| Literature DB >> 32906716 |
Lee Seng Esmond Seow1, Wei Jie Ong1, Aditi Hombali1, P V AshaRani1, Mythily Subramaniam1.
Abstract
The experience of craving via exposure to drug-related cues often leads to relapse in drug users. This study consolidated existing empirical evidences of cue reactivity to methamphetamine to provide an overview of current literature and to inform the directions for future research. The best practice methodological framework for conducting scoping review by Arkey and O'Malley was adopted. Studies that have used a cue paradigm or reported on cue reactivity in persons with a history of methamphetamine use were included. Databases such as Medline, EMBASE, PsycINFO and CINAHL were searched using key terms, in addition to citation check and hand search. The search resulted in a total of 32 original research articles published between 2006 to 2020. Three main themes with regard to cue reactivity were identified and synthesized: (1) effects of cue exposure, (2) individual factors associated with cue reactivity, and (3) strategies that modulate craving or reactivity to cues. Exposure to methamphetamine-associated cues elicits significant craving and other autonomic reactivity. Evidence suggests that drug cue reactivity is strongly associated with indices of drug use and other individual-specific factors. Future studies should focus on high quality studies to support evidence-based interventions for reducing cue reactivity and to examine cue reactivity as an outcome measure.Entities:
Keywords: cue exposure; cue reactivity; cue-induced craving; methamphetamine use disorder
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32906716 PMCID: PMC7558044 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph17186504
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Summary of search strategy.
Figure 2Key themes of cue reactivity or areas of cue paradigm applications identified from primary studies in methamphetamine research through the scoping review. n = number of available studies.
Details of included studies that looked at the effects of drug cue exposure and factors associated with change in cravings upon cue exposure.
| Authors (Year) | Study Sample & Context | Drug Cue(s) | Methods | Outcome(s) of Interest | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Culbertson et al. (2010) | 17 non-treatment seeking METH users; USA | METH virtual reality (METH-VR) of virtual avatars and drug-use animations of smoking, injecting, snorting) created using online gaming platform; METH-video that included professional actors/actresses administering METH followed by in vivo mock METH paraphernalia | Participants were asked to complete four test sessions: (1) METH-VR, (2) neutral-VR, (3) METH-video and (4) neutral-video in a counter-balanced fashion. | - Subjective ratings of urges to use | - METH-VR cue condition elicited greater increases in subjective cravings (VAS) compared to all neutral cue conditions. |
| Ekhtiari et al. (2010) | 50 outpatients who met DSM-IV-TR criteria for METH dependence in the past 6 months; Iran | Cues were classified into 4 main themes (drug, instruments 1, accompanying cues 2 and act of abuse) and photos were taken for each cue | 50 photos with high | - Self-reported craving intensity on VAS (0-100) when presented with cues | - Differences in cue-induced craving (VAS) in CICT 50 and CICT 10 were not associated with age, education, income, marital status, employment and sexual activity in the past 30 days prior to study entry. |
| Tolliver et al. (2010) | 43 treatment and non-treatment seeking participants who met DSM-IV criteria for METH dependence in the past 6 months; USA | (1) 30–35 still photographs | Participants were exposed to the three cue modalities in a counter-balanced fashion. Clinical and demographic correlates of METH craving were also explored. | - Subjective craving on WSRS using 100 mm VAS anchored with adjectival modifiers (not at all. mildly, moderately, extremely) | - Relative to baseline, subjective craving (WSRS-VAS) was increased by all three cue modalities to a similar extent. |
| Saladin et al. (2012) | 40 treatment and non-treatment seeking participants who met DSM-IV criteria for METH dependence; USA | (1) 30–35 still photographs | The relationship | - METH craving on WSRS using 100 mm VAS anchored with adjectival modifiers (not at all, mildly, moderately, extremely) after each cue presentation | - Toronto Alexithymia Scale factor 1 (a measure of difficulty identifying feelings) scores measured at baseline were found to positively associate with cue-elicited craving (WSRS-VAS). |
| Tolliver et al. (2012) | 30 participants who met DSM-IV criteria for METH dependence in the past 6 months and 30 controls; USA | Public domain video footage with sequential 15–30 s segments of individuals or actors manufacturing, procuring, or using METH through various routes of administration | Participants were instructed to perform an auditory dual task cognitive test while viewing METH-related and neutral video cues in a counter-balanced fashion. | - Subjective craving on WSRS recorded before and after each video cue presentation | - Both response errors and inhibition errors increased significantly in METH participants while control participants exhibited only slightly increased rates of response errors upon exposure to cues. |
| Yin et al. (2012) | 26 METH users who had not received recent treatment and had not taken the drug at least 24 h before the experiment and 26 gender-matched controls; China | Not clearly described | Participants viewed METH cues vs neutral cues vs happy and sad (control cues) stimuli based on subjective evaluations of the emotional valence of the pictures via a block design in a balanced order. | - Activation in specific affect-related regions of the brain (ACC and frontal gyrus) were recorded with fMRI while exposure to picture cues | - Robust activation of the ACC gyrus was evident in patients watching METH cues, but not in those watching sad or happy pictures or in healthy participants under any condition. |
| Wang et al. (2013) | 139 inpatients who had a history of DSM-IV METH dependence with varying abstinence period: 6 d ( | (1) 32 photographs of individuals procuring and | Participants underwent a cue session where either neutral cues or METH cues were presented first in a randomized manner. | - Subjective craving on VAS (1–10, “not at all” to “extremely high”)- Physiological responses such as heart rate and blood pressure- All measures were recorded before and after each cue presentation | - Cue-induced craving (VAS) increased until 3 months of abstinence and decreased at 6 months and 1 year of abstinence. |
| Lopez et al. (2015); Study 1 | 21 participants who met criteria for METH abuse or dependence as assessed by SCID-IV; USA | 84 images and 42 short videos from online sources, documentaries and feature films depicting METH use | Participants were grouped by their preferred route of administration (intranasal vs. smoking) and were shown visual stimuli- food (control cues) vs. people smoking METH vs. people snorting METH vs. ’substance only’ with no specific route of administration. | - Level of craving on a single-item scale (1–5 rating scale, “not at all” to “very much”) assessed after presentation of picture cues | - Participants who preferred to smoke METH reported significantly stronger craving for smoking stimuli, whereas those who preferred the intranasal route reported stronger craving for intranasal stimuli. |
| Malcolm et al. (2016) | 9 non-treatment seeking males who met DSM-IV-TR criteria for current METH dependence and 9 gender-, race- and alcohol use-matched controls; USA | Sequence of slides consisting of meth use (IV, nasal, smoking) pictures | Participants viewed visual cues of METH, neutral objects (matched for color and hue) and rest (crosshair on a neutral background) conditions in a randomized presentation. | - Activation of brain circuitry recorded with fMRI while presented with cues | - METH participants rated their craving for METH cues significantly higher and had increased brain activation in the ventral striatum and medial frontal cortex compared to controls in response to METH cues (vs. neutral cues). |
| Shahmohammadi et al. (2016) | 10 pure METH users for at least 6 months and 10 age- and gender-matched controls; Iran | Color photographs depicted on a black background containing drug associated cues and drugs (including with face and hand) | Participants viewed a series of images with neutral and METH-related content presented in fixed pre-randomized order | - Event-related potentials recordings while presented with cues | - Drug abusers exhibited significant positive activities in response to METH-related cues, which are most pronounced as P300 peaks in time range from about 300 to 600 ms and were maximal in channels FP1, FPz, FP2 and F8. |
| Huang et al. (2018) | 28 participants who met criteria for METH dependence as assessed by SCID-IV after long term (>16 months) drug rehabilitation and 27 age-matched controls; China | 30 images that fall into METH sample, drug paraphernalia and simulation scenarios of drug use shot by researchers | Participants viewed visual cues of METH, sexual (control cues), and neutral cues with order of images, blocks within epoch, and the epochs all randomly presented. | - Patterns of cortical activation recorded with fMRI while presented with cues | - Elevated activity in the bilateral mPFC and right lateral posterior cingulate cortex in response to METH cues was observed among those with METH use disorder compared to controls. |
| Wang, Shen and Wu. (2018) | 61 male patients who met DSM-IV criteria for METH dependence and had completed more than 1 month of forced detoxification and 45 age-matched male controls; China | A METH-related virtual social environment created VR video depicting a real-life story of men/women who are using METH together and who invite the observers to take METH | Participants first went through 8-min resting state, followed by 8-min viewing of the METH-cue video. | - Cue-induced cravings on VAS (0-10, “no craving at all” to “extremely strong craving”) assessed immediately after the cue | - Cue-induced condition elicited a larger HRV in patients with METH dependence, whereas a reverse pattern of HRV change was observed in the controls. |
| Grodin, Courtney and Ray. (2019) | 15 non-treatment seeking participants with current METH use disorder; USA | 32 METH cue pictures consisting of drug, drug pipes, and drug use | Participants completed METH Infusion in the laboratory before completing two runs of cue task, which included 4 blocks of METH cues and 4 blocks of neutral cues presented pseudo randomly. Relationship between METH-induced craving and neural responses to METH cues was explored. | - Neural responses or patterns of brain activation recorded by fMRI while presented with cues | - METH cues activated a widespread set of regions, including mesocorticolimbic regions, such as the ventral and dorsal striatum, and ventromedial prefrontal cortex, compared to neutral cues. |
| Liang et al. (2019) | 52 males who met DSM-5 criteria for METH use disorder; China | METH use-related pictures consisting of intake utensils, tools and the scenarios of intake | Participants were exposed to six METH-related images presented in a block-wise method for 24 s (4 s each). The reliability of cue-induced craving as an indicator for addiction severity was examined. | - Cue-induced craving on VAS (0 -100, “not at all” to “extremely intense”) assessed after viewing picture cues | - 24 of the 52 METH users rated non-zero increase in subjective craving (VAS) upon exposure to cues. |
| Tan et al. (2019) | 60 males who met DSM-5 criteria for METH use disorder; China | A METH-related virtual social environment designed based on results of focus group, depicting a video in which four persons played with | Participants were exposed to neutral environment (5 min) and drug cue environment (5 min) presented in VR headset sequentially. | - Self-reported craving on VAS (0-10, “no craving” to “most craving ever experienced for METH”) assessed after presentation of cue) | - Self-reported craving (VAS) and skin conductance level increased in response to VR drug cues compared with neutral cues. |
| Chen et al. (2019) | 99 males who met criteria for METH dependence as assessed by SCID-IV; of which 49 men had short term (1–3 months) while 50 had long term (16–40 months) abstinence and 47 controls; China | 30 images of METH itself, people who were smoking METH, | Participants viewed visual cues of METH, sexual (control cues), and neutral cues with order of images, blocks within epoch, and the epochs all pseudo-randomly presented. Relationships between regional activations and baseline methamphetamine use and impulsivity were also explored. | - Regional brain activations recorded with fMRI while presented with cues | - Greater METH cue–related activation in the ventral mPFC was observed in METH-using participants relative to healthy controls. |
ACC: anterior cingulate cortex; CICT: cue induced craving assessment task; DLPFC: dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; EEG: electroencephalogram; fMRI: functional magnetic resonance imaging; IV: intravenous; METH: methamphetamine; mPFC: medial prefrontal cortex; OFC: orbitofrontal cortex; SCID-IV: structured clinical interview for DSM-IV; VAS: visual analog scale; WSRS: within-session rating scale.
Details of included studies that looked at methods that modulate cue-elicited cravings and reactivity or involve cue exposure.
| Authors (Year) | Study Sample & Context | Study Design | Drug Cue(s) | Methods | Outcome(s) of Interest | Main Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Newton et al. (2006) | 20 non- treatment seeking participants who met DSM-IV-TR criteria for METH abuse or dependence; USA | Double-blind, placebo controlled, parallel group design | Videotaped cues showing actors using METH | Following baseline METH dosing, participants received a second identical series of METH doses 6 days after initiation of twice- daily oral 150 mg bupropion ( | - Cue induced cravings on GCS and WSRS | - Treatment with bupropion, compared to placebo, was associated with significantly |
| Newton et al. (2008) | 16 non-treatment seeking participants who met DSM-IV-TR criteria for METH dependence; | Double-blind, placebo controlled, parallel group design | 5-min of METH paraphernalia (pipe stems, a lighter, and a small plastic bag | Following baseline METH dosing, participants received repeated METH dosing after 2-week treatment with oral 15 mg aripiprazole ( | - Cue-induced craving on BSCS before and after cue presentation | - No significant effects of aripiprazoletreatment on cue-induced METH craving (BSCS) was observed, although exposure to METH cues induced moderate increases in craving. |
| Ray et al. (2015) | 30 non-treatment seeking participants who met DSM-IV criteria for METH abuse or dependence; USA | Double-blind, randomized, crossover, placebo-controlled | Audiotaped script that induced sensory and emotional memories related to METH use and the handling of METH paraphernalia (e.g., glass pipe) at various times of exposure | Participants completed two separate 5-day inpatient stays. During each admission, participants completed testing sessions comprised of METH cue reactivity and intravenous 30 mg METH administration after receiving oral 50 mg Naltrexone or placebo for 4 days. | - Cue-induced craving on MAUQ assessed after each standardized exposure | - Naltrexone was found to reduce cue-induced craving (MAUQ), as compared with placebo. |
| Courtney, Ghahremani and Ray. (2016) | 23 non-treatment seeking participants who met DSM-5 criteria for METH use disorder; USA | Randomized, placebo controlled, within-subject design | 4 blocks of METH cue pictures, with each block consisting of four pictures, presented for 5 s each | Participants underwent a cue reactivity task during two fMRI sessions following 3 days of 50 mg naltrexone administration and matched time for placebo. | - Blood-oxygen-level dependent activation and functional connectivity recorded with fMRI while presented with cues | - Administration of naltrexone reduced cue reactivity in sensorimotor areas and occipital regions and was associated with altered functional connectivity of dorsal striatum, ventral tegmental area, and precuneus with frontal, visual, sensory, and motor-related regions. |
| Roche et al. (2016) | 30 non-treatment seeking participants who met criteria for METH abuse of dependence as assessed by SCID-IV; | Randomized, counter-balanced, and double-blind | Audiotaped script that induced sensory and emotional memories related to METH use and the handling of METH paraphernalia (e.g., glass pipe) at various times of exposure | Participants completed two 4-day medication regimens of oral 50 mg naltrexone or placebo. On day 4 of each medication regimen, they completed a cue reactivity paradigm followed by intravenous METH administration. | - Cue-induced craving on MAUQ assessed after each standardized exposure | - Cue-induced craving for METH (MAUQ) was positively associated with post-infusion subjective METH effects, including positive, negative and craving-related responses. |
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| Bruehl et al. (2006) | 82 active METH users; Georgia | Qualitative | Not applicable | In-depth interviewing | - Narrative responses that corresponded with three types of craving (cue-, drug- and withdrawal-induced) | - Traditional cues, drugs and withdrawal states may lead to craving but do not necessarily provoke it. |
| DeSantis et al. (2009) | 40 participants who met DSM-IV criteria for METH abuse and dependence in the past six months but maintained abstinence on test day; USA | Longitudinal | (1) 30–35 still photographs | Participants underwent a human laboratory cue exposure procedures. | - Subjective reports of craving (unclear on the scale used) | - Participation in cue reactivity paradigm decreased the odds (OR = 0.39) of remaining in or transitioning to the high use state, though not significant. |
| Price et al. (2010) | 24 participants who met DSM-IV criteria for METH dependence in the past six months; USA | Pre-post design | Pictures and video of individuals procuring and using METH and “in vivo” paraphernalia and simulated METH | Participant underwent 20-min sequences of multi-modal METH cue exposure over each of two one-hour sessions (total of six cue sequences), with multi-modal METH cues counter-balanced for presentation order. | - Cue-induced craving on modified WSRS-VAS (0–10) | - METH cue-elicited craving (WSRS-VAS) was extinguished during two sessions of repeated within-session exposures to multi-modal cues, with no evidence of spontaneous recovery between sessions. |
| Li et al. (2013) | 10 non-treatment seeking participants who met DSM-IV-TR criteria for METH | Single-blind, crossover, sham-controlled | 40 METH-related pictures (drug, paraphernalia, or persons using the drug) | Participants were randomized to receive 15 min of sham and real (1 Hz) DLPFC rTMS in two experimental sessions separated by 1 h. | - Cue-induced craving on VAS (100 mm lines with anchoring statements at both ends, “no craving at all” to “the most craving I have ever had”) at baseline and during stimulation | - Real rTMS over the left DLPFC increased self-reported craving (VAS) as compared to sham stimulation in METH users, but no effect on craving in control group was observed. |
| Shahbabaie et al. (2014) | 32 male who met DSM-IV criteria for METH dependence for a history of at least 12 months and were abstinent from any drug use for a least a week prior to experiment (mean abstinence duration= 73.33 days); Iran | Double-blind, | Computerized cue-induced craving assessment task comprising of two series of 20 drug related images each | 20 min ‘anodal’ tDCS (2 mA) or ‘sham’ tDCS was applied over right DLPFC in a random sequence while participants performed a craving task starting after 10 min of stimulation. | - Self-reported craving on VAS (0–100 scale) before tDCS, after 10 min of tDCS, and after tDCS termination | - Active prefrontal tDCS increased craving (VAS) upon meth-related cue exposure. |
| Lopez et al. (2015); Study 2 | 13 METH smokers who met criteria for METH abuse of dependence as assessed by SCID-IV; USA | Within subject design | 54 METH stimuli that were rated at least 3.5 on a 1 to 5 scale on their effectiveness in eliciting craving | METH smokers implemented cognitive regulation (either focusing on positive or negative consequences or no regulation) while viewing photographs depicting METH smoking. | - Level of craving on a single-item scale (0–10, “not at all” to “very much”) at the end of each trial | - Participants reported significantly lower craving when focusing on the negative consequences associated with METH use. |
| Liu et al. (2017) | 50 male pure METH abusers; China | Randomized, sham-controlled | Handling with tools of drug use and faked METH for 5 min | Participants were randomized to receive five modes of rTMS stimulation: 10 Hz left P3 (sham), 10 Hz L-DLPFC, 10 Hz R-DLPFC, 1 Hz L-DLPFC, 1 Hz R-DLPFC. | -Cue-induced craving on a 0–100 scale prior to rTMS | - Both high and low frequency rTMS at either left or right DLPFC decreased cue-induced craving score immediately and after 5 days of continuous treatment; while no such effect was observed for active rTMS stimulation at P3 point. |
| Su et al. (2017) | 30 males who met DSM-5 criteria for moderate or severe METH use disorders; China | Randomized, double blind and controlled clinical trial | 80 MA-related (drug-use materials, person and situation) pictures and recalling of last use of METH | Participants were randomized to receive 5 sessions of 8 min sham ( | - Cue-induced craving on VAS (0–100 mm, “no craving” to “most craving ever experienced for MA”) before and after real rTMS or sham stimulation as well as pre experiment baseline | - Real rTMS over the left DLPFC reduced craving (VAS) significantly after 5 sessions of rTMS as compared to sham stimulation. |
| Rohani Anaraki et al. (2019) | 30 male who met DSM-5 criteria for methamphetamine use disorder and were abstinent from any drug use for at least one week before treatment (mean abstinence duration = 57.46 days); Iran | Randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled | Verbal induction where participants were asked to describe 3 previous situations that had led to craving and drug use | Participants underwent 5 sessions of 20 min bilateral real ( | - Cue-induced craving on VAS (0–100 mm, “I absolutely don’t have a craving” to “It is the strongest craving I have ever had”) at pretest and posttest | - Cue-induced craving (VAS) was reduced significantly in tDCS related to sham condition. |
| Dean et al. (2019) | 17 participants who met DSM-IV criteria for current METH dependence who were receiving residential treatment; USA | Randomized, single blind controlled trial | METH-related images consisting of glass | Participants were randomly assigned to either receive 12 sessions of computerized attentional bias modification (ABM) training (train attention away from METH stimuli 100% of the time) ( | - Cue-induced craving on a Likert-type scale (0–4, “not at all” to “very much”) following cue presentation- Brain activation recorded by fMRI when presented with cues | - Cue-induced cravings and activation in the ventromedial prefrontal cortex was reduced over time, but ABM training did not influence these effects. |
| Wang, Liu and Shen. (2019) | Study 1: 61 male patients who met DSM-IV criteria for METH dependence; China | Randomized controlled trial | VR METH-cue model comprising of 8-min VR video, which simulates a real METH-related social context including various METH-related cues | Study 1: Participants were randomly assigned to either the intervention group ( | Study 1: | - Study 1: Those who received VRCP showed a significantly larger decrease on the score of METH-craving and METH-liking from baseline to follow-up assessments, compared to those who did not |
| Su et al. (2020) | 126 treatment seeking participants who met DSM-5 criteria for severe METH use disorder; China | Randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled | 5-min view of METH-related pictures | Participants were randomized to receive either intermittent theta burst stimulation (iTBS; | - Cue-induced craving on VAS (0–100, “no craving” to “highest craving for METH”) at baseline and each of the 5 study sessions (Week 1–4) | - After four weeks of intervention, cue-induced craving rating (VAS) showed a significant time × group interaction effect and a significant difference for time. |
BSCS: brief substance craving scale; DEQ: drug effects questionnaire; DLPFC: dorsolateral prefrontal cortex; ECG: electrocardiogram; GCS: general craving scale; MAUQ: methamphetamine urge questionnaire; METH: methamphetamine; tDCS: transcranial direct current stimulation; TLFB: time-line follow-back; rTMS: repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation; VAS: visual analog scale; VRCP: virtual reality counter-conditioning procedure; WSRS: within-session rating scale.