Cocaine use disorder criteria in a clinical sample: an analysis using Item Response Theory, factor analysis, and network analysis
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Abstract
Background: The conceptualization of substance use disorders (SUDs) was modified in successive
editions of the DSM. Dimensionality and inclusion/exclusion of several criteria was studied using
various analytic approaches.
Objective: The study aimed to deepen our knowledge of the interrelationships between the
diagnostic criteria for cocaine use disorder (CUD), applying three different analytical techniques:
factor analysis, Item Response Theory (IRT) models, and network analysis.
Methods: 425 (85.4% male) outpatients were evaluated for CUD using the Substance Dependence
Severity Scale. Confirmatory Factor Analysis, 2-parameter logistic model (IRT) and network analysis
were applied to analyze the relationships between the diagnostic criteria.
Results: The results show that “legal problems” criterion is not congruent with the CUD measure on
three analyses. Also, network analysis suggests the usefulness of the “craving” criterion. The
criterion “quit/control” is the one that presents the best centrality indices and expected influence,
showing strong relationships with the criteria of “craving,” “tolerance,” “neglect roles” and “activities
given up.”
Conclusions: Network analysis appears to be a useful and complementary technique to factor
analysis and IRT for understanding CUD. The “quit/control” criterion emerges as a central criterion
to understand CUD.
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Bibliographic citation
Sánchez-García, M., Rosa-Cáceres, A. de la, Díaz-Batanero, C., Fernández-Calderón, F., & Lozano, O. M. (2022). Cocaine use disorder criteria in a clinical sample: an analysis using Item Response Theory, factor analysis, and network analysis. In The American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse (Vol. 48, Issue 3, pp. 284–292). Informa UK Limited. https://doi.org/10.1080/00952990.2021.2012185














