Longitudinal trajectories of substance use disorder treatment use: A latent class growth analysis using a national cohort in Chile

Borquez, Ignacio; Cerda, Magdalena; Cruz, Andres Gonzalez-Santa; Krawczyk, Noa; Castillo-Carniglia, Alvaro

Abstract

Background and aimsLongitudinal studies have revealed that substance use treatment use is often recurrent among patients; the longitudinal patterns and characteristics of those treatment trajectories have received less attention, particularly in the global south. This study aimed to disentangle heterogeneity in treatment use among adult patients in Chile by identifying distinct treatment trajectory groups and factors associated with them.DesignNational-level registry-based retrospective cohort.Setting and participantsAdults admitted to publicly funded substance use disorder treatment programs in Chile from November 2009 to November 2010 and followed for 9 years (n = 6266).MeasurementsMonthly treatment use; type of treatment; ownership of the treatment center; discharge status; primary substance used; sociodemographic.FindingsA seven-class treatment trajectory solution was chosen using latent class growth analysis. We identified three trajectory groups that did not recur and had different treatment lengths: Early discontinuation (32%), Less than a year in treatment (19.7%) and Year-long episode, without recurrence (12.3%). We also identified a mixed trajectory group that had a long first treatment or two treatment episodes with a brief time between treatments: Long first treatment, or immediate recurrence (6.3%), and three recurrent treatment trajectory groups: Recurrent and decreasing (14.2%), Early discontinuation with recurrence (9.9%) and Recurrent after long between treatments period (5.7%). Inpatient or outpatient high intensity (vs. outpatient low intensity) at first entry increased the odds of being in the longer one-episode groups compared with the Early discontinuation group. Women had increased odds of belonging to all the recurrent groups. Using cocaine paste (vs. alcohol) as a primary substance decreased the odds of belonging to long one-episode groups.ConclusionsIn Chile, people in publicly funded treatment for substance use disorder show seven distinct care trajectories: three groups with different treatment lengths and no recurring episodes, a mixed group with a long first treatment or two treatment episodes with a short between-treatment-episodes period and three recurrent treatment groups.

Más información

Título según WOS: ID WOS:001142141600001 Not found in local WOS DB
Título de la Revista: ADDICTION
Volumen: 119
Número: 4
Editorial: Wiley
Fecha de publicación: 2024
Página de inicio: 753
Página final: 765
DOI:

10.1111/add.16412

Notas: ISI