The goal of this research is to understand relapse to heroin use in methadone-maintenance patients. Intravenous heroin use is a high-risk behavior for transmission of the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Methadone maintenance, while effective in reducing intravenous drug use and needle-sharing, does not prevent some patients from lapsing to these behaviors. Variables that predict lapses to heroin use should be identified so that innovative interventions can be developed. The proposed study replicates and extends our earlier work on prediction of relapse. One previous study focused on treated alcoholics, cigarette smokers, and detoxified opiate users (N= 221). In a second project, we studied cocaine treatment patients (N= 104). Important contributions of the earlier work are both theoretical and methodological. They include (a) determination of the importance of commitment to abstinence, social support, and positive moods in predicting continued abstinence, independent of drug of abuse; and (b) design refinements that allow comparison of prospective and retrospective data in the prediction of relapse. These comparisons suggest that retrospective data about relapse may not be valid because a lapse distorts subsequent self-report. In the proposed study, more frequent assessments will allow fine-grained prospective prediction of drug use. Subjects will be 186 exheroin-users in methadone-maintenance treatment who, according to program data, have been abstinent from heroin for 60 days. During a baseline month, potential subjects' urines will be screened twice weekly for heroin and cocaine. Patients who maintain abstinence from these drugs will enter the study and be assessed twice weekly for three months. Predictors include commitment to abstinence, social support, psychiatric diagnosis, psychological symptoms, stress, positive and negative moods, withdrawal symptoms, optimism, coping with temptation, positively reinforcing nondrug activities, and cocaine use. The outcome variable is lapse to heroin use. Besides self-reports, subjects will provide urine specimens at each assessment for confirmation of abstinence. All subjects will be reassessed at six months. The study findings are expected to lead to more powerful interventions for preventing relapse to heroin use in methadone-maintenance patients. The findings will also contribute to a model of relapse applicable across the addictions.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute on Drug Abuse (NIDA)
Type
Research Project (R01)
Project #
5R01DA003082-08
Application #
3207698
Study Section
Drug Abuse Clinical and Behavioral Research Review Committee (DACB)
Project Start
1983-09-01
Project End
1994-12-31
Budget Start
1992-01-01
Budget End
1992-12-31
Support Year
8
Fiscal Year
1992
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of California San Francisco
Department
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
073133571
City
San Francisco
State
CA
Country
United States
Zip Code
94143
Wasserman, D A; Korcha, R; Havassy, B E et al. (1999) Detection of illicit opioid and cocaine use in methadone maintenance treatment. Am J Drug Alcohol Abuse 25:561-71
Wasserman, D A; Weinstein, M G; Havassy, B E et al. (1998) Factors associated with lapses to heroin use during methadone maintenance. Drug Alcohol Depend 52:183-92
Havassy, B E; Wasserman, D A; Hall, S M (1995) Social relationships and abstinence from cocaine in an American treatment sample. Addiction 90:699-710
Havassy, B E; Wasserman, D A; Hall, S M (1993) Relapse to cocaine use: conceptual issues. NIDA Res Monogr 135:203-17
Hall, S M; Havassy, B E; Wasserman, D A (1991) Effects of commitment to abstinence, positive moods, stress, and coping on relapse to cocaine use. J Consult Clin Psychol 59:526-32
Hall, S M; Wasserman, D A; Havassy, B E (1991) Relapse prevention. NIDA Res Monogr 106:279-92
Havassy, B E; Hall, S M; Wasserman, D A (1991) Social support and relapse: commonalities among alcoholics, opiate users, and cigarette smokers. Addict Behav 16:235-46
Hall, S M; Havassy, B E; Wasserman, D A (1990) Commitment to abstinence and acute stress in relapse to alcohol, opiates, and nicotine. J Consult Clin Psychol 58:175-81
Hall, S M; Hall, R G; Ginsberg, D (1990) Pharmacological and behavioral treatment for cigarette smoking. Prog Behav Modif 25:86-118
Havassy, B E; Hall, S M; Wasserman, D M (1990) Relapse to cocaine use following treatment: preliminary findings on the role of social support. NIDA Res Monogr 105:502-4

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