Background and Aims: Alcohol consumption is an inherent feature of alcohol use disorder (AUD), and drinking characteristics may be diagnostically informative. This study had three aims: (1) to examine the classification accuracy of several drinking quantity/frequency indicators in a large representative sample of U.S. community adults; (2) to extend the findings to a clinical sample of adults; and (3) to examine potential sex differences. Design: In cross-sectional epidemiological and clinical datasets, receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were used to evaluate diagnostic classification using area under the curve (AUC), accuracy, sensitivity, specificity, positive predictive value (PPV), and negative predictive value (NPV). Measurements: Classifiers included measures of quantity/frequency (e.g., drinks/drinking day, largest drinks/drinking day, number of drinking days, and heavy drinking frequency). The clinical criterion (reference standard) was AUD diagnostic status per structured clinical interview (community sample) or a symptom checklist (clinical sample). Setting and Participants: Two samples were examined: a large, nationally representative random sample of U.S. community adults who reported past-year drinking (N=25,778, AUD=20%) and a clinical sample from a Canadian mental health and addictions inpatient treatment centre (N=1,341, AUD=82%). Findings: All drinking indicators performed much better than chance at classifying AUD (AUCs=0.60-0.92, ps<.0001). Heavy drinking frequency indicators performed optimally in both the community (AUCs=0.78-0.87; accuracy=0.72-0.80) and clinical (AUC=0.85-0.92; accuracy =0.77-0.89) samples. Collectively, the most discriminating drinking behaviors were number of heavy drinking episodes and exceeding drinking low-risk guidelines. No substantive sex differences in optimal cut-offs or variable performance were observed. Conclusions: Quantitative drinking indices performed well at classifying AUD in both a nationally representative and large inpatient sample, robustly identifying AUD at rates much better than chance and above accepted benchmarks, with limited differences by sex. These findings broadly support the potential clinical utility of quantitative drinking indicators, such as routine patient assessment via electronic medical records.
Competing Interest StatementJames MacKillop is a principal in BEAM Diagnostics, Inc. and has served as a consultant to Clairvoyant Therapeutics. No other authors have disclosures.
Funding StatementFunding to support this work was provided by the Peter Boris Chair in Addictions Research, a Canada Research Chair in Translational Addiction Research (CRC-2020-00170), and Homewood Research Institute, a registered charity.
Author DeclarationsI confirm all relevant ethical guidelines have been followed, and any necessary IRB and/or ethics committee approvals have been obtained.
Yes
The details of the IRB/oversight body that provided approval or exemption for the research described are given below:
The Regional Centre for Excellence in Ethics, Research Ethics Board in Guelph, Ontario, Canada gave ethical approval for this work (protocol #19-8).
I confirm that all necessary patient/participant consent has been obtained and the appropriate institutional forms have been archived, and that any patient/participant/sample identifiers included were not known to anyone (e.g., hospital staff, patients or participants themselves) outside the research group so cannot be used to identify individuals.
Yes
I understand that all clinical trials and any other prospective interventional studies must be registered with an ICMJE-approved registry, such as ClinicalTrials.gov. I confirm that any such study reported in the manuscript has been registered and the trial registration ID is provided (note: if posting a prospective study registered retrospectively, please provide a statement in the trial ID field explaining why the study was not registered in advance).
Yes
I have followed all appropriate research reporting guidelines, such as any relevant EQUATOR Network research reporting checklist(s) and other pertinent material, if applicable.
Yes
Data AvailabilityData produced in the present study may be made available upon reasonable request to the authors
留言 (0)