| Literature DB >> 33425652 |
Albert Burgess-Hull1, David H Epstein1.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Addiction scientists have begun using ambulatory assessment methods-including ecological momentary assessment (EMA), experience sampling, and daily diaries-to collect real-time or near-real-time reports of participants' internal states in their natural environments. The goal of this short review is to synthesize EMA findings from our research group, which has studied several hundred outpatients during treatment for opioid-use disorder (OUD). (We cite pertinent findings from other groups, but have not tried to be comprehensive.) One of our main goals in using EMA is to examine momentary changes in internal states that proximally predict, or concurrently mark, events such as lapses to opioid use. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Addiction; Ambulatory assessment; Ecological momentary assessment; Momentary predictors; Opioid addiction; Opioid use disorder
Year: 2021 PMID: 33425652 PMCID: PMC7778403 DOI: 10.1007/s40429-020-00351-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Addict Rep
Summary of our major EMA studies
| Protocol title in-house | Notes | Years data collected | status | Population | Design and outcomes | Arms/substudies | Selected publications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 385: Real-time assessment of drug craving, use, and abstinence during outpatient treatment: A development and feasibility study | Our first EMA study; our first pilot GMA study | 2004-2009 | Data collection ended 2009; data analysis ongoing | OUD/CocUD outpatients in treatment at our clinic | Mostly observational (EMA, some GMA), against a background of treatment. Event-contingent entries for craving and drug use (not stress events). | • 385a (2005-2006). Our first EMA study; no GMA included. 114 pts. • 385b (2008-2010). Small interventional study with CBT homework reminders given on devices. 27 pts. • 385c (2008-2009). Small pilot GMA study with 27 pts, leading to the 020 study. | • Epstein DH, Willner-Reid J, Vahabzadeh M, Mezghanni M, Lin J-L, and Preston KL. Real-time electronic-diary reports of cue exposure and mood in the hours before cocaine and heroin craving and use. Archives of General Psychiatry 66(1): 88-94, 2009. • Preston KL, Vahabzadeh M, Schmittner J, Lin J-L, Gorelick DA, and Epstein DH. Cocaine craving and use during daily life. Psychopharmacology 207(2): 291-301, 2009. • Heinz AJ, Disney ER, Epstein DH, Glezen LA, Clark PI, and Preston KL. A focus-group study on spirituality and substance-user treatment. Substance Use and Misuse 45(1-2): 134-153, 2010. • Epstein DH, Marrone GF, Heishman SJ, Schmittner J, and Preston KL. Tobacco, cocaine, and heroin: craving and use during daily life. Addictive Behaviors 35: 318-324, 2010. • Epstein DH and Preston KL. Daily life hour by hour, with and without cocaine: an ecological momentary assessment study. Psychopharmacology 211(2): 223-232, 2010. • Preston KL and Epstein DH. Stress in the daily lives of cocaine and heroin users: relationship to mood, craving, relapse triggers, and cocaine use. Psychopharmacology 218(1): 29-37, 2011. • Epstein DH and Preston KL. TGI Monday?: Drug-dependent outpatients report lower stress and more happiness at work than elsewhere. American Journal on Addictions 21:189-198, 2012. • Phillips KA, Epstein DH, and Preston KL. Daily temporal patterns of heroin and cocaine use and craving: relationship with business hours regardless of actual employment status. Addictive Behaviors 38(10): 2485-2491, 2013. • Kennedy AP, Epstein DH, Phillips KA, and Preston KL. Sex differences in cocaine/heroin users: drug-use triggers and craving in daily life. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 132(1):29-37, 2013. • Willner-Reid J, Whitaker D, Epstein DH, Phillips KA, Pulaski AR, Preston KL, and Willner P. Cognitive-behavioral therapy for heroin and cocaine use: ecological momentary assessment of homework simplification and compliance. Psychology and Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice 89: 276-293, 2016. (385b) • Epstein DH, Tyburski M, Craig IM, Phillips KA, Jobes ML, Vahabzadeh M, Mezghanni M, Lin J-L, Furr-Holden CDM, and Preston KL. Real-time tracking of neighborhood surroundings and mood in urban drug misusers: application of a new method to study behavior in its geographical context. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 134: 22-29, 2014. (385c) |
| 407: Clonidine for relapse prevention in buprenorphine-maintenance patients | Our first use of EMA as an outcome measure in a randomized clinical trial | 2006-2014 | Data collection ended 2014; data analysis ongoing | OUD/CocUD outpatients in treatment at our clinic | Randomized pharmacological intervention against a background of treatment, with outcome assessed partly via EMA. | . | • Kowalczyk WJ, Phillips KA, Jobes ML, Kennedy AP, Ghitza UE, Agage DA, Schmittner JP, Epstein DH, and Preston KL. Clonidine maintenance prolongs opioid abstinence and decouples stress from craving in daily life: a randomized controlled trial with ecological momentary assessment. American Journal of Psychiatry 172(8): 760-767, 2015. • Kowalczyk WJ, Bertz JW, Moran LM, Phillips KA, Ghitza UE, Epstein DH, and Preston KL. Clonidine increases the likelihood that abstinence can withstand unstructured time in buprenorphine-maintained outpatients. Journal of Addiction Medicine 11(6): 454-460, 2017. • Kowalczyk WJ, Moran LM, Bertz JW, Phillips KA, Ghitza UE, Vahabzadeh M, Lin J-L, Epstein DH, and Preston KL. Using ecological momentary assessment to examine the relationship between craving and affect with opioid use in a clinical trial of clonidine as an adjunct medication to buprenorphine treatment. American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 44(4): 502-511, 2018. |
| 020: Developing field tools for real-time assessment of exposure to psychosocial stress and drug use in an outpatient treatment population | Our first large GMA study | 2009- | Data collection paused during Covid-19 pandemic; data analysis ongoing | • OUD/CocUD outpatients in treatment at our clinic with methadone (2009-2014) or buprenorphine (2011-2014) • OUD/CocUD outpatients in treatment at our clinic with office-based bup (OBOT) or in treatment elsewhere (TE) (2015-) | Mostly observational (EMA/GMA), against a background of treatment. Event-contingent entries for drug use and stress events (not craving events). | • Lab sessions with stressors (2009-2013) • Circadian-light monitoring with Daysimeter (2011-2015) • Ambulatory physiological monitoring with AutoSense chestband (2010-2014) • Home sleep EEG with Sleep Profiler (2014-2018) | • Furnari M, Epstein DH, Phillips KA, Jobes ML, Kowalczyk W J, Vahabzadeh M, Lin J-L, and Preston KL. Some of the people, some of the time: field evidence for associations and dissociations between stress and drug use. Psychopharmacology 232(19): 3529-3537, 2015. • Kennedy AP, Epstein DH, Jobes ML, Agage DA, Tyburski M, Phillips KA, Ali AA, Bari R, Hossain SM, Hovsepian K, Rahman MM, Ertin M, Kumar S, and Preston KL. Continuous in-the-field measurement of heart rate: correlates of drug use, craving, stress, and mood in polydrug users. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 151: 159-166, 2015. • Preston KL, Kowalczyk WJ, Phillips KA, Jobes ML, Vahabzadeh M, Lin J-L, Mezghanni M, and Epstein DH. Context and craving during stressful events in the daily lives of drug-dependent patients. Psychopharmacology 234(17): 2631-2642, 2017. • Preston KL, Kowalczyk WJ, Phillips KA, Vahabzadeh M, Lin J-L, Mezghanni M, Jobes ML, and Epstein DH. Exacerbated craving in the presence of stress and drug cues in drug-dependent patients. Neuropsychopharmacology 43: 859-867, 2018. • Preston KL, Kowalczyk WJ, Phillips KA, Jobes ML, Vahabzadeh M, Lin J-L, Mezghanni M, and Epstein DH. Before and after: craving, mood, and background stress in the hours surrounding drug use and stressful events in patients with opioid-use disorder. Psychopharmacology 235(9): 2713-2723, 2018. • Preston KL, Schroeder JR, Kowalczyk WJ, Phillips KA, Jobes ML, Dwyer M, Vahabzadeh M, Lin J-L, Mezghanni M, and Epstein DH. End-of-day reports of daily hassles and stress in men and women with opioid-use disorder: Relationship to momentary reports of opioid and cocaine use and stress. Drug and Alcohol Dependence 193: 21-28, 2018. • Panlilio LV, Stull SW, Kowalczyk WJ, Phillips KA, Schroeder JR, Bertz JW, Vahabzadeh M, Lin J-L, Mezghanni M, Nunes EV, Epstein DH, and Preston KL. Stress, craving and mood as predictors of early dropout from opioid agonist therapy. DAD, 202: 200-208. 2019. • Finan PH, Mun CJ, Epstein DH, Kowalczyk WJ, Phillips KA, Agage D, Smith MT, and Preston KL. Multimodal assessment of sleep in men and women during treatment for opioid use disorder. Drug and Alcohol Dependence, 2020. • Epstein DH, TyburskiM, Kowalczyk WJ, Burgess-Hull AJ, Phillips KA, Curtis BL, and Preston KL. Prediction of stress and drug craving ninety minutes in the future with passively collected GPS data. Nature Digital Medicine 3(1): 1-12, 2020. |
| 472: Health Outcomes by Neighborhood (HON) | Our first use of GMA in a non-SUD cohort and in an HIV+ cohopt | 2012- | Data collection paused during Covid-19 pandemic; data analysis ongoing | "All comers"; includes nonusers, people who use cannabis, and people who use opioids or cocaine but are not seeking treatment. | Mostly observational and non-EMA (participants evaluated in two sessions, 12 months apart). Some undergo EMA or GMA. Intent of observation is quasi-epidemiological (though we use a convenience sample, not a probability sample). | • HON-B (2015-); includes optional GMA component. • HON-C (2017-); HIV cohort with GMA. | • Stull SW, Panlilio LV, Moran LM, Schroeder JR, Bertz JW, Epstein DH, Preston KL, and Phillips KA. The chippers, the quitters, and the highly symptomatic: A 12-month longitudinal study of DSM-5 opioid-and cocaine-use problems in a community sample. Addictive Behaviors 96: 183-191, 2019. |