| Literature DB >> 32552804 |
Nazmus Saquib1, Ahmad Mamoun Rajab2, Juliann Saquib2, AbdulRahman AlMazrou2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Substance use disorders (SUD) are mental health conditions that arise from chronic drug use. There is an increased recognition of this problem in Saudi Arabia.Entities:
Keywords: Quality; Review; Saudi Arabia; Substance use disorder
Year: 2020 PMID: 32552804 PMCID: PMC7301978 DOI: 10.1186/s13011-020-00285-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy ISSN: 1747-597X
Fig. 1Flowchart of the eligible trials
General description of the included SUD studies (n = 21)
| Author/ Year | Design | Location | Sample size | Sample age | Sample source, Gender: | SUD diagnostic criteria | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alkhalaf et al., 2019 [ | Cross sectional (records) | Al-Amal Hospital, Dammam | 2048 1993 ( 2013 ( | Older than 15 | Patients (M) | Not mentioned | Significant differences were observed in type of addiction and socio-demographics (age, criminal record, educational level, employment status, relapse, and type of substance abused) between 1993 and 2013. |
| Ibrahim et al., 2018 [ | Cross sectional | Psychiatric Rehabilitation Center (PRC), Buraidah | 612 | (10–80) 73% were 21–40 years | Patients (M) | Not mentioned | Majority were polysubstance users (60%); amphetamine users (24%). No significant association between positive family history of substance abuse or mental and type of substance abused. |
| Bassiony, 2008 [ | Cross sectional | Al-Amal hospital in Jeddah | 101 | (14–61) | Patients (M) | DSM-IV | Adolescents started using drugs at a younger age than adults ( |
| AbuMadini et al., 2008 [ | Cross sectional (records) | Al-Amal Hospital, Dammam | 12,743 | (83%) were 20–39 years. | Patients (M) | ICD-9 &10 | Use increased for amphetamines and cannabis, decreased for heroin, sedatives and volatile substances and remained stable for alcohol. |
| Abalkhail, 2001 [ | Cross sectional (Comparative study) | Al-Amal hospital, Jeddah | 303 | Mean (SD) 30.4 (0.4) heroin, 29.4 (1.0) non-heroin | Patients (M) | Not mentioned | Heroin addicts were seven times more likely to develop hepatitis B or C infection than non-heroin addicts. |
| Iqbal, 2000 [ | Cross sectional (records) | Voluntary detoxification unit, Jeddah | 799 | (17–66) 83% were 20–39 and 68% were under 35. | Patients (M) | DSM-IV | Heroin was the choice of substance (63%) abuse; 14% were poly drug users. Among heroin users, 91% were injecting it and 69% had Hepatitis C. |
| al-Nahedh, 1999 [ | Cross sectional | Al-Amal Hospital, Riyadh | 160 | (20–60) (Mean 29.5) | Not mentioned | Age, unemployment, peer pressure and family and social stresses were significantly associated with repeated admissions. | |
| Hafeiz, 1995 [ | Cross sectional | Al-Amal Hospital, Dammam. | 116 | (20–61) 83% were 21–32 year | Patients (M) | DSMIIIR | 84% used heroin either alone or in combination with other drugs. 31% used alcohol, 26% used cannabis, and 10% used stimulants. Heroin user were younger and less likely poly-drug abusers than alcoholics. |
| Osman, 1992 [ | Cross sectional | Jeddah Psychiatric Hospital | 485 | (15–65) Mean 29.04 (8.67) 52% were 20–29. | Patients (M, F) (F 2.7%, n = 13) | Substance abuse predefined criteria | 43.5% were heroin addicts and 16.1% alcohol abusers; 14.6% were poly-drug abusers. Reasons for drug use: curiosity and peer influence and traveling abroad. 4.9% had criminal history. |
| Qureshi, 1992 [ | Cross sectional | Buraidah Mental Hospital | 240 | – | Patients and controls (M) | DSM III R | Single and/or disruptive marital life, poor social class, unskilled job and/or unemployment and financial issues were significantly associated with drug abusers as contrast to control group ( |
| Omer and Ezzat, 1999 [ | Cross sectional (Description of two studies) | Al- Amal hospital, Jeddah | Study A: 43 cases of volatile and similar number control from opiate patients Study B: 50, no comparison control | Older than 15 years | Patients (M) | DSM III R for study A, Not specified for study B | The majority of admitted volatile substance abusers were young, single and unemployed. The two main abused substances were paint and glue. Volatile abusers had no difference in age distribution as compared to the control group of heroin addicts but scored more in the psychosis scale. |
| Iqbal, 2001 [ | Cross sectional | Al- Amal hospital, Jeddah | 302 | > 18 years | adult with substance dependence (M) | DSM-IV | On admission, 57.14% expressed no desire to complete the program. Unaided abstinence was reported by 42.71% and post-treatment abstinence by 57.52%. |
| Alshomrani, 2015 [ | Cross sectional | Alamal Complex for Mental Health in Riyadh, Addiction center. | 357 | (13–71) Mean (SD) 40 (8.6) | Inpatients heroin users (M) | Not mentioned | Prevalence of HBV surface antigen was 7.7%, antibodies for HCV 77.8%, and HIV 9.8%. A significant association was found between positive HCV and positive HIV tests. |
| Alzahrani AJ et al., 2009 [ | Cross sectional | Local rehabilitation center, Dammam | 344 | – | intravenous drug users (M) | Not mentioned | The prevalence of HBV and HCV was 12% ( Mixed genomes of HBV, HCV and TTV were observed. |
| Alzahrani AJ 2008 [ | Case-Control | Local rehabilitation center, Dammam | Cases ( Control matched blood donors ( | Mean (SD) 31 (2.2) | Patients followed up or admitted to a drug rehabilitation hospital (M) | Not mentioned | The seroprevalence of HBsAg was 6.1%, HCV antibodies was 37.7% ( 39% (116) were positive by the new HCV Ag/Ab combination ELISA assay, from which 95% have detectable HCV core Ag. |
| Alzahrani AJ 2005 [ | Cross sectional | Local rehabilitation center, Dammam | 201 | Mean 33 | Patients enrolled in drug rehabilitation (M) | Not mentioned | The seroprevalence of HBsAg was 5.9%, the HCV antibodies was 35.6%, and HIV antibodies was 0.99%. Drug users were found to be responsible for approximately 60% of the new cases of HCV infection. |
| Njoh and Zimmo, 1997 [ | Cross sectional | Al-Amal Hospital, Jeddah | 2628 serum samples | – | Patients admitted for drug dependence (M) | DSM-IV | The overall HIV prevalence of 0.15% (1.5 persons per 1000). |
| Almarhabi et al., 2018 [ | Cross sectional | Al-Amal hospital addiction center in Jeddah | 101 | Mean (SD) 33.28 (9.46) | Substance users admitted for rehabilitation (M) | Not mentioned | 93% drove under the influence of an abused substance. Current substance use: Amphetamines (38.6%), Cannabis (24.8%). Amphetamines and alcohol were the choice of drug for initiation |
| Khalawi et al., 2017 [ | Case control study | Al-Amal Hospital, Jeddah | 207 cases 416 controls | Mean (SD) Cases 29.9 (10.9), Controls 33.7 (10.9) | Cases: substance users; (F) Controls: visitors at the primary health center (F) | Not mentioned | Significant risk factors for substance use: presence of family conflicts, substance abuse by husband, substance abuse by peers, substance abuse by siblings, sexual abuse, low family income ( |
| Youssef et al., 2016 [ | Case control study | Al-Baha Psychiatric Hospital | 239 cases, 117 controls | Cases: 18–45 years 31.35 (6.25) Controls 31.66 (7.84) | Cases: patients admitted for substance use; Control: Non drug users (M) | DSM-IV-TR | Amphetamine (87.7%) and cannabis (70.49%) were the most abused substances. Depression and suicide probability are common consequences of substance abuse. |
| Chinnian et al., 1994 [ | Case-Control | De-Addiction Hospital, Riyadh | 320 experimental ( 70 medical control 70 normal control | (18–35) Mean: heroin (25.27), alcohol (30.58), control (25.97) | Cases: heroin or alcohol abusers Control 1: patients from general medical trauma wards Control 2: Normal undergraduate students at the Islamic University | Not mentioned | Alcohol abusers scored higher than all the other groups in terms of psychoticism, neuroticism, and anxiety. With the lie scale, the substance-abusing group as a whole recorded significantly higher scores than the controls. |
| Alzahrani H et al., 2015 [ | Cross sectional | public health hospital in Jeddah | 165 | (18–50) 38% were 31–40 years | Inpatients admitted for substance use disorders (M) | Not mentioned | High prevalence of depression (95.2%) among substance users (100% in heroin, 80% in amphetamine users). Prevalence and comorbidity were significantly associated with duration of substance abuse. |
| Khalil, 2011 [ | Cross sectional | Al-Amal Hospital of Substance Abuse in Dammam | 175 | (18–60) Mean (SD) 34.7 (10.2) | Patients from the detoxification and rehabilitation wards (M) | DSM-IV | The Arabic version of the University of Rhode Island Change Assessment (URICA) showed good psychometric properties, supporting the validity and reliability of the four factors of the scale. |
Quality assessment of the included cross-sectional studies using the adopted Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS)
| Selection | Comparability | Outcome | Total | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author | Representativeness of the sample (⋆) | Sample size (⋆) | Non-respondents (⋆) | Ascertainment of the exposure (risk factor) (⋆⋆) | (⋆⋆) | Assessment of outcome (⋆⋆) | Statistical test (⋆) | (*10) |
| Alkhalaf et al., 2019 [ | * | – | – | – | – | * | * | 3 |
| Ibrahim et al., 2018 [ | * | – | – | ** | – | – | 3 | |
| Almarhabi et al., 2018 [ | * | * | – | – | ** | * | 6 | |
| Alshomrani, 2015 [ | * | – | – | * | ** | * | 5 | |
| Khalil, 2011 [ | – | – | – | ** | ** | * | 5 | |
| Alzahrani AJ et al., 2009 [ | – | – | – | – | ** | – | 2 | |
| Bassiony, 2008 [ | – | – | – | ** | * | * | 4 | |
| Alzahrani AJ, 2005 [ | * | – | – | – | ** | – | 3 | |
| AbuMadini et al., 2008 [ | * | – | – | ** | ** | * | 6 | |
| Abalkhail, 2001 [ | * | – | – | – | ** | * | 4 | |
| Iqbal, 2000 [ | * | – | – | ** | ** | – | 5 | |
| al-Nahedh, 1999 [ | * | – | – | – | * | * | 3 | |
| Njoh and Zimmo, 1997 [ | * | – | – | ** | ** | – | 5 | |
| Hafeiz, 1995 [ | * | – | – | ** | * | – | 4 | |
| Osman, 1992 [ | * | – | – | * | ** | – | 4 | |
| Qureshi, 1992 [ | – | – | – | ** | ** | * | 6 | |
| Iqbal, 2001 [ | – | – | – | ** | * | – | 3 | |
| Alzahrani H et al., 2015 [ | * | * | – | – | ** | * | 6 | |
| Omer and Ezzat, 1999 [ | – | – | – | * | – | * | * | 3 |
Quality assessment of the included case-control studies using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale (NOS)
| Selection | Comparability/ confounders | Exposure | Total | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Author | Adequacy of case definition (⋆) | Representativeness of the cases (⋆) | Selection of controls (⋆) | Definition of controls (⋆) | Comparability of cases and controls (⋆⋆) | Ascertainment of the exposure (⋆) | Similarity of ascertainment between cases and controls (⋆) | Non-response rate (⋆) | (*9) |
| Khalawi et al., 2017 [ | – | * | – | – | – | * | – | 2 | |
| Youssef et al., 2016 [ | * | * | – | * | – | * | – | 5 | |
| Alzahrani AJ, 2008 [ | – | * | – | – | – | * | – | 3 | |
| Chinnian et al., 1994 [ | – | * | – | * | – | * | – | 4 | |