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Alcohol use, abuse and dependence in an older European population: Results from the MentDis_ICF65+ study

Muñoz, Manuel; Ausín, Berta; Santos-Olmo, Ana B; Härter, Martin; Volkert, Jana; Schulz, Holger; Sehner, Susanne; Dehoust, Maria Christina; Suling, Anna; Wegscheider, Karl; Canuto, Alessandra; Crawford, Mike J; Grassi, Luigi; Da Ronch, Chiara; Hershkovitz, Yael; Quirk, Alan; Rotenstein, Ora; Shalev, Arieh Y; Strehle, Jens; Weber, Kerstin; Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich; Andreas, Sylke
BACKGROUND:Alcohol use disorders (AUD) in older people have been the subject of increasing interest in Europe and worldwide. However, thus far, no reliable data exist regarding the prevalence of AUD in people over the age of 65 years in Europe. OBJECTIVE:To assess the current (past month), 12-month and lifetime prevalence of alcohol use, abuse and dependence in people aged 65-84 years. STUDY DESIGN/METHODS:The MentDis_ICF65+ study was a representative stepwise cross-sectional survey that was conducted in six European and associated cities (Hamburg, Germany; Ferrara, Italy; London/Canterbury, England; Madrid, Spain; Geneva, Switzerland and Jerusalem, Israel). METHOD/METHODS:In total, 3,142 community-dwelling people aged between 65 and 84 years who lived in participating cities were assessed with an age-sensitive diagnostic interview (CIDI65+). RESULTS:The prevalence of lifetime alcohol use was 81% for the overall sample. The observed AUD (DSM-IV-TR) prevalence was as follows: current, 1.1%; 12-month, 5.3% and lifetime, 8.8%. Alcohol consumption and AUD were more prevalent in males, and a significant interaction between gender and city was observed; greater gender differences in the prevalence of these disorders were observed in Hamburg, London/Canterbury and Geneva in comparison to the other cities. The prevalence of lifetime alcohol consumption and 12-month AUD tended to be lower in older persons. CONCLUSION/CONCLUSIONS:The results highlight the appropriateness of using age-adjusted diagnostic tools (CIDI65+) to identify alcohol use and AUD in older people. Different alcohol use patterns were observed in males and females. The results seem to indicate the presence of different alcohol use patterns between northern and southern European countries. Specialized services are proposed, including brief and/or more intensive interventions framed intensive and more simple interventions framed in stepped care strategies, to improve the social and health resources available for older people across Europe.
PMCID:5927409
PMID: 29708993
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 3061582

Application of data pooling to longitudinal studies of early post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD): the International Consortium to Predict PTSD (ICPP) project

Qi, Wei; Ratanatharathorn, Andrew; Gevonden, Martin; Bryant, Richard; Delahanty, Douglas; Matsuoka, Yutaka; Olff, Miranda; deRoon-Cassini, Terri; Schnyder, Ulrich; Seedat, Soraya; Laska, Eugene; Kessler, Ronald C; Koenen, Karestan; Shalev, Arieh
Background: Understanding the development of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) is a precondition for efficient risk assessment and prevention planning. Studies to date have been site and sample specific. Towards developing generalizable models of PTSD development and prediction, the International Consortium to Predict PTSD (ICPP) compiled data from 13 longitudinal, acute-care based PTSD studies performed in six different countries. Objective: The objectives of this study were to describe the ICPP's approach to data pooling and harmonization, and present cross-study descriptive results informing the longitudinal course of PTSD after acute trauma. Methods: Item-level data from 13 longitudinal studies of adult civilian trauma survivors were collected. Constructs (e.g. PTSD, depression), measures (questions or scales), and time variables (days from trauma) were identified and harmonized, and those with inconsistent coding (e.g. education, lifetime trauma exposure) were recoded. Administered in 11 studies, the Clinician Administered PTSD Scale (CAPS) emerged as the main measure of PTSD diagnosis and severity. Results: The pooled data set included 6254 subjects (39.9% female). Studies' average retention rate was 87.0% (range 49.1-93.5%). Participants' baseline assessments took place within 2 months of trauma exposure. Follow-up durations ranged from 188 to 1110 days. Reflecting studies' inclusion criteria, the prevalence of baseline PTSD differed significantly between studies (range 3.1-61.6%), and similar differences were observed in subsequent assessments (4.3-38.2% and 3.8-27.0% for second and third assessments, respectively). Conclusion: Pooling data from independently collected studies requires careful curation of individual data sets for extracting and optimizing informative commonalities. However, it is an important step towards developing robust and generalizable prediction models for PTSD and can exceed findings of single studies. The large differences in prevalence of PTSD longitudinally cautions against using any individual study to infer trauma outcome. The multiplicity of instruments used in individual studies emphasizes the need for common data elements in future studies.
PMCID:6008580
PMID: 29938009
ISSN: 2000-8066
CID: 3161842

Cognitive Flexibility Predicts PTSD Symptoms: Observational and Interventional Studies

Ben-Zion, Ziv; Fine, Naomi B; Keynan, Nimrod Jackob; Admon, Roee; Green, Nili; Halevi, Mor; Fonzo, Greg A; Achituv, Michal; Merin, Ofer; Sharon, Haggai; Halpern, Pinchas; Liberzon, Israel; Etkin, Amit; Hendler, Talma; Shalev, Arieh Y
Introduction: Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is a prevalent, severe and tenacious psychopathological consequence of traumatic events. Neurobehavioral mechanisms underlying PTSD pathogenesis have been identified, and may serve as risk-resilience factors during the early aftermath of trauma exposure. Longitudinally documenting the neurobehavioral dimensions of early responses to trauma may help characterize survivors at risk and inform mechanism-based interventions. We present two independent longitudinal studies that repeatedly probed clinical symptoms and neurocognitive domains in recent trauma survivors. We hypothesized that better neurocognitive functioning shortly after trauma will be associated with less severe PTSD symptoms a year later, and that an early neurocognitive intervention will improve cognitive functioning and reduce PTSD symptoms. Methods: Participants in both studies were adult survivors of traumatic events admitted to two general hospitals' emergency departments (EDs) in Israel. The studies used identical clinical and neurocognitive tools, which included assessment of PTSD symptoms and diagnosis, and a battery of neurocognitive tests. The first study evaluated 181 trauma-exposed individuals one-, six-, and 14 months following trauma exposure. The second study evaluated 97 trauma survivors 1 month after trauma exposure, randomly allocated to 30 days of web-based neurocognitive intervention (n = 50) or control tasks (n = 47), and re-evaluated all subjects three- and 6 months after trauma exposure. Results: In the first study, individuals with better cognitive flexibility at 1 month post-trauma showed significantly less severe PTSD symptoms after 13 months (p = 0.002). In the second study, the neurocognitive training group showed more improvement in cognitive flexibility post-intervention (p = 0.019), and lower PTSD symptoms 6 months post-trauma (p = 0.017), compared with controls. Intervention- induced improvement in cognitive flexibility positively correlated with clinical improvement (p = 0.002). Discussion: Cognitive flexibility, shortly after trauma exposure, emerged as a significant predictor of PTSD symptom severity. It was also ameliorated by a neurocognitive intervention and associated with a better treatment outcome. These findings support further research into the implementation of mechanism-driven neurocognitive preventive interventions for PTSD.
PMID: 30337890
ISSN: 1664-0640
CID: 3369822

Cognitive Flexibility Predicts Emerging PTSD Symptoms and Improves Early Neurocognitive Intervention's Efficacy [Meeting Abstract]

Ben-Zion, Ziv; Fine, Naomi; Keinan, Nimrod-Yacob; Etkin, Amit; Hendler, Talma; Liberzon, Israel; Shalev, Arieh
ISI:000509546600496
ISSN: 0893-133x
CID: 4765702

Alcohol use, abuse and dependence in an older European population: Results from the MentDis_ICF65+study

Munoz, Manuel; Ausin, Berta; Santos-Olmo, Ana B.; Haerter, Martin; Volkert, Jana; Schulz, Holger; Sehner, Susanne; Dehoust, Maria Christina; Suling, Anna; Wegscheider, Karl; Canuto, Alessandra; Crawford, Mike J.; Grassi, Luigi; Da Ronch, Chiara; Hershkovitz, Yael; Quirk, Alan; Rotenstein, Ora; Shalev, Arieh Y.; Strehle, Jens; Weber, Kerstin; Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich; Andreas, Sylke
ISI:000431130100040
ISSN: 1932-6203
CID: 4765652

Conceptual history of post-traumatic stress disorder

Chapter by: Shalev, Arieh Y; Marmar, Charles R
in: Post-traumatic stress disorder by Nemeroff, Charles B [Ed]; Marmar, Charles R [Ed]
New York, NY, US: Oxford University Press, 2018
pp. 3-29
ISBN: 9780190259440
CID: 4374292

Study approach and field work procedures of the MentDis_ICF65+ project on the prevalence of mental disorders in the older adult European population

Volkert, Jana; Harter, Martin; Dehoust, Maria Christina; Schulz, Holger; Sehner, Susanne; Suling, Anna; Wegscheider, Karl; Ausin, Berta; Canuto, Alessandra; Crawford, Mike J; Da Ronch, Chiara; Grassi, Luigi; Hershkovitz, Yael; Munoz, Manuel; Quirk, Alan; Rotenstein, Ora; Santos-Olmo, Ana Belen; Shalev, Arieh Y; Strehle, Jens; Weber, Kerstin; Wittchen, Hans-Ulrich; Andreas, Sylke
BACKGROUND: This study describes the study approach and field procedures of the MentDis_ICF65+ study, which aims to assess the prevalence of mental disorders in older adults. METHODS: An age-appropriate version of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI65+) was developed and tested with regard to its feasibility and psychometric properties in a pre-test and pilot phase. In the cross-sectional survey an age-stratified, random sample of older adults (65-84 years) living in selected catchment areas of five European countries and Israel was recruited. RESULTS: N = 3142 participants (mean age 73.7 years, 50.7% female) took part in face-to-face interviews. The mean response rate was 20% and varied significantly between centres, age and gender groups. Sociodemographic differences between the study centres appeared for the place of birth, number of grandchildren, close significants, retirement and self-rated financial situation. The comparison of the MentDis_ICF65+ sample with the catchment area and country population of the study centres revealed significant differences, although most of these were numerically small. CONCLUSIONS: The study will generate new information on the prevalence of common mental disorders among older adults across Europe using an age-appropriate, standardized diagnostic instrument and a harmonized approach to sampling. Generalizability of the findings and a potentially limited representativeness are discussed.
PMCID:5689153
PMID: 29145800
ISSN: 1471-244x
CID: 2784532

Predictors of PTSD 40 years after combat: Findings from the National Vietnam Veterans longitudinal study

Steenkamp, Maria M; Schlenger, William E; Corry, Nida; Henn-Haase, Clare; Qian, Meng; Li, Meng; Horesh, Danny; Karstoft, Karen-Inge; Williams, Christianna; Ho, Chia-Lin; Shalev, Arieh; Kulka, Richard; Marmar, Charles
BACKGROUND: Few studies have longitudinally examined predictors of posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in a nationally representative sample of US veterans. We examined predictors of warzone-related PTSD over a 25-year span using data from the National Vietnam Veterans Longitudinal Study (NVVLS). METHODS: The NVVLS is a follow-up study of Vietnam theater veterans (N = 699) previously assessed in the National Vietnam Veterans Readjustment Study (NVVRS), a large national-probability study conducted in the late 1980s. We examined the ability of 22 premilitary, warzone, and postmilitary variables to predict current warzone-related PTSD symptom severity and PTSD symptom change in male theater veterans participating in the NVVLS. Data included a self-report Health Questionnaire survey and a computer-assisted telephone Health Interview Survey. Primary outcomes were self-reported PTSD symptoms assessed by the PTSD Checklist for DSM-5 (PCL 5) and Mississippi PTSD Scale (M-PTSD). RESULTS: Predictors of current PTSD symptoms most robust in hierarchical multivariable models were African-American race, lower education level, negative homecoming reception, lower current social support, and greater past-year stress. PTSD symptoms remained largely stable over time, and symptom exacerbation was predicted by African-American race, lower education level, younger age at entry into Vietnam, greater combat exposure, lower current social support, and greater past-year stressors. CONCLUSIONS: Findings confirm the robustness of a select set of risk factors for warzone-related PTSD, establishing that these factors can predict PTSD symptom severity and symptom change up to 40 years postdeployment.
PMID: 28489300
ISSN: 1520-6394
CID: 2549032

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder

Shalev, Arieh; Liberzon, Israel; Marmar, Charles
PMID: 28636846
ISSN: 1533-4406
CID: 2603942

Differential effect of exposure-based therapy and cognitive therapy on post-traumatic stress disorder symptom clusters: A randomized controlled trial

Horesh, Danny; Qian, Meng; Freedman, Sara; Shalev, Arieh
A question remains regarding differential effects of exposure-based versus non-exposure-based therapies on specific post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptom clusters. Traumatized emergency room patients were randomized to receive prolonged exposure (PE) or cognitive therapy (CT) without exposure. PE/CT had no differential effect on individual symptom clusters, and change in total PTSD score remained significant even after controlling for the reductions in all three symptom clusters. In addition, baseline levels of PTSD avoidance/intrusion/hyperarousal did not moderate the effects of PE and CT on total PTSD symptom scores. Taken together, these findings challenge the notion that PE and CT are specifically, and differentially, useful in treating one particular PTSD symptom cluster. PRACTITIONER POINTS: Despite their different theoretical backgrounds and techniques, the notion that PE and CT (without exposure) target different PTSD symptoms was not confirmed in this study. Thus, both interventions may in fact be equally effective for treating intrusion, avoidance and hyperarousal symptoms. Baseline levels of avoidance, intrusion and hyperarousal may not be good a priori indicators for PTSD treatment selection. The effect of PE and CT on PTSD as a whole does not seem to depend on a reduction in any specific symptom cluster. These findings indicate that exposure and non-exposure interventions may lead to similar results in terms of reductions in specific PTSD symptoms. It is quite possible that individual PTSD clusters may respond to therapy in an inter-related fashion, with one cluster affecting the other.
PMCID:5326605
PMID: 27561944
ISSN: 2044-8341
CID: 2221632