Taxonicity of Cannabis Use Disorder: Findings from Nationally Representative Community Sample and an Inpatient Clinical Sample

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Operational diagnostic definitions of drug addiction have evolved considerably over the last twenty years, including both a categorical one (substance dependence; ICD-11) and predominantly dimensional one (substance use disorder [SUD]; DSM-5). Although cannabis use disorder (CUD) is among the most prevalent SUDs, few studies have directly evaluated whether its underlying structure is categorical or dimensional or investigated this question with a clinical sample. Three taxometric procedures, Mean Above-Minus Below a Cut [MAMBAC], Maximum Eigenvalue [MAXEIG)], Latent Mode [L-Mode], were conducted in two datasets: (1) participants who reported cannabis use in the National Epidemiological Study and Alcohol and Related Conditions III (NESARC-III), a large, nationally representative sample of U.S. community adults (N=3623) and (2) patients reporting pre-admission cannabis use in an inpatient SUD treatment program in Ontario, Canada (N=621). Comparison curve fit indices (CCFI) for the NESARC-III analyses supported dimensional structure: MAMBAC=0.48; MAXEIG=0.30; L-Mode=0.43; Mean CCFI=0.40. CCFI coefficients for the clinical dataset also supported dimensional structure: MMAMBAC=0.09, MAXEIG=0.16, L-Mode=0.29, Mean CCFI=0.18. These results suggest that the latent structure of cannabis addiction is a dimensional construct along a spectrum of severity rather than a dichotomous categorical construct. These findings are more consistent with the DSM-5 conceptualization compared to ICD-11.

Article activity feed