Drug and Alcohol Dependence
Volume 91, Issue 2 , Pages 169-177, 1 December 2007

Psychosocial functioning and cocaine use during treatment: Strength of relationship depends on type of urine-testing method

Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics Branch, Treatment Section, Intramural Research Program (IRP), National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA), NIH/DHHS, 5500 Nathan Shock Drive, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA

Received 22 February 2007; received in revised form 2 May 2007; accepted 22 May 2007.

Abstract 

Although improvement in psychosocial functioning is a common goal in substance-abuse treatment, the primary outcome measure in most cocaine trials is urinalysis-verified cocaine use. However, the relationship between cocaine use and psychosocial outcomes is not well documented. To investigate this relationship and identify the optimal urine-screen method, we retrospectively analyzed data from two 25-week randomized controlled trials of abstinence reinforcement (AR) in 368 cocaine/heroin users maintained on methadone. Cocaine use was measured thrice weekly by qualitative urinalysis, benzoylecgonine concentration (BE), and an estimate of New Uses of cocaine by application of an algorithm to BE. Social adjustment (SAS-SR), current diagnosis of cocaine dependence (DSM-IV criteria), and depression symptoms (Beck Depression Inventory) were determined at study exit. Cocaine use was significantly lower in AR groups than in controls. Across groups, in-treatment cocaine use was significantly associated with worse social adjustment, current cocaine dependence, and depression at exit. Significant differences were detected more frequently with New Uses than qualitative urinalysis or BE. Nevertheless, the amount of variance accounted for by the urine screens was typically <15%. Cocaine use during treatment, especially when measured with New Uses criteria, can predict psychosocial functioning, but cannot substitute for direct measures of psychosocial functioning.

Keywords: Urinalysis, Substance dependence, Treatment, Methadone maintenance, Abstinence reinforcement, Psychosocial function

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PII: S0376-8716(07)00220-7

doi:10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2007.05.018

Drug and Alcohol Dependence
Volume 91, Issue 2 , Pages 169-177, 1 December 2007