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Substance Use Disorder Symptoms Follow Teens Into Adulthood

— Long-term study finds adolescents do not "recover on their own," as some observers have suggested

MedpageToday
A photo of a teen male with a credit card and line of white powder as seen through a glass coffee table

Adolescents with substance use disorder (SUD) were more likely to have subsequent prescription drug use and symptoms of SUD in adulthood, revealed a longitudinal analysis that followed high school seniors to the age of 50.

Students with two or more SUD symptoms at age 18 had higher odds of medical prescription drug use and prescription drug misuse in adulthood, and 61.6% of adolescents with the most severe SUD symptoms (six or more) had at least two SUD symptoms in adulthood, reported Sean Esteban McCabe, PhD, of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, and colleagues.

"This finding reinforces that the long-term sequelae are more deleterious for those with more severe SUD symptoms during adolescence," the study group wrote in . "Notably, most adolescents with severe SUD symptoms do not mature out of symptomatic substance use during the transition from adolescence to adulthood."

Writing in an , Nora Volkow, MD, and Eric Wargo, PhD, of the National Institute on Drug Abuse in North Bethesda, Maryland, said: "Critics of the chronic disease model of addiction have argued that people frequently recover on their own, unaided, from SUDs, but [McCabe and colleagues] show that SUDs in adolescence often carry over into adulthood and may last decades."

"Consequently, screening in this age group could be leveraged to help estimate adult SUD and the risk of adverse health outcomes, including overdoses," Volkow and Wargo added.

In 2020, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommended drug screenings for adults, but said that .

McCabe and co-authors said their study was the first national investigation to examine the long-term association of SUD symptoms in adolescence with prescription drug use, prescription drug misuse, and SUD symptoms in adulthood.

Using multivariable analysis, the team found that adolescents with the highest SUD symptom severity were one and a half times more likely to use prescription drugs in adulthood compared with those without SUD symptoms in adolescence (adjusted odds ratio 1.55, 95% CI 1.11-2.16).

Adolescents with four or more SUD symptoms were nearly twice as likely to have prescription drug misuse in the past year as adults compared with those without SUD symptoms in adolescence, the researchers added.

Notably, while SUD symptoms decreased overall between ages 35 and 50, prescription drug use and misuse increased in that same age group, McCabe and co-authors said. In addition, approximately half the adults prescribed opioids, sedatives, or tranquilizers had reported two or more SUD symptoms at age 18.

"Prescribers should be aware that many adults prescribed opioids, sedatives, or tranquilizers had multiple SUD symptoms during adolescence and require careful assessment and monitoring," the researchers wrote. "Importantly, the cohorts of adolescents who were high school seniors between 1976 to 1986 and were followed over the 32-year study time frame (ending 2018) [run] parallel to the emergence and steep increase in the opioid crisis, largely associated with the widespread overprescribing of opioids."

"These prescribing practices may be associated with the high rates of prescription drug use and PDM [prescription drug misuse] as these cohorts aged into middle adulthood," the team added. "Although the association between adolescent SUD symptom severity and adult prescription drug use and PDM would still stand, it is important to acknowledge that the opioid crisis has led to changes in prescribing practices over the past several years that warrant more research that reexamines these associations over time."

The multi-cohort used questionnaires to assess SUD symptoms over a 32-year period from ages 18 (when participants were high school seniors) to 50, beginning in 1975. Enrollees participated in 10 follow-up surveys in that period, and the baseline response rates ranged from 77% to 84% over the study period.

This analysis included 5,317 respondents, of whom 51.2% were women and 77.9% were white. One-fifth of respondents reported having two to three SUD symptoms, 12% reported four to five, and 11.5% reported six or more SUD symptoms at baseline.

The researchers acknowledged that school dropouts and institutionalized populations, who have higher rates of severe SUD symptoms, were excluded from the study, which may have resulted in underestimates. In addition, Volkow and Wargo noted that prescription stimulant use and smoking history were not studied.

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    Lei Lei Wu is a staff writer for Medpage Today. She is based in New Jersey.

Disclosures

The study was supported in part by grants from the National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA).

McCabe and co-authors reported no conflict of interest disclosures.

Volkow reported being the Director of the NIDA; Wargo reported no disclosures.

Primary Source

JAMA Network Open

McCabe SE, et al "Longitudinal analysis of substance use disorder symptom severity at age 18 years and substance use disorder in adulthood" JAMA Netw Open 2022; DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.5324.

Secondary Source

JAMA Network Open

Volkow ND, Wargo EM "Association of severity of adolescent substance use disorders and long-term outcomes" JAMA Network Open 2022; DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.5656.