders based on type of disorder (abuse vs. dependence), type of substance (alcohol vs. other drug), and polysubstance involvement (alcohol or drug vs. alcohol and drug) (Karno et al. 2008). Participants in the National Epidemiologic Survey on Alcohol and Related Conditions were included if they met criteria for a prior-to-past-year alcohol- and/ or drug-use disorder (n = 12,297). Odds ratios were computed to examine differences in the rate of remission as of the past year. Individuals with a diagnosis of alcohol misuse (as opposed to dependence) were more likely to have recovered than dependent drinkers. Individuals with both alcohol- and drug-use disorders were less likely to have recovered, compared with those with only one substance disorder. No differences were observed in remission rates between those with an alcohol-use disorder and those with a drug-use disorder. These findings support prior research in suggesting a worse prognosis for individuals with a diagnosis of dependence and problematic use of both alcohol and drugs. The 1997 National Survey of Mental Health and Well-Being in Australia (Degenhardt et al. 2003) showed that alcohol use was related strongly to the use of other substances. Those who did not report alcohol use within the past 12 months were less likely to report using tobacco, cannabis, sedatives, stimulants or opiates. Higher rates again were observed among those with alcohol use disorders: half (51%) of those who were alcohol-dependent were regular tobacco smokers, one-third had used cannabis (32%); 15% reported other drug use; 15% met criteria for a cannabis use disorder and 7% met criteria for another drug use disorder. Also in Australia, Degenhardt’s paper about GHB and ketamine use, derived from a subsection of respondents (aged 14-39 years only) to the 2004 Australian Household Drug Survey (Australian Institute of Health and Welfare 2005), supplies some information about other drug use. While the prevalence of GHB and ketamine use was quite low, they found high rates of polydrug use among illicit drug users (Degenhardt and Dunn 2008). The most commonly used drug was alcohol, used by 95% of the total surveyed population (n =11,595), with 28% of the total consuming more than 11 drinks in one day in the previous year, and 49% of 115 GHB-users and 57% of ketamine-users consuming 11 drinks or more in one day in the previous year. This may suggest either that use of GHB or ketamine lowers personal resistance to drinking alcohol, or conversely it opposes its effects (thereby reducing intoxication, as do amphetamines, for example). However, no evidence is available on this aspect. Comorbidities and cognitive impairment The comorbidities most commonly associated with polysubstance use, as demonstrated in at least one study (Skinstad and Swain 2001) include anxiety and mood disorders, followed by personality disorders. However, cognitive deficits are the characteristics most often associated with alcohol dependence. 241 Cognitive deficits were assessed in one study of dependent alcoholics (Durazzo et al. 2008). The goal of Durazzo’s study was to investigate the influence of several common co-morbid medical conditions (primarily hypertension and hepatitis C), psychiatric (primarily unipolar mood and anxiety disorders), and substance use (primarily psychostimulant and cannabis) disorders, and chronic cigarette smoking on the neurocognitive functioning in short-term abstinent, treatment-seeking individuals with an alcohol use disorder. Seventy-five alcohol-dependent participants (average 51 years; 72 male) completed comprehensive neurocognitive testing after approximately 1 month of abstinence. Smoking status (smoker/nonsmoker) and age were significant independent predictors of cognitive efficiency, general intelligence, postural stability, processing speed, and visuospatial memory after adjustment for age norms and also controlling for estimated verbal intelligence, education, alcohol consumption, and medical, psychiatric, and substance-misuse co-morbidities. Results indicated that chronic smoking accounted for a significant portion of the variance in the neurocognitive performance of this cohort. Several tests of visuospatial cognition are also known to be sensitive to chronic alcohol abuse. Beatty et al (1997) examined spatial cognition in a sample of 94 alcohol-dependent people, compared to controls, and looked for any influences on effects resulting from the use of other drugs. Groups that had misused only alcohol, alcohol and marijuana, or alcohol and multiple other drugs (A/P) were compared to the controls recruited from the community. Testing occurred after at least 3 weeks of treatment for the drug abusers. On all measures of visuospatial perception and construction, and on all measures of visuospatial learning and memory, all groups of alcoholics were impaired relative to controls, but there were no significant differences among the groups that misused alcohol. By contrast, on all measures of geographical knowledge that required more detailed place localisation, subjects in the A/P group were impaired, while subjects who misused only alcohol or alcohol and marijuana performed as well as controls. Their results seem to indicate that alcohol is the most disabling substance, and those who also use cannabis and other drugs have no more impairments than those associated with their alcohol use. Another study of polydrug users tested for associated cognitive deficits (Nixon et al. 1998). Healthy control subjects (n=63) were compared with 40 individuals who misused alcohol only, 24 individuals who misused alcohol and stimulants, 16 individuals who misused alcohol and marijuana, and 41 individuals who misused alcohol and depressants/narcotics, or alcohol and two or more other drugs. All subjects were administered tests of short-term memory, spatial orientation, visualspatial perception, and problem-solving. Results from the study indicated that control subjects and individuals who misused both alcohol and marijuana performed significantly better than the other groups on most tests. Gender was not significant. These results were not attributable to differences on measures of affect, or the years of chronic alcohol consumption. Summary The above studies all indicate that any assessment of alcohol use or misuse should include questioning on the use of other drugs. 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Waern, M 2003, Alcohol dependence and misuse in elderly suicides. Alcohol Alcohol 38(3): 249-254. Webb, E, Ashton CH, Kelly P et al. 1996, Alcohol and drug use in UK university students. Lancet 348(9032): 922-925. Wobrock T and Soyka M 2009, Pharmacotherapy of patients with schizophrenia and substance abuse. Expert Opin Pharmacother 10(3): 353-367. 249 250 Chapter 11 Aftercare and long-term follow-up Recommendation 11.1 Long-term follow-up of patients following an intensive treatment program is recommended as part of a comprehensive treatment plan, reflecting the chronic relapse possibility of alcohol dependence. Strength of Level of recommendation evidence D IV A number of studies have examined various methods of continuing care for patients with alcohol use disorders. For example, a telephone intervention was tested for acceptability and feasibility by Burleson and Kaminer for short-term follow-up of adolescents (Burleson and Kaminer 2007). Four therapists and 43 adolescents who completed a series of manualised guided follow-up telephone interventions responded favourably and consistently to a questionnaire concerning its acceptability, feasibility, and confidentiality. Three other studies tested the effect of continuing care by telephone on abstinence rates (Rus-Makovec and Cebasek-Travnik 2008; McKay et al. 2004; McKay et al. 2005; Horng and Chueh 2004). The first study showed a positive influence on quality of life in the telephone follow-up group but had no effect on abstinence rates at the long term (Rus-Makovec and Cebasek-Travnik 2008). Positive indicators of therapy success (abstinence or decrease in drinking, stable social relations, and more positive self-evaluation of well-being) were found in 53% of patients at 3 months, 44% at 6 months, and 31% at 12 months in the telephone group. However, groups did not significantly differ in abstinence level (telephone group=28%, control group=24%) at the 24-month mark. There were significant differences in measure of well-being, with the telephone group scoring higher on self-assessment of psychological health, self-evaluation of financial status, and general quality of life. The McKay studies showed more positive effects. The 2004 publication (McKay et al. 2004) looked at continuing care for 359 substance dependent (alcohol and/or cocaine) patients, using a randomised procedure, comparing a telephone-based monitoring and brief counselling intervention (TEL) with 2 face-to-face interventions, relapse prevention (RP) and standard 12-step group counselling. Self-report, collateral, and biological measures of alcohol and cocaine use were obtained over a 12-month follow-up. The treatment groups did not differ on abstinence-related outcomes; however, in participants solely with alcohol dependence (n = 91), the telephone group (TEL) improved more than did the 12-step group; heavy drinking days decreased from 40-50% prior to follow-up care, to 5% of days at 3 months and 8-18% at 12 months. At 24-month follow-up the results were similar but were no longer significant between the groups (McKay et al. 2005). However the TEL group did not deteriorate faster, as might have been expected, over time; they still had higher rates of abstinence than the 12-step group, and had lower GGT levels than the RP group, at the 24- month mark. It seems apparent from this study that telephone-based counselling following an intensive stabilisation period is as effective as more intensive face-to-face treatments and is more cost-effective. 251 A smaller study of patients (34 in each group) recruited from a psychiatric centre (Horng et al. 2004) used a quasi-experimental pre-post control group design to compare abstinence rates, re-admission rates, alcohol consumption, addiction severity and social adjustment between the two groups. The experimental group received regular telephone counselling at 1, 3, 5, 9, and 13 weeks after discharge. These sessions were 30 minutes to one hour in length. All outcome measures showed significant differences between the groups at 3 month follow-up. Readmissions in the control group were 38% while in the experimental group was 9%; both groups decreased alcohol consumption; the experimental group’s average alcohol consumption was 28g compared to the control group’s average 119g; however the control group had a higher level of consumption at baseline. The authors conclude that telephone counselling is highly recommended to help reduce readmission, to improve social functioning, and to reduce alcohol consumption postdischarge for alcoholism. They do recognise that the experimental group was more highly motivated to change, as participants were not randomly selected, and that it may have been difficult to continue beyond 3 months due to mobility of their patients. This limits the generaliseability of their results. Another study of follow-up focussed on improving compliance with aftercare treatment by 74 patients on disulfiram, following their admission to an inpatient program (Neto et al. 2007). This study focussed on attendance at aftercare groups, psychiatric appointments, and attendance at AA. The results, using intention-to-treat analysis, show that 39% of patients were abstinent at 6 months; the largest percentage of relapses occurred at 3 months. However 80% were abstinent at 30 days and the relapse rate slowed, with the median time to first relapse at 120 days. A closer inspection showed that 47% of patients had not attended their monthly outpatient psychiatric appointment, 20% had not attended the fortnightly aftercare groups, and 34% had not attended the AA sessions. This matter of compliance would seem to be major factor in the success (or failure) of such a program. A randomised controlled trial of adolescents with alcohol use disorders (Kaminer et al. 2008) also looked at the effect of outpatient aftercare on abstinence rates, frequency of drinking, and cannabis use (n = 177). Participants were assigned to 5 face-to-face sessions (active aftercare), brief telephone follow-up, or no contact. All had completed 9 weekly cognitive behavioural therapy group sessions to address their alcohol problems. Results at three months showed the likelihood of relapse increased significantly in the no contact condition, although all groups relapsed to a degree. The differential treatments were more effective for females; there was a significant change in abstinence rate for girls from baseline to follow-up in the active aftercare 5-session group. The results are not clearly presented in the paper; however the active aftercare produced better outcomes than did the control condition. Youths enrolled in active aftercare showed significantly fewer drinking days (p =.044) and fewer heavy drinking days (p =.035) per month relative to controls. The authors conclude that, in general, active aftercare was effective in slowing the expected relapse to higher frequency and amount of alcohol use; however, maintenance of treatment gains was only achieved for females. Other studies reinforce the evidence for longer treatment and longer follow-up having more beneficial results for patients. Moos and Moos looked at the influence of duration and intensity of treatment on 473 previously untreated patients with alcohol use disorders (Moos and Moos 2003). They found that, compared with patients who did not enter treatment immediately, individuals who started treatment relatively quickly and who obtained a longer duration of treatment had better short- and longterm alcohol-related outcomes and better short-term social functioning. Patients were 252 followed up at 1-year, 3-year and 8-year intervals. It was found that patients who underwent a longer duration of additional treatment had better alcohol-related outcomes than others who had no additional treatment but, in those who delayed treatment entry, the duration of treatment was not associated with improved outcomes. In general, the intensity of treatment was not related to better outcomes; rather the length of treatment was the deciding factor, with 68% being abstinent at an 8-year interval after 53 or more weeks of continuing additional treatment. The message from this particular study seems to be – start treatment immediately and keep in continued contact (at least once weekly) for at least one year. Two other longitudinal studies followed patients over 16 and 20 years. The first one (Ilgen et al. 2008) surveyed 420 US patients who had not received treatment for alcohol use disorders at baseline and 1 year and reassessed them at 8 and 16 years. It is not stated whether any treatment was delivered to these people; it appears to be a naturalistic study. In the 6 months prior to the 1-year assessment, 36% reported abstinence from alcohol, 48% reported drinking problems, and 16% reported nonproblem drinking. At each follow up, between 16% and 21% of the entire sample were problem-free. Those who were problem-free at 1 year had reported, at baseline, fewer days of intoxication, fewer drinks per drinking day, fewer alcohol dependence symptoms and alcohol-related problems, less depression, and more adaptive coping mechanisms than did the abstinent and problem-drinking participants. In addition, 48% of participants who were problem-free at 1 year continued to report positive outcomes (either no problem drinking or abstinence) throughout the long-term followup, whereas 77% of those who were abstinent at 1 year reported the same positive outcomes throughout the same period. Gual et al’s 20-year follow-up (Gual et al. 2009) covered 850 patients in 8 addiction centres in Catalonia, evaluating long-term outcomes after outpatient treatment. This treatment focussed on abstinence, building on awareness of alcohol dependence as an illness, the acquisition of new lifestyle habits, and improvement of quality of life, delivered over a 2-year period. Participants were followed up at 1, 5 and 10 years, and then 20 years, using quantity-frequency measures of alcohol consumption over the previous 12 months. All information was collected at interview with either a psychiatrist or clinical psychologist from the initial study centres. Data were also collected about chronic illnesses, medications, hospital visits, alcohol-related accidents, employment, financial or legal problems, or disability; psychosocial stress was assessed using DSM-III-R Axis IV. Results show that 50% were abstinent at year 5, 42% at year 10 and 33% of the original sample at year 20 (32% were deceased by that time, and 10% lost to followup). Women had better outcomes, with 84% abstinent at 20 years, compared to 66% of men; mortality rates were significantly different (22% of women compared to 34.5% men; p = 0.03). A factor that is recognised by the authors is that heavy drinkers had double the mortality rates than controlled drinkers or abstainers, with 5-year drinking status predicting mortality rates at 10 and 20 years, thus abstinence rates remain high in the surviving cohort (70% of those who answered questions at 20 years). Recommendation 11.2 A range of clinical strategies should be used to reduce alcohol-related harm in people who continue to drink heavily and resist treatment. These include attending to medical, psychiatric, social and medico-legal issues, maintaining social supports, and facilitating Strength of Level of recommendation evidence D IV 253 reduction in alcohol intake. The authors of one of the studies above also examined the personal and social resources that predicted positive alcohol-related outcomes in that particular study, following up 461 patients (Moos and Moos 2007). They found that in general, social learning (self-efficacy and approach coping), health and financial resources, association with Alcoholics Anonymous, and bonding with family members, friends, and co-workers predicted better alcohol-related and psychosocial outcomes. In particular, more self-confidence and financial resources at one year independently predicted less 3-year alcohol consumption and fewer drinking problems. Better health and participation in AA also predicted fewer drinking problems, while more selfconfidence and more health and financial resources predicted less depression. The social learning and health and financial resources also tended to predict better 8-year outcomes. The authors conclude that the application of social learning theory, economic behaviour, and social control theories may help to identify predictors of remission. If these are tackled at the same time as treatment for alcohol problems in isolation, better results may be achieved. Other factors affecting positive outcomes include the length of initial stay in treatment and attendance at 12-step programs. One such study looked at gender differences in seven year outcomes among older adults (Satre et al. 2007). The sample was 25 women and 59 men aged 55 and over who took part in one of two treatment options in the same abstinence-based program. Average length of stay in treatment, including after care of up to one year, was 142.6 days among women and 80.1 days among men. At seven years, 76% of women reported abstinence in the prior 30 days while 56% of men did so. Also at 7 years, more frequent attendance at 12-step programs (mean 3.9 meetings in previous 30 days) was significantly associated with abstinence in the same period. Abstinent people also reported attending significantly more meetings in the prior 12 months (mean 42.8) vs a mean of 2.3 meetings for non-abstinent participants (p = 0.005). The authors consider that, given the projected rate of growth in the older population, the influential factors for successful treatment of older people for alcohol problems need to be carefully assessed and implemented. There are several other studies that report on various dimensions that influence continuity of care. One article (Schaefer et al. 2008) looked at staff practices and engagement in care, and whether they mediated or moderated the interaction between the patient and treatment factors. They compared the 18 different intensive outpatient substance use disorder programs that varied in their continuity of care practices, in which 429 patients were enrolled. Methadone maintenance programs were excluded; however most patients (82%) had an alcohol and drug problem. They found that abstinence was more likely to occur when the patient’s discharge plan specified at least one follow-up care appointment per week, appointments were arranged before discharge, drug-free or sober living arrangements were available, and when patients were engaged for a longer time (up to 6 months, in this case) in continuing care. They also state that psychiatric or clinic use in the year prior to entry for treatment, completion of treatment, access to transport for appointments, and more patient motivation for continuing care also predicted abstinence. The follow-up rate was 78% and almost all patients were male (98%); therefore this study may not be generalisable to females. Average age was 47 (standard deviation, SD = 7.9) years; 58% were divorced or separated, and at discharge 25% were employed. A pilot study by Passetti et al (Passetti et al. 2008) examined community treatment methods to engage alcohol-dependent patients in treatment. They compared two clinics which differed in the degree of assertiveness with which they tried to engage people with a history of repeat presentation for alcohol problems. The usual care 254 clinic sent patients an opt-in letter and they had to telephone for an appointment. The flexible access clinic operated a walk-in service; caseloads were smaller, and the staff telephoned patients reminding them to attend a session. Failure to attend was followed up. Staff role composition was similar at each clinic. Results of this study show that retention in treatment of recidivist patients was more likely in the flexible care clinic, with 35% completing withdrawal compared to 26% of usual care patients (p<0.05), and 23% entering aftercare compared to 14% (p<0.02). However, as patients were not randomly assigned, selection bias may have occurred. A small quasi-experimental study (n = 40) evaluated whether social reinforcement would further improve aftercare attendance and treatment outcome (Lash et al. 2004). Socila reinforcement in this case was personal verbal recognition by the therapist, a certificate of attendance at the 6th visit, their name on an honour roll and a medallion on completion of 8 sessions. At 6-month follow-up, patients who received social reinforcement had less alcohol use, and were also more likely to be abstinent form alcohol than the standard care patients (76% versus 40%; p = 0.036). They were also more likely to attend aftercare for a longer time (up to 12 months). This seems a very simple strategy, but it was effective in encouraging attendance and reduction in alcohol use. Randomisation was not possible due to patients’ personal schedules but the two groups were very similar on demographic variables, diagnostic criteria or Addiction Severity Index scores at baseline. However it must be noted that drug use was not affected by the social reinforcement technique; it was only effective for alcohol. Another method of keeping patients engaged in treatment is presented in a paper by Collins et al. (2007). These authors describe three case studies of patients for whom email was utilised between patient and physician as an adjunct to the ongoing treatment for alcohol or substance dependency. They applied this method to selected patients who were at higher risk due to previous relapse or to complacency, and they were invited to communicate with their addiction specialists. They have continued for between 6 months and 5 years. It comes through from these selected studies that the support gained by patients was highly effective in aiding their continuance and perseverance in recovery programs. Patients using this method (or selected to use this method) are commonly high-functioning professionals who might otherwise feel isolated and who benefit from the constant responses of their provider. They are accustomed to self-analysis, able to express themselves clearly and are willing to email daily. For one patient it also served as a map of progress. 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