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Drug Alcohol Depend ; 139: 121-31, 2014 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24731538

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Convergent research reveals heterogeneity in substance use disorders (SUD). The Addiction Dimensions for Assessment and Personalised Treatment (ADAPT) is designed to help clinicians tailor therapies. METHODS: Multicentre study in 21 SUD clinics in London, Birmingham (England) and Adelaide (Australia). 132 clinicians rated their caseload on a beta version with 16 ordinal indicators of addiction severity, health and social problem complexity, and recovery strengths constructs. In Birmingham, two in-treatment outcomes were recorded after 15-months: 28-day drug use (Treatment Outcome Profile; n=703) and Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF; DSM-IV Axis V; n=695). Following item-level screening (inter-rater reliability [IRR]; n=388), exploratory structural equation models (ESEM), latent profile analysis (LPA), and mixed-effects regression evaluated construct, concurrent and predictive validity characteristics, respectively. RESULTS: 2467 patients rated (majority opioid or stimulant dependent, enrolled in opioid medication assisted or psychological treatment). IRR-screening removed two items and ESEM models identified and recalibrated remaining indicators (root mean square error of approximation 0.066 [90% confidence interval 0.055-0.064]). Following minor re-specification and satisfactory measurement invariance evaluation, ADAPT factor scores discriminated patients by sample, addiction therapy and drug use. LPA identified three patient sub-types: Class 1 (moderate severity, moderate complexity, high strengths profile; 46.9%); Class 2 (low severity, low complexity, high strengths; 25.4%) and Class 3 (high severity, high complexity, low strengths; 27.7%). Class 2 had higher GAF (z=4.30). Class 3 predicted follow-up drug use (z=2.02) and lower GAF (z=3.51). CONCLUSION: The ADAPT is a valid instrument for SUD treatment planning, clinical review and outcome evaluation. Scoring and application are discussed.


Subject(s)
Psychiatric Status Rating Scales , Substance-Related Disorders/diagnosis , Adult , Amphetamine-Related Disorders/diagnosis , Amphetamine-Related Disorders/psychology , Amphetamine-Related Disorders/therapy , Cross-Sectional Studies , Female , Humans , Male , Opioid-Related Disorders/diagnosis , Opioid-Related Disorders/psychology , Opioid-Related Disorders/therapy , Psychiatric Status Rating Scales/standards , Reproducibility of Results , Sensitivity and Specificity , Severity of Illness Index , Substance-Related Disorders/psychology , Substance-Related Disorders/therapy
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