Joint Effects of Real-World Cue Exposure and Affective States on Momentary Alcohol Craving in Adults with Alcohol Use Disorder
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Background
Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is marked by high relapse rates often driven by craving, yet less is known about whether in vivo , social, and place-based alcohol cues are differentially associated with craving across affective states. This study examined independent and affect-contingent associations of these cues with momentary craving in adults with AUD enrolled in an alcohol intervention study.
Methods
Thirty-three adults with AUD completed up to four daily ecological momentary assessments (EMA) for 28 days. EMA prompts assessed craving, in vivo alcohol exposure, being around usual drinking partners, being in usual drinking places, and high-arousal positive affect (PA) and negative affect (NA). Multilevel mixed-effects models adjusted for demographics, intervention phase (1 = post, 0 = pre), AUD severity, and temporal and contextual covariates.
Results
EMA compliance was high ( Median per-participant = 86.6%). Within-person elevations in in vivo alcohol exposure and being around usual drinking partners were independently associated with greater momentary craving, whereas being in usual drinking places was not. In vivo alcohol exposure was more strongly associated with craving during higher-than-usual PA ( β = 0.08, p = .032), whereas being in usual drinking places was more strongly associated with craving during higher-than-usual NA ( β = 0.06, p = .036), adjusting for intervention phase (which was associated with lower craving).
Conclusions
Findings support the need for personalized just-in-time adaptive interventions tailored to high-risk, momentary cue–affect contexts in AUD, beyond low-frequency clinician-delivered feedback that may reduce average craving but not fully address real-time risk. ClinicalTrials.gov registration: NCT05135767 .