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Behavioral Economic Demand for Alcohol and Cigarettes in Heavy Drinking Smokers: Evidence of Asymmetric Cross-commodity Reinforcing Value

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Specialty Public Health
Date 2020 Nov 28
PMID 33247757
Citations 4
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Abstract

Introduction: Previous studies have highlighted a strong bidirectional relationship between cigarette and alcohol consumption. To advance our understanding of this relationship the present study uses a behavioral economic approach in a community sample (N = 383) of nontreatment seeking heavy drinking smokers.

Aims And Methods: The aims were to examine same-substance and cross-substance relationships between alcohol and cigarette use, and latent factors of demand. A community sample of nontreatment seeking heavy drinking smokers completed an in-person assessment battery including measures of alcohol and tobacco use as well as the Cigarette Purchase Task and the Alcohol Purchase Task. Latent factors of demand were derived from these hypothetical purchase tasks.

Results: Results revealed a positive correlation between paired alcohol and cigarette demand indices (eg, correlation between alcohol intensity and cigarette intensity) (rs = 0.18-0.46, p ≤ .003). Over and above alcohol factors, cigarette use variables (eg, Fagerström Test for Nicotine Dependence and cigarettes per smoking day) significantly predicted an additional 4.5% (p < .01) of the variance in Persistence values but not Amplitude values for alcohol. Over and above cigarette factors, alcohol use variables predicted cigarette Persistence values (ΔR2 = .013, p = .05), however, did not predict Amplitude values.

Conclusions: These results advance our understanding of the overlap between cigarette and alcohol by demonstrating that involvement with one substance was associated with demand for the other substance. This asymmetric profile-from smoking to alcohol demand, but not vice versa-suggests that it is not simply tapping into a generally higher reward sensitivity and warrants further investigation.

Implications: To our knowledge, no study to date has examined alcohol and cigarette demand, via hypothetical purchase tasks, in a clinical sample of heavy drinking smokers. This study demonstrates that behavioral economic indices may be sensitive to cross-substance relationships and specifically that such relationships are asymmetrically stronger for smoking variables affecting alcohol demand, not the other way around.

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Behavioral economic cigarette demand among individuals who smoke with and without obesity.

Bickel W, Freitas-Lemos R, Tegge A, Tomlinson D, Epstein L Health Psychol. 2021; 40(10):666-673.

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Behavioral Economic Assessment of Alcohol and Cigarette Demand in Smokers With Alcohol Use Disorder.

Cui Y, Linares Abrego P, Yoon J, Karam-Hage M, Cinciripini P, Ait-Daoud Tiouririne N Front Psychiatry. 2021; 12:674607.

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No evidence of the clinical utility of single-item breakpoint to inform on tobacco demand in persons with substance use disorders.

Gonzalez-Roz A, Secades-Villa R, Aonso-Diego G, Weidberg S, Fernandez-Hermida J Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2021; 238(9):2525-2533.

PMID: 34031700 DOI: 10.1007/s00213-021-05875-y.

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