探讨性别在老年酒精使用障碍治疗结果中的作用。

IF 2.7 Q2 SUBSTANCE ABUSE
Jeppe Sig Juelsgaard Tryggedsson, Kjeld Andersen, Silke Behrendt, Michael P Bogenschutz, Gerhard Buehringer, Anette Søgaard Nielsen
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:老年人中的酒精使用障碍(AUD),特别是在治疗结果的性别差异方面,仍未得到充分探讨。我们的目的是探讨老年人AUD治疗结果的性别差异,重点关注1年期间的连续测量(例如,每天饮酒)和二元测量(例如,禁欲)。方法:我们分析了来自一项多国随机对照试验的数据,该试验涉及693名诊断为DSM-5 AUD的老年人(60岁以上)。参与者在丹麦、德国和美国接受了动机增强疗法和社区强化方法。参与者分别在基线、4周、12周、26周和52周后进行评估。采用多水平混合效应线性和逻辑回归,并根据社会人口统计学和基线饮酒特征进行调整。结果:男性和女性在所有结果上都有显著的改善。在基线时,与男性相比,女性报告的饮酒量减少0.75 /天,饮酒量减少1.33 /饮酒日,低血液酒精含量(BAC)的几率降低50% (OR = 0.50; p)。结论:在DSM-5 AUD诊断的老年人中,治疗导致了男女之间实质性和持续的改善。虽然女性在减少饮酒方面表现得不那么有利,但调整后的估计值大致相当。鉴于女性对酒精的生理脆弱性增加,这可能并不意味着同样的临床风险。尽管如此,研究结果支持了有意义的治疗效果的潜力,而不考虑性别。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Exploring the role of gender on treatment outcomes in older adults with alcohol use disorder.

Background: Alcohol use disorder (AUD) among older adults, particularly with respect to gender differences in treatment outcomes, remains underexplored. Our objective was to explore gender differences in AUD treatment outcomes among older adults, focusing on continuous measures (e.g., drinks per day) and binary measures (e.g., abstinence) across a 1-year period.

Methods: We analyzed data from a multinational randomized controlled trial involving 693 older adults (60+) diagnosed with DSM-5 AUD. Participants received motivational enhancement therapy and the community reinforcement approach, across sites in Denmark, Germany, and the United States. Participants were assessed at baseline and after 4, 12, 26, and 52 weeks. Multilevel mixed-effects linear and logistic regressions were used, adjusted for sociodemographic and baseline drinking characteristics.

Results: Both men and women showed significant improvements across all outcomes. At baseline, females reported 0.75 fewer drinks/day, 1.33 fewer drinks/drinking day, and 50% lower odds of low blood alcohol content (BAC) compared to males (OR = 0.50; p < 0.05). Gender-time interactions showed smaller reductions in females' drinks per day and drinks per drinking day (p < 0.05), resulting in similar drinking levels at follow-ups. No gender differences were found at any time points for percent days abstinent and percent heavy drinking days (p ≥ 0.05). A significant gender-time interaction was found for percent days abstinent (p = 0.04), but no consistent direction was observed across time points. For abstinence and no heavy drinking, no gender differences were found (p ≥ 0.05). No interactions between gender and time were found for any binary outcome (p ≥ 0.05).

Conclusions: Among older adults with DSM-5 AUD diagnosis, treatment led to substantial and sustained improvements across genders. While women showed less favorable drinking reductions, adjusted estimates were broadly comparable. Given women's increased physiological vulnerability to alcohol, this may not imply equivalent clinical risk. Still, findings support the potential for meaningful treatment benefits regardless of gender.

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CiteScore
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