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Dive into the research topics where Charles Moore is active.

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Featured researches published by Charles Moore.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2003

Short-term alcohol and drug treatment outcomes predict long-term outcome.

Constance Weisner; G. Thomas Ray; Jennifer R. Mertens; Derek D. Satre; Charles Moore

INTRODUCTION Although addiction is recognized as a chronic, relapsing condition, few treatment studies, and none in a commercially insured managed care population, have measured long-term outcomes. We examined the relationship of 6-month treatment outcomes to abstinence 5 years post-treatment, and whether the predictors of abstinence at 5 years were different for those who were, and were not, abstinent at 6 months. METHODS The sample (N=784) is from an outpatient (day hospital and traditional outpatient) managed care chemical dependency program. Subjects were interviewed at baseline, 6 months, and 5 years. Logistic regression analysis was used to assess which individual, treatment and extra-treatment characteristics predicted alcohol and drug abstinence at 5 years. RESULTS Abstinence at 6 months was an important predictor of abstinence at 5 years. Among those abstinent at 6 months, predictors of abstinence at 5 years were older age, being female, 12-step meeting attendance, and recovery-oriented social networks. Among those not abstinent at 6 months, being alcohol dependent rather than drug dependent, 12-step meeting attendance, treatment readmission, and recovery-oriented social networks predicted abstinence at 5 years. CONCLUSION Our findings demonstrate a clear association between short-term and long-term treatment success. In addition, these results strongly support the importance of recovery-oriented social networks for those with good short-term outcomes, and the beneficial impact of readmission for those not initially successful in treatment.


Biological Psychiatry | 2007

Attentional Control and Brain Metabolite Levels in Methamphetamine Abusers

Ruth Salo; Thomas E. Nordahl; Yutaka Natsuaki; Martin H. Leamon; Gantt P. Galloway; Christy Waters; Charles Moore; Michael H. Buonocore

BACKGROUND Methamphetamine abuse is associated with neurotoxicity to frontostriatal brain regions with concomitant deleterious effects on cognitive processes. METHODS By using a computerized measure of selective attention and single-voxel proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy, we examined the relationship between attentional control and brain metabolite levels in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and primary visual cortex (PVC) in 36 currently abstinent methamphetamine abusers and 16 non-substance-using controls. RESULTS The methamphetamine abusers exhibited reduced attentional control (i.e., increased Stroop interference) compared with the controls (p = .04). Bonferroni-adjusted comparisons revealed that ACC levels of N-acetyl aspartate (NAA)-creatine and phosphocreatine (Cr) were lower and that levels of choline (Cho)-NAA were higher in the methamphetamine abusers compared with the controls, at the adjusted p value of .0125. Levels of NAA-Cr, but not of Cho-NAA, within the ACC correlated with measures of attentional control in the methamphetamine abusers (r = -.41; p = .01) but not in controls (r = .22; p = .42). No significant correlations were observed in the PVC (methamphetamine abusers, r = .19; p = .28, controls, r = .38; p = .15). CONCLUSIONS Changes in neurochemicals within frontostriatal brain regions including ACC may contribute to deficits in attentional control among chronic methamphetamine abusers.


Biological Psychiatry | 2009

Cognitive Control and White Matter Callosal Microstructure in Methamphetamine-Dependent Subjects: A Diffusion Tensor Imaging Study

Ruth Salo; Thomas E. Nordahl; Michael H. Buonocore; Yutaka Natsuaki; Christy Waters; Charles Moore; Gantt P. Galloway; Martin H. Leamon

BACKGROUND Methamphetamine (MA) abuse causes damage to structures within the human cerebrum, with particular susceptibility to white matter (WM). Abnormalities have been reported in anterior regions with less evidence of changes in posterior regions. Methamphetamine abusers have also shown deficits on attention tests that measure response conflict and cognitive control. METHODS We examined cognitive control with a computerized measure of the Stroop selective attention task and indices of WM microstructure obtained from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) in the callosal genu and splenium of 37 currently abstinent MA abusers and 17 non-substance abusing control subjects. Measurements of fractional anisotropy (FA), apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) of callosal fibers, and diffusion tensor eigenvalues were obtained in all subjects. RESULTS The MA abusers exhibited greater Stroop reaction time interference (i.e., reduced cognitive control) (p = .04) compared with control subjects. After correcting for multiple comparisons, FA within the genu correlated significantly with measures of cognitive control in the MA abusers (p = .04, Bonferroni corrected) but not in control subjects (p = .26). Group differences in genu but not splenium FA were trend significant (p = .09). CONCLUSIONS Methamphetamine abuse seems to alter anterior callosal WM microstructure with less evidence of change within posterior callosal WM microstructure. The DTI indices within the genu but not splenium correlated with measures of cognitive control in chronic MA abusers.


Medical Care | 2003

Utilization and cost impact of integrating substance abuse treatment and primary Care

Sujaya Parthasarathy; Jennifer R. Mertens; Charles Moore; Constance Weisner

Objective. To examine the impact of integrating medical and substance abuse treatment on health care utilization and cost. Research Design. Randomized clinical trial assigning patients to one of two treatment modalities: an Integrated Care model where primary health care is provided along with substance abuse treatment within the unit and an Independent Care model where medical care is provided in the HMO’s primary care clinics independently from substance abuse treatment. Subjects. Adult patients entering treatment at the outpatient Chemical Dependency Recovery Program in Kaiser Sacramento. Measures. Medical utilization and cost for 12 months pretreatment and 12 months after treatment entry. Results. For the full, randomized cohort, there were no statistically significant differences between the two treatment groups over time. However, among the subset of patients with substance abuse related medical conditions (SAMC), Integrated Care patients had significant decreases in hospitalization rates (P = 0.04), inpatient days (P = 0.05) and ER use (P = 0.02). Total medical costs per member-month declined from


Biological Psychiatry | 2005

A dissociation in attentional control: evidence from methamphetamine dependence.

Ruth Salo; Thomas E. Nordahl; Charles Moore; Christy Waters; Yutaka Natsuaki; Gantt P. Galloway; Shawn J. Kile; Edith V. Sullivan

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Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology | 2007

Day Hospital and Residential Addiction Treatment: Randomized and Nonrandomized Managed Care Clients.

Jane Witbrodt; Jason Bond; Lee Ann Kaskutas; Constance Weisner; Gary Jaeger; David Pating; Charles Moore

200.03 (P = 0.02). Among SAMC Independent Care patients, there was a downward trend in inpatient days (P = 0.08) and ER costs (P = 0.05) but no statistically significant decrease in total medical cost. Conclusions. (Non)findings for the full sample suggest that integrating substance abuse treatment with primary care, may not be necessary or appropriate for all patients. However, it may be beneficial to refer patients with substance abuse related medical conditions to a provider also trained in addiction medicine. There appear to be large cost impacts of providing integrated care for such patients.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2011

Extended findings of Brain Metabolite Normalization in MA-Dependent Subjects Across Sustained Abstinence: A Proton MRS Study

Ruth Salo; Michael H. Buonocore; Martin H. Leamon; Yutaka Natsuaki; Christy Waters; Charles Moore; Gantt P. Galloway; Thomas E. Nordahl

BACKGROUND Selective attention comprises multiple, dissociable component processes, including task shifting and selective inhibition. The goal of this study was to test whether task-shifting, selective inhibition, or both processes were impaired in long-term but currently abstinent methamphetamine-dependent individuals. METHODS Participants were 34 methamphetamine-dependent subjects and 20 nonsubstance abusing controls who were tested on an alternating-runs switch task with conflict sequences that required subjects to switch tasks on every second trial (AABBAABB). RESULTS Methamphetamine-dependent individuals committed more errors on trials that required inhibition of distracting information compared with controls (methamphetamine = 17%; controls = 13%; p = .02). By contrast, error rates did not differ between the groups on switch trials (methamphetamine = 7%; controls = 6%; p = .68). CONCLUSIONS These results indicate that selective inhibition, but not task switching, is selectively compromised by methamphetamine.


Hepatology | 2012

The impact of lifetime alcohol use on hepatitis C treatment outcomes in privately insured members of an integrated health care plan

Marcia Russell; Mary Patricia Pauly; Charles Moore; Constance Chia; Jennifer Mary Dorrell; Renee Junko Cunanan; Gayle Witt; Scott Martin

Male and female managed care clients randomized to day hospital (n=154) or community residential treatment (n=139) were compared on substance use outcomes at 6 and 12 months. To address possible bias in naturalistic studies, outcomes were also examined for clients who self-selected day hospital (n=321) and for clients excluded from randomization and directed to residential treatment because of high environmental risk (n=82). American Society of Addiction Medicine criteria defined study and randomization eligibility. More than 50% of followed clients reported past-30-day abstinence at follow-ups (unadjusted rates, not significant between groups). Despite differing baseline severities, randomized, self-selecting, and directed clients displayed similar abstinence outcomes in multivariate longitudinal models. Index treatment days and 12-step attendance were associated with abstinence (p<.001). Other prognostic effects (including gender and ethnicity) were not significant predictors of differences in outcomes for clients in the treatment modalities. Although 12-step attendance continued to be important for the full 12 months, treatment beyond the index stay was not, suggesting an advantage for engaging clients in treatment initially and promoting 12-step attendance for at least a year.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 2008

Preliminary evidence of behavioral predictors of recurrent drug-induced psychosis in methamphetamine abuse

Ruth Salo; Thomas E. Nordahl; Martin H. Leamon; Yutaka Natsuaki; Charles Moore; Christy Waters; Cameron S. Carter

OBJECTIVE The goal of the present study was to extend our previous findings on long-term methamphetamine (MA) use and drug abstinence on brain metabolite levels in an expanded group of MA-dependent individuals. METHODS Seventeen MA abusers with sustained drug abstinence (1-5 years), 30 MA abusers with short-term drug abstinence (1-6 months) and 24 non-substance using controls were studied using MR spectroscopy (MRS). MRS measures of NAA/Cr, Cho/Cr and Cho/NAA were obtained in the anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) and in the primary visual cortex (PVC). RESULTS ACC-Cho/NAA values were abnormally high in the short-term abstinent group compared to controls [F(1,52) = 18.76, p < 0.0001]. No differences were observed between controls and the long-term abstinent group [F(1,39) = 0.97, p = 0.97]. New evidence of lower ACC-NAA/Cr levels were observed in the short-term abstinent MA abusers compared to controls [F(1,52) = 23.05, p < 0.0001] and long-term abstinent MA abusers [F(1,45) = 7.06, p = 0.01]. No differences were observed between long-term abstinent MA abusers and controls [F(1,39) = 0.48, p = 0.49]. CONCLUSIONS The new findings of relative NAA/Cr normalization across periods of abstinence suggest that adaptive changes following cessation of MA abuse may be broader than initially thought. These changes may contribute to some degree of normalization of neuronal function in the ACC.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2012

Ten-year stability of remission in private alcohol and drug outpatient treatment: Non-problem users versus abstainers

Jennifer R. Mertens; Andrea H. Kline-Simon; Kevin Delucchi; Charles Moore; Constance Weisner

Treatment of chronic hepatitis C infection (HCV+) has historically been shown to be less effective in patients with a heavy drinking history. The effect of moderate and heavy alcohol use on treatment with pegylated interferon‐alpha and ribavirin (P/R) in an insured household population has not been previously reported. We investigated the effect of alcohol on treatment outcome in a cohort of 421 treatment‐naïve HCV+ patients, members of an integrated health care plan treated with P/R between January 2002 and June 2008. A detailed drinking history was obtained for 259 (61.5%) eligible patients. Regular drinking was reported by 93.1% of patients before HCV diagnosis, by 30.9% between HCV diagnosis and treatment, by 1.9% during treatment, and 11.6% after the end of treatment. Heavy drinking patterns were reported by 67.9%, 63.5% of patients drank more than 100 kg of ethanol before initiating HCV treatment, and 29.3% reported abstaining less than the required 6 months before treatment. Despite these reports of heavy drinking, sustained virological responses (SVRs) were obtained in 80.2% of patients with HCV genotypes 2 or 3 and 45.1% of patients with genotypes 1, 4, or 6. Pretreatment drinking patterns and total alcohol intake were both unrelated to SVR rates. Abstaining less than 6 months before treatment was related to lower SVR rates in moderate, but not heavy, drinkers. HCV treatment relapse was unrelated to drinking after treatment ended. Conclusion: The amount of alcohol consumed before HCV treatment did not have a negative effect on treatment outcomes in our population. A history of heavy drinking should not be considered a deterrent to HCV treatment in members of an integrated health care plan who are closely monitored. (HEPATOLOGY 2012)

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Christy Waters

University of California

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Ruth Salo

University of California

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Thomas E. Nordahl

National Institutes of Health

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Gantt P. Galloway

California Pacific Medical Center

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