4.4 Article

Diagnostic criteria for cannabis withdrawal syndrome

Journal

DRUG AND ALCOHOL DEPENDENCE
Volume 123, Issue 1-3, Pages 141-147

Publisher

ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2011.11.007

Keywords

Cannabis; Diagnostic criteria; DSM-V; Withdrawal

Funding

  1. NIH, National Institute on Drug Abuse
  2. NIDA Residential Research Support Services [HHSN271200599091CADB]
  3. NIH [1K23DA027045-01A1]

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Objective: Cannabis withdrawal occurs in frequent users who quit, but there are no accepted diagnostic criteria for a cannabis withdrawal syndrome (CWS). This study evaluated diagnostic criteria for CWS proposed in DSM-V and two earlier proposals. Method: A convenience sample of 384 adult, non-treatment-seeking lifetime cannabis smokers provided retrospective self-report data on their most difficult quit attempt without formal treatment, which was used in this secondary analysis. Prevalence, time of onset, and peak intensity (5-point Likert scale) for 39 withdrawal symptoms (drawn from the literature) were assessed via computer-administered questionnaire. Subject groups were compared using chi-square or ANOVA. Symptom clustering was evaluated with principal components analysis. Results: 40.9% of subjects met the DSM-V criterion of >= 3 symptoms from a list of 7. There were no associations with sex, race, or type of cannabis preparation used. There were significant positive associations between duration or frequency of cannabis use prior to the quit attempt and experiencing CWS. Subjects with CWS had a significantly shorter duration of abstinence. Alternative syndromal criteria (dropping physical symptoms from DSM-V list; requiring >= 2 or >= 4 symptoms from a list of 11) yielded a similar prevalence of CWS and similar associations with prior cannabis use and relapse. The PCA yielded 12 factors, including some symptom clusters not included in DSM-V. Conclusions: Findings support the concurrent and predictive validity of the proposed DSM-V CWS, but suggest that the list of withdrawal symptoms and number required for diagnosis warrant further evaluation. Published by Elsevier Ireland Ltd.

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