Content area

Abstract

Introduction

Craving is commonly thought to play a crucial role both in the transition from controlled drinking to alcohol dependence and in the mechanism underlying relapse. However there is no consensus on its definition, and on its correct assessment. Another significant hindrance is that craving is almost certainly a multi-faceted construct. To this respect a three pathway psychobiological model able to differentiate craving into a reward, relief, and obsessive component has been suggested.

Methods

CTQ was administered to 547 control subjects and to 100 alcohol dependent patients. The dimensional structure of the questionnaire, through the principal component analysis, the reliability and the threshold values were evaluated in both the control and clinical sample.

Results

The results showed and confirmed that the CTQ is composed of three dimensions. Cronbach's alpha coefficients suggest that the questionnaire is reliable. Alcohol-dependent subjects had a significantly higher mean score as compared to the normative sample in both Reward, Relief, Obsessive craving. Younger age correlated with higher scores on Reward craving (r=0.38; p<0.001) and males reported significantly higher scores than women on Reward craving (t=4.36; p<0.001).

Discussion

CTQ showed to be a reliable and valid questionnaire to distinguish a normative sample from pathological individuals. The average scores obtained represent the first normative data available for this questionnaire. Identifying a craving type may represent an important predicting or matching variable for anti-craving psychotropics. More research is needed with respect to CTQ's external validity, i.e. correlations with phenotypic, endophenotypic and genetic indicators of relief, reward and obsessive drinking.

Details

Title
Craving Typology Questionnaire (CTQ): A scale for alcohol craving in normal controls and alcoholics
Author
Martinotti, Giovan ni; Di Nicola, Marco; Tedeschi, Daniela; Callea, Antonino; Di Giannantonio, Massimo; Janiri, Luigi
First page
925
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Oct 2013
Publisher
Elsevier Limited
ISSN
0010440X
e-ISSN
15328384
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1433078042
Copyright
Copyright Elsevier Limited Oct 2013