Moderators of Substance Use Disorder Treatment for Adolescents
- PMID: 32716211
- PMCID: PMC7855225
- DOI: 10.1080/15374416.2020.1790379
Moderators of Substance Use Disorder Treatment for Adolescents
Abstract
Objective: This brief review covers the current state of the literature on moderators of adolescent substance use disorder (SUD) treatment. These moderators provide information on "for whom" a specific treatment may work best.Method: We used Google Scholar, PubMed, PsycInfo, and manual search of relevant reference lists to identify eligible peer-reviewed publications from January 2005 to December 2019.Results: We summarize 21 published studies (including meta-analyses, randomized clinical trials, and correlational work) testing moderators and/or predictors of adolescent SUD treatment outcomes. Conclusions are, thus, limited by the relatively small number of studies. Results suggest that, for adolescents with co-occurring externalizing pathology or those higher in SUD severity, more intensive treatment appears to be more effective. Other findings were often inconsistent (e.g., examining sex or race/ethnicity as a moderator) between studies, making it challenging to provide clear recommendations for personalizing SUD treatment choice.Conclusions: Future research may need to shift focus from exploring often unchangeable moderators (e.g., race/ethnicity) to factors that are potentially modifiable with treatment. Additionally, testing models that include mediators of treatment effects-that is, factors that help to explain "how" treatment works-along with moderators (moderated-mediation) may provide the most benefit in understanding both "for whom" and "how" to tailor SUD treatment to optimally meet an adolescent's personal needs.
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