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Original Research

Sensitivity and specificity of S2BI for identifying alcohol and cannabis use disorders among adolescents presenting for primary care

, MD, MPH, , ScD, MSc, , PhD, , MS, , PhD & , MD, MPH
 

Abstract

Background

The Screening to Brief Intervention (S2BI) tool was designed to identify substance use disorders in adolescents. We report the S2BI’s sensitivity and specificity for identifying alcohol and cannabis use disorders (AUD and CUD) in adolescents presenting for primary care. Methods: Participants aged 14–18 (N = 517) completed an electronic survey, consisting of the S2BI, the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI), and anxiety and depression screens. We calculated sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive value (PPV, NPV) of the S2BI compared to the CIDI criterion standard, using past year “monthly” and “weekly or more” consumption of alcohol or marijuana as a threshold for AUD or CUD. Results: Current AUD and CUD were present in 2.9% and 8.3% of the sample, respectively and severe AUD and CUD were present in 0.8% and 3.9%. The S2BI had 53.3% sensitivity and 94.2% specificity for identifying any AUD (PPV = 21.6%; NPV = 98.5%), and 81.4% sensitivity and 92.0% specificity for identifying any CUD (PPV = 47.9%; NPV = 98.2%). The same threshold had 100% sensitivity and 93.6% specificity for identifying moderate/severe AUD, and 90.0% sensitivity and 89.0% specificity for identifying moderate/severe CUD. Conclusions: S2BI had excellent sensitivity and specificity for identifying moderate and severe AUD and CUD. Sensitivity decreased when mild AUD and CUD were included.

Acknowledgments

We thank Melanie Mait and Kidest Assefa-McNeil of the Division of Developmental Medicine at Boston Children’s Hospital for additional manuscript editing.

Disclosure statement

The study protocol was approved by the Boston Children’s Hospital Institutional Review Board (IRB) (IRB-P00019608).

Data availability statement

The data used in this paper is available on request from the corresponding author.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Conrad N. Hilton Foundation under Grant [number 20140273]. The funder had no role in the study design, in data collection, analysis or interpretation, in article development, or in the decision to submit the article for publication.

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