| Literature DB >> 27455958 |
Maryam Moeeni1,2, Emran M Razaghi3, Koen Ponnet4,5,6,7, Fatemeh Torabi8, Seyed Ali Shafiee9, Tahereh Pashaei10,11.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to determine which predictors influence the risk of relapse among a cohort of amphetamine-type substance (ATS) users in Iran.Entities:
Keywords: ATS dependence; Matrix model; Relapse; Survival analysis; Treatment program
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27455958 PMCID: PMC4960917 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-016-0973-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Demographic and psychological characteristics of the sample
| Patients included ( | Patients excluded ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Mean/% |
| Mean/% |
| |
| Demographic variables | |||||
| Age at the time of admission | 128 | 30.10 | 39 | 30.00 | .99b |
| High school graduate | |||||
| Yes | 78 | 60.93 % | 24 | 61.53 % | .99a |
| No | 50 | 39.06 % | 15 | 38.46 % | |
| Marital status | .89a | ||||
| Single | 56 | 43.75 % | 18 | 46.15 % | |
| Married | 45 | 35.16 % | 12 | 30.77 % | |
| Divorced | 27 | 21.09 % | 9 | 23.08 % | |
| Employment status | .95a | ||||
| Full time | 56 | 43.75 % | 16 | 41.03 % | |
| Part time | 24 | 18.75 % | 8 | 20.51 % | |
| Unemployed | 48 | 37.50 % | 15 | 38.46 % | |
| Psychological variables | |||||
| Aggression | .99a | ||||
| Yes | 73 | 57.03 % | 22 | 56.41 % | |
| No | 55 | 42.97 % | 17 | 43.59 % | |
| Criminal offences | .79a | ||||
| Yes | 36 | 28.15 % | 12 | 30.77 % | |
| No | 92 | 71.88 % | 28 | 71.80 % | |
| Casual sex | .99a | ||||
| Yes | 100 | 78.13 % | 29 | 74.36 % | |
| No | 28 | 21.88 % | 10 | 25.64 % | |
Note
achi-square test; bt-test
Drug related characteristics of the sample
| Patients included ( | Patients excluded ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Mean/% |
| Mean/% |
| |
| Age at first time of drug use | 128 | 22.00 | 39 | 21.32 | .68b |
| Duration of Addiction (in years) | 128 | 5.20 | 39 | 5.25 | .99b |
| Duration of amphetamines dependence (in years) | 128 | 2.20 | 39 | 2.02 | .79b |
| Family support | .99a | ||||
| Yes | 32 | 25.00 % | 9 | 23.08 % | |
| No | 96 | 75.00 % | 30 | 76.92 % | |
| Having (at least) an addict in the family | .79a | ||||
| Yes | 46 | 35.94 % | 13 | 33.33 % | |
| No | 82 | 64.06 % | 26 | 66.67 % | |
| Injection experience | .59a | ||||
| Yes | 26 | 20.31 % | 9 | 23.08 % | |
| No | 102 | 79.69 % | 30 | 76.92 % | |
| Poly substance abuse | .63a | ||||
| Yes | 110 | 85.94 % | 32 | 82.05 % | |
| No | 18 | 14.06 % | 7 | 17.95 % | |
| Amphetamines dependence as the primary diagnosis | .99a | ||||
| Yes | 113 | 88.29 % | 34 | 87.18 % | |
| No | 18 | 11.72 % | 5 | 12.82 % | |
| Treatment experience | .99a | ||||
| Yes | 95 | 74.22 % | 29 | 74.36 % | |
| No | 33 | 25.78 % | 10 | 25.64 % | |
| A history of residential treatment in camps | .76a | ||||
| Yes | 78 | 60.94 % | 22 | 56.41 % | |
| No | 50 | 39.06 % | 17 | 43.59 % | |
Note.
achi-square test; bt-test
Fig. 1Kaplan-Meier estimate of time to relapse
Test of proportional hazard assumption
| Variable | rho | chi2 | df | prob > chi2 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Matrix treatment program (in sessions) | 0.05 | 0.61 | 1 | 0. 44 |
| Casual sex | −0.07 | 0.33 | 1 | 0.57 |
| Criminal offences | 0.15 | 1.46 | 1 | 0.23 |
| Duration of amphetamines dependence (in years) | 0.01 | 0.00 | 1 | 0.96 |
| Family support | 0.01 | 0.00 | 1 | 0.95 |
| Global test | 1.96 | 5 | 0.86 |
Fig. 2log-log survival estimates against the log of time
Cox PH model of stimulants relapse predictors
| Variable | Hazard ratio | Robust SE | Confidence of interval (95 %) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Matrix treatment program (in sessions) | .82 | .04 | .75 .9 | 0.000 |
| Casual sex | ||||
| Yes | 2.03 | .65 | 1.09 3.79 | 0.025 |
| No | - | - | - - | - |
| Criminal offences | ||||
| Yes | 1.59 | .35 | 1.04 2.45 | 0.033 |
| No | - | - | - - | - |
| Duration of Amphetamines dependence (in years) | 1.02 | .01 | 1.01 1.03 | 0.001 |
| Family support | ||||
| Yes | .52 | .12 | .33 .80 | 0.003 |
| No | - | - | - - | - |