Spanagel, Rainer and Bach, Patrick and Banaschewski, Tobias and Beck, Anne and Bermpohl, Felix and Bernardi, Rick E and Beste, Christian and Deserno, Lorenz and Durstewitz, Daniel and Ebner-Priemer, Ulrich and Endrass, Tanja and Ersche, Karen D and Feld, Gordon and Gerchen, Martin Fungisai and Gerlach, Björn and Goschke, Thomas and Hansson, Anita Christiane and Heim, Christine and Kiebel, Stefan and Kiefer, Falk and Kirsch, Peter and Kirschbaum, Clemens and Koppe, Georgia and Lenz, Bernd and Liu, Shuyan and Marxen, Michael and Meinhardt, Marcus W and Meyer-Lindenberg, Andreas and Montag, Christiane and Müller, Christian P and Nagel, Wolfgang E and Oliveria, Ana M M and Owald, David and Pilhatsch, Maximilian and Priller, Josef and Rapp, Michael A and Reichert, Markus and Ripke, Stephan and Ritter, Kerstin and Romanczuk-Seiferth, Nina and Schlagenhauf, Florian and Schwarz, Emanuel and Schwöbel, Sarah and Smolka, Michael N and Soekadar, Surjo R and Sommer, Wolfgang H and Stock, Ann-Kathrin and Ströhle, Andreas and Tost, Heike and Vollstädt-Klein, Sabine and Walter, Henrik and Waschke, Tina and Witt, Stephanie H and Heinz, Andreas (2024) The ReCoDe addiction research consortium: losing and regaining control over drug intake-findings and future perspectives. Addiction Biology, 29, (7), e13419. https://doi.org/10.1111/adb.13419.
External website: https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/adb.13...
Substance use disorders (SUDs) are seen as a continuum ranging from goal-directed and hedonic drug use to loss of control over drug intake with aversive consequences for mental and physical health and social functioning. The main goals of our interdisciplinary German collaborative research centre on Losing and Regaining Control over Drug Intake (ReCoDe) are (i) to study triggers (drug cues, stressors, drug priming) and modifying factors (age, gender, physical activity, cognitive functions, childhood adversity, social factors, such as loneliness and social contact/interaction) that longitudinally modulate the trajectories of losing and regaining control over drug consumption under real-life conditions. (ii) To study underlying behavioural, cognitive and neurobiological mechanisms of disease trajectories and drug-related behaviours and (iii) to provide non-invasive mechanism-based interventions. These goals are achieved by: (A) using innovative mHealth (mobile health) tools to longitudinally monitor the effects of triggers and modifying factors on drug consumption patterns in real life in a cohort of 900 patients with alcohol use disorder. This approach will be complemented by animal models of addiction with 24/7 automated behavioural monitoring across an entire disease trajectory; i.e. from a naïve state to a drug-taking state to an addiction or resilience-like state. (B) The identification and, if applicable, computational modelling of key molecular, neurobiological and psychological mechanisms (e.g., reduced cognitive flexibility) mediating the effects of such triggers and modifying factors on disease trajectories. (C) Developing and testing non-invasive interventions (e.g., Just-In-Time-Adaptive-Interventions (JITAIs), various non-invasive brain stimulations (NIBS), individualized physical activity) that specifically target the underlying mechanisms for regaining control over drug intake. Here, we will report on the most important results of the first funding period and outline our future research strategy.
B Substances > Substances in general
E Concepts in biomedical areas > Nervous system physiology (brain, neural)
F Concepts in psychology > Behaviour > Risk-taking behaviour
G Health and disease > Substance use disorder (addiction) > Drug use disorder > Drug withdrawal / craving
HJ Treatment or recovery method > Substance disorder treatment method
J Health care, prevention, harm reduction and treatment > Risk and protective factors
J Health care, prevention, harm reduction and treatment > Treatment and maintenance > Treatment factors
VA Geographic area > International
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