The considerable impact of addiction has been highly visible in the news. What isn't apparent from the big headlines is that a large percentage of addicts are not single drug users but abuse and are dependent on multiple drugs. As of 2017, over 2.3 million people age 12 and older (nearly 1%) in the U.S. were considered to meet the criteria for having both an Alcohol Use Disorder and a Substance Use Disorder. That is roughly equivalent to the rates of cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine substance use disorders combined (e.g., people who only abuse one of those substances). Moreover, over 80% of adults with a diagnosable alcohol use disorder in the U.S. also use nicotine products, and rates of nicotine co-use soar to as high as 95% in methamphetamine addicts. This pattern of poly-drug abuse and dependence is observed across different classes of drugs and it's not uncommon for users to abuse multiple classes. Even so, studying addiction has generally focused on individual drugs of abuse.
The purpose of this Research Topic is to highlight the reality of poly-drug abuse as it helps frame the way that we think about and study addiction. We are seeking high-quality original preclinical and clinical submissions that focus on the use of multiple substances. Studies assessing potential therapeutics (novel pharmacotherapies, innovative treatment strategies, multi-model combined therapies) are desirable and highly relevant, even though submissions do not necessarily have to be treatment-focused. Preclinical submissions focused on mechanism (i.e., target receptors, convergent pathways, circuitry models, viral studies, knockout models, etc…) and similar clinical studies (imaging studies, genetic screening and others that are focused on the underlying mechanism) are more than welcome. Authors should consider co-abuse and poly-drug use to be broadly defined as problematic or consistent use of two or more substances, but does not need to meet the criteria for dependence on both substances. We will also consider submissions focused on the social and socioeconomic impact of poly-drug abuse. Our goal is to assemble a comprehensive and well-rounded picture of poly-drug abuse in order to shine a brighter light on this important and complicated issue.
The considerable impact of addiction has been highly visible in the news. What isn't apparent from the big headlines is that a large percentage of addicts are not single drug users but abuse and are dependent on multiple drugs. As of 2017, over 2.3 million people age 12 and older (nearly 1%) in the U.S. were considered to meet the criteria for having both an Alcohol Use Disorder and a Substance Use Disorder. That is roughly equivalent to the rates of cocaine, heroin, and methamphetamine substance use disorders combined (e.g., people who only abuse one of those substances). Moreover, over 80% of adults with a diagnosable alcohol use disorder in the U.S. also use nicotine products, and rates of nicotine co-use soar to as high as 95% in methamphetamine addicts. This pattern of poly-drug abuse and dependence is observed across different classes of drugs and it's not uncommon for users to abuse multiple classes. Even so, studying addiction has generally focused on individual drugs of abuse.
The purpose of this Research Topic is to highlight the reality of poly-drug abuse as it helps frame the way that we think about and study addiction. We are seeking high-quality original preclinical and clinical submissions that focus on the use of multiple substances. Studies assessing potential therapeutics (novel pharmacotherapies, innovative treatment strategies, multi-model combined therapies) are desirable and highly relevant, even though submissions do not necessarily have to be treatment-focused. Preclinical submissions focused on mechanism (i.e., target receptors, convergent pathways, circuitry models, viral studies, knockout models, etc…) and similar clinical studies (imaging studies, genetic screening and others that are focused on the underlying mechanism) are more than welcome. Authors should consider co-abuse and poly-drug use to be broadly defined as problematic or consistent use of two or more substances, but does not need to meet the criteria for dependence on both substances. We will also consider submissions focused on the social and socioeconomic impact of poly-drug abuse. Our goal is to assemble a comprehensive and well-rounded picture of poly-drug abuse in order to shine a brighter light on this important and complicated issue.