| Literature DB >> 30147392 |
Sterling M McPherson1,2,3,4, Ekaterina Burduli1,2,3,4,5, Crystal Lederhos Smith1,2,3,4, Jalene Herron2,6, Oladunni Oluwoye2,6, Katherine Hirchak2,3,4, Michael F Orr1,2,3,4,5, Michael G McDonell1,2,3,4,5, John M Roll1,2,3,4,5.
Abstract
This review of contingency management (CM; the behavior-modification method of providing reinforcement in exchange for objective evidence of a desired behavior) for the treatment of substance-use disorders (SUDs) begins by describing the origins of CM and how it has come to be most commonly used during the treatment of SUDs. Our core objective is to review, describe, and discuss three ongoing critical advancements in CM. We review key emerging areas wherein CM will likely have an impact. In total, we qualitatively reviewed 31 studies in a systematic fashion after searching PubMed and Google Scholar. We then describe and highlight CM investigations across three broad themes: adapting CM for underserved populations, CM with experimental technologies, and optimizing CM for personalized interventions. Technological innovations that allow for mobile delivery of reinforcers in exchange for objective evidence of a desired behavior will likely expand the possible applications of CM throughout the SUD-treatment domain and into therapeutically related areas (eg, serious mental illness). When this mobile technology is coupled with new, easy-to-utilize biomarkers, the adaptation for individual goal setting and delivery of CM-based SUD treatment in hard-to-reach places (eg, rural locations) can have a sustained impact on communities most affected by these disorders. In conclusion, there is still much to be done, not only technologically but also in convincing policy makers to adopt this well-established, cost-effective, and evidence-based method of behavior modification.Entities:
Keywords: contingency management; drug- and alcohol-use biomarkers; novel substance-use treatment technologies; substance-use disorder treatment
Year: 2018 PMID: 30147392 PMCID: PMC6095117 DOI: 10.2147/SAR.S138439
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse Rehabil ISSN: 1179-8467
Literature reviewed for the “Adapting contingency management for underserved populations” section
| Study | Age (years) | n | SUD type | CM type | CM duration (weeks) | Primary outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Angelo et al | 43.5 (SD 9.31) | 96 | Stimulant-use disorder | RCT, usual CM | 12 | Stimulant-negative urine test, psychiatric severity, and rates of outpatient-treatment utilization |
| Barry et al | Age reported by ethnicity: | 191 | Stimulant-use disorder | RCT, usual CM | 12 | CM participants had longer continuous cocaine abstinence and submitted more negative urine samples for cocaine; ethnicity not related to treatment outcomes, and there was no significant interaction between treatment and ethnicity |
| Bellack et al | 42.7 (SD 7.10) | 129 | Drug (cocaine, heroin, cannabis)-dependence disorder | Usual CM | 24 | Urinalysis results from biweekly treatment sessions |
| Helmus et al | 43.7 (SD 7.1) | 20 | Any SUD | A-B-A, usual CM | 12 | CM participants had higher rates of attendance than UC, but no effect on alcohol use |
| Kelly et al | 40.2 (SD 10.4) | 160 | Substance abuse and comorbid psychiatric disorders | Usual CM | 6 | CM participants attended more treatment days compared to UC group |
| McDonell et al | 45.38 (SD 10.20) | 79 | Alcohol-use disorder | RCT using EtG urine tests, usual CM | 12 | CM participants 3.1 times more likely to submit EtG-negative urine tests compared to those in the control group |
| McDonell et al | CM 43.01 (SD 9.27) | 176 | Stimulant-use disorder | RCT using urine tests, usual CM | 12 | CM participants significantly less likely to complete treatment period than those assigned to control group (42% vs 65%); CM participants 2.4 times more likely to submit stimulant-negative urine test during treatment |
| McDonell et al | 41.8 (SD 9.2) | 126 | Stimulant-use disorder | RCT using carbon monoxide breath samples, usual CM | 12 | CM participants 79% more likely to submit a smoking-negative breath sample compared to UC group |
| Miguel et al | CM 35.3 (SD 8.7) | 65 | Stimulant-use disorder | RCT using urine and breath samples, usual CM | 12 | CM participants more likely to remain in treatment and submit negative crack-cocaine, alcohol, and THC samples compared to UC participants |
| Oluwoye et al | 45.38 (SD 10.2) | 79 | Alcohol-use disorder | RCT using EtG urine tests, usual CM | 12 | Heavy drinkers with major depression more likely than those with schizophrenia-spectrum and bipolar disorders to submit EtG-positive urine samples during treatment |
| Peirce et al | CM 42.5 (SD 8.9) | 388 | Stimulant-use disorder | RCT using EtG urine tests, usual CM | 12 | Total number of stimulant- and alcohol-negative samples provided and longest duration of abstinence, retention, and counseling attendance |
| Ries et al | Not reported | 41 | Any SUD | RCT, usual CM | 27 | CM condition used alcohol for few weeks; no significant differences between groups for drug use |
Abbreviations: SUD, substance-use disorder; CM, contingency management; RCT, randomized controlled trial; EtG, ethyl glucuronide; EtG, ethyl glucuronide.
Literature reviewed for the “Leveraging contingency management with experimental technologies” section
| Study | Age (years) | n | SUD type | CM type | CM duration (weeks) | Primary outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alessi and Petry | Monitoring-only group 44.5 (SD 14.3) | 30 | Frequent alcohol users who were not dependent | Escalating reinforcement with reset contingency | 4 | Percentage of negative breath-alcohol tests and longest duration of abstinence both significantly greater with CM |
| Dallery et al | 36 (SD not listed) | 94 | Cigarette smokers | Escalating reinforcement with bonuses | 7 | Significant differences found in point prevalence between abstinent-contingent and submission-contingent groups at 4 weeks |
| Reynolds et al | Abstinence-contingent group 16.58 (SD 1.54) | 62 | Cigarette smokers | Five-phase shaping design, escalating reinforcement with bonuses | 5 | Active-treatment condition reduced breath-CO levels significantly more than controls |
| Budney et al | 35.9 (SD 10.5) | 75 | Cannabis-use disorder | Escalating reinforcement with bonuses | 10 | Both interventions containing CM (therapist and computer) had longer abstinence than non-CM intervention; therapist and computer interventions did not differ from each other in longest abstinence |
| Barnett et al | 32 (SD 9.9) | 13 | Heavy drinkers | Escalating reinforcement | 2 | Self-reports of percentage of days abstinent, drinks per week, transdermal measures of average and peak transdermal alcohol concentration, and area under the curve declined significantly in weeks 2–3 |
| Alessi et al | 42 (SD 10) | 100 | Alcohol-use disorder | Not detailed in manuscript | 12 | 84% of participants provided 12 weeks of data, and 96% of SCRAM bracelets returned fully intact; 94 equipment tampers occurred, affecting 2% of monitoring days; 56% (67) of tampers coincided with detected drinking |
| Raiff et al | 45 (SD not reported) | 3 | Non-SUD (diabetes mellitus) | Escalating reinforcement with bonus and reset contingencies | 4–5 | Significant increase in precision with which participants took their daily doses in designated time window |
| Sorensen et al | 43.3 (SD 7.55) | 66 | Methadone maintenance | RCT, escalating reinforcement with reset contingency | 12 | Significant mean adherence differences between voucher and comparison groups |
Abbreviations: SUD, substance-use disorder; CM, contingency management; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SCRAM, secure continuous remote alcohol monitor.
Literature reviewed for the “Optimizing contingency management for personalized interventions” section
| Study | Age (years) | n | SUD type | CM type | CM duration (weeks) | Primary outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Packer et al | 30 (SD 9.98) | 103 | Tobacco-use disorder | Varying durations of CM | 1 | High-magnitude reinforcement provided immediately, but in incremental amounts was associated with longer intervals to relapse during treatment in comparison with high-magnitude reinforcement provided in a single lump sum after a delay; low rates of responding in the low-magnitude conditions made interpretation of the impact of delay in those conditions difficult |
| Roll et al | 32 (SD 9.53) | 118 | Methamphetamine-use disorder | Fishbowl CM with 1, 2, or 4 months CM | 16 | Participants more likely to remain abstinent through the 16-week trial as CM duration increased; longer CM doses more effective at maintaining methamphetamine abstinence |
| Higgins et al | Voucher group 31.8 (SD 3.9) | 40 | Cocaine-use disorder | Voucher exchangeable for retail items | 12 | Average durations of continuous cocaine abstinence presented via urinalysis during treatment significantly longer for group with vouchers vs group without vouchers ( |
| Stitzer et al | 32.7 | 34 | Tobacco-use disorder | Standard CM | 4 | Participants who earned more during cut-down period had greater levels of absence and length of absence |
| Higgins et al | Contingent group 32.6 (SD 5.7) | 39 | Opioid-use disorder | Standard CM with a 3-week methadone-stabilization period | 8 | Contingent group presented significantly lower opiate-positive urine samples during weeks 8–11 (14% positive) than the noncontingent (38% positive) or control (50% positive) groups |
| Robles et al | 40.73 (SD not reported) | 48 | Opioid-use disorder | Voucher exchangeable for retail items | 22 | Participants given CM for attendance or abstinence; participants in CM for abstinence had significantly longer periods of opiate abstinence and lower rates of cocaine use |
| Budney et al | 32 (SD 8.5) | 60 | Cannabis-use disorder | Voucher exchangeable for retail items | 14 | Treatment-seeking individuals saw significantly more weeks of continuous cannabis abstinence when given CM in conjunction with MBT |
| Kadden et al | 32.7(SD 9.6) | 240 | Cannabis-use disorder | Standard CM paired with either CBT and motivational enhancement or CM only | 9 | Those in the two CM groups provided significantly more urine-negative samples than therapies alone; only CM had higher rates of abstinence at 1 year posttreatment; CM with CBT + MET had higher follow-up rates |
| Lamb et al | 37 (SD not reported) | 102 | Tobacco-use disorder | Escalating reinforcement reset Treatments delivering incentives for breath COs at or below the 10th, 30th, 50th, or 70th percentile of recent CO values | 12 | Shaping successful in decreasing CO values across groups; all participants in all groups reached desired CO level at least once |
| Lamb et al | 38 (SD 11.9) | 71 | Tobacco-use disorder | Escalating reinforcement with reset Participants received incentives for providing breath samples with CO levels that were <4 ppm or that were at or better than the best 60th percentile within a four or nine-visit window | 12 | CO levels substantially reduced and readiness-to-quit measure increased in both groups; however, more individuals in four-sample window group achieved CO <4 ppm, indicating recent abstinence; these individuals did so more rapidly and for a greater number of visits |
| Lamb et al | 39.2 (SD 11.7) | 146 | Tobacco-use disorder | Escalating schedule with reset Standard CM or CM shaping CM shaped abstinence by providing incentives for CO levels lower than the seven lowest of the participant’s last nine samples or <4 ppm | 12 | Participants were determined to be hard to treat or easier to treat (reached absence during baseline). Participants who were in easier-to-treat and standard CM did significantly better than those who were harder to treat; his difference did not exist in the CM-shaping group |
Abbreviations: SUD, substance-use disorder; CM, contingency management; CBT, cognitive behavioral therapy; MET, motivational enhancement therapy.