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Dive into the research topics where Kevin Cummins is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin Cummins.


Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 2008

Comorbidity of Substance Dependence and Depression : Role of Life Stress and Self-Efficacy in Sustaining Abstinence

Tate; Wu J; McQuaid; Kevin Cummins; Shriver C; Krenek M; Sandra A. Brown

The authors examined life stress and self-efficacy as predictors of time to relapse for 113 adults with comorbid major depressive disorder and alcohol and/or substance dependence in a randomized clinical trial comparing 2 psychotherapy interventions (integrated cognitive- behavioral therapy and 12-step facilitation therapy). Life stress, self-efficacy, and substance use were assessed at treatment entry, 12 weeks (mid-treatment), and 24 weeks (end of treatment). Time to relapse was defined as the number of days from treatment initiation until first alcohol and/or drug use. Half of the sample relapsed within the study period of 24 weeks. There was no significant difference between treatment groups. Individuals experiencing life stressors were more likely to relapse early than those not experiencing life stressors. Lower self-efficacy also predicted earlier relapse. Chronic stress levels and self-efficacy were stable across time for most individuals. In contrast, acute stress events occurred at differing times, and survival analyses provided evidence of heightened relapse risk in the month following acute stressors. The interaction of self-efficacy and life stress was not significant. The results highlight the significance of life stress and self-efficacy as predictors of early relapse.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2012

The association of fetuin-A with cardiovascular disease mortality in older community-dwelling adults: the Rancho Bernardo study.

Gail A. Laughlin; Kevin Cummins; Christina L. Wassel; Lori B. Daniels; Joachim H. Ix

OBJECTIVES The goal of this study was to evaluate the prospective association of fetuin-A levels with cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality. BACKGROUND Fetuin-A is a circulating inhibitor of calcium deposition in the vasculature and of insulin action in muscle and fat, and may be involved in the pathogenesis of CVD. METHODS This is a population-based prospective study of 633 men and 1,025 women (median age = 73 years) who had fetuin-A levels and CVD risk factors evaluated in 1992 to 1996 and were followed for vital status through 2010. RESULTS Plasma fetuin-A (g/l ± SD) was highest in women using oral estrogens (0.55 ± 0.12), intermediate for women not using oral estrogens (0.51 ± 0.10), and lowest for men (0.50 ± 0.10), p < 0.001. Lower fetuin-A levels were associated with older age, but with lower levels of other CVD risk factors including adiposity, blood pressure, lipids, triglycerides, and insulin resistance (all p < 0.01). During the median 12-year follow-up, 273 deaths were attributed to CVD. The association of fetuin-A with CVD mortality differed by diabetes status (p for interaction = 0.003). Adjusting for age, sex, oral estrogens, and lifestyle, the hazard ratio for CVD mortality comparing the lowest fetuin-A quartile with all higher values was 1.76 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.34 to 2.31; p < 0.001) for participants without diabetes and 0.43 (95% CI: 0.19 to 0.98; p = 0.046) for participants with diabetes. CONCLUSIONS Low fetuin-A levels predicted greater risk for CVD mortality in older adults without diabetes, but were associated with reduced risk of CVD death in those with diabetes. Fetuin-A may provide novel insight into mechanisms leading to CVD death in those with versus without diabetes.


Psychology of Addictive Behaviors | 2010

Clinical Outcomes of an Integrated Treatment for Depression and Substance Use Disorders

Katherine P. Lydecker; Susan R. Tate; Kevin Cummins; John R. McQuaid; Eric Granholm; Sandra A. Brown

The authors compared longitudinal treatment outcomes for depressed substance-dependent veterans (N = 206) assigned to integrated cognitive-behavioral therapy plus standard pharmacotherapy (ICBT + P) or 12-step facilitation therapy plus standard pharmacotherapy (TSF + P). Drug and alcohol involvement and depressive symptomology were measured at intake and at 3-month intervals during treatment and up to 1 year posttreatment. Participants in both treatment conditions showed decreased depression and substance use from intake. ICBT + P participants maintained improvements in substance involvement over time, whereas TSF + P participants had more rapid increases in use in the months following treatment. Decreases in depressive symptoms were more pronounced for TSF + P than ICBT + P in the 6 months posttreatment. Within both treatment groups, higher attendance was associated with improved substance use and depression outcomes over time. Initial levels of depressive symptomology had a complex predictive relationship with long-term depression outcomes. Early treatment response predicted long-term substance use outcomes for a portion of the sample. Although both treatments were associated with improvements in substance use and depression, ICBT + P may lead to more stable substance use reductions compared with TSF + P.


Journal of the American College of Cardiology | 2011

The Associations of Fetuin-A with Subclinical Cardiovascular Disease in Community-Dwelling Persons: the Rancho Bernardo Study

Joachim H. Ix; Elizabeth Barrett-Connor; Christina L. Wassel; Kevin Cummins; Jaclyn Bergstrom; Lori B. Daniels; Gail A. Laughlin

OBJECTIVES The aim of this study was to determine the association of fetuin-A with subclinical cardiovascular disease (CVD) in community-living individuals. BACKGROUND Fetuin-A is a hepatic secretory protein that inhibits arterial calcium deposition in vitro. Lower fetuin-A levels are associated with arterial calcification and death in end-stage renal disease populations. The association of fetuin-A with subclinical CVD in the general population is unknown. METHODS Among 1,375 community-living individuals without prevalent clinical CVD, we measured plasma fetuin-A concentrations. Peripheral arterial disease (PAD) was defined by ankle brachial index <0.90, coronary artery calcification (CAC) was measured by computed tomography, and common and internal intima-media thickness (cIMT) were measured by carotid ultrasound. PAD was measured concurrent with fetuin-A, and CAC and cIMT were measured 4.6 years (mean) later. RESULTS Mean age was 70 ± 11 years, and 64% were women. Fetuin-A levels were inversely associated with CAC severity. When evaluated as CAC categories (0, 1 to 100, 101 to 300, >300) with ordinal logistic regression, each SD higher fetuin-A was associated with 31% lower odds of CAC severity (proportional odds ratio: 0.69; 95% confidence interval: 0.46 to 0.92; p = 0.008) in models adjusted for demographic data, lifestyle factors, traditional CVD risk factors, and kidney function. In contrast, no association of fetuin-A was observed with PAD or high common or internal cIMT in adjusted models. CONCLUSIONS Lower fetuin-A levels are independently associated with greater CAC severity but not PAD or cIMT. If confirmed, fetuin-A might mark calcium deposition within the vasculature but not atherosclerosis per se.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2010

Alcohol and drug involvement after adolescent treatment and functioning during emerging adulthood

Kristen G. Anderson; Danielle E. Ramo; Kevin Cummins; Sandra A. Brown

This study identified patterns of alcohol and other drug (AOD) involvement during the decade following adolescent AOD treatment and developmental outcomes in emerging adulthood. AOD and psychosocial variables were assessed at eight time points from adolescence into adulthood (n=153; 41.2% women) in an inpatient treatment sample of alcohol and other drug dependent teens. Latent class growth analysis identified six trajectories based on alcohol and substance use frequency which were consistent with developmental transitions and validated by measures of dependency symptoms. While few differences were evident at intake, the educational, occupational and interpersonal attainments were differentially associated with the alcohol/drug trajectories as youth transitioned into adulthood. High rates of high school graduation (71.1%), professional occupations (45.2%), marriage/cohabitation (48.5%), and financial responsibility for children (F[5,27]=2.75, p=.02) were evident for those with the least alcohol and drug involvement. More severe drug use trajectories were associated with higher rates of dependence, incarceration and more treatment at the final period of assessment. Outcomes of the trajectory of frequent alcohol involvement were distinct from combined alcohol and drug use. These findings highlight the long-term diversity of substance use outcomes following adolescent treatment and suggest that identification of these patterns of use following treatment can help clarify the developmental impact of youth alcohol and drug use on outcomes in young adulthood.


Diabetes Care | 2013

Sex-specific association of fetuin-A with type 2 diabetes in older community-dwelling adults: the Rancho Bernardo study.

Gail A. Laughlin; Elizabeth Barrett-Connor; Kevin Cummins; Lori B. Daniels; Christina L. Wassel; Joachim H. Ix

OBJECTIVE This study evaluated the sex-specific association of plasma fetuin-A levels with prevalent and incident type 2 diabetes in community-dwelling older adults. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Participants were 684 men and 1,058 women (median age, 71 years) whose fetuin-A levels, diabetes prevalence, and diabetes risk factors were evaluated in 1992–1996. The participants were followed for incident diabetes through 2010 (median follow-up, 9 years). RESULTS Women with impaired glucose tolerance had elevated fetuin-A levels compared with women with normal glucose tolerance (P = 0.019), but fetuin-A levels were not elevated in women with impaired fasting glucose. Fetuin-A did not vary by glucose tolerance status in men. There were significant interactions of fetuin-A by sex for prevalent (P = 0.007) and incident (P = 0.020) diabetes. For women, each SD (0.10 g/L) higher fetuin-A level was associated with a higher odds of prevalent diabetes (odds ratio [OR] 1.79, 95% CI 1.47–2.17) and greater risk of incident diabetes (hazard ratio [HR] 1.66, 95% CI 1.18–2.34), adjusting for age and estrogen therapy. These associations were not materially altered by adjustment for diabetes risk factors but were attenuated by adjusting for postchallenge glucose levels. Among men, although positive associations with prevalent (OR 1.15 [0.94–1.41]) and incident (HR 1.24 [0.93–1.65]) diabetes were suggested in age-adjusted models, risk estimates attenuated to one after multivariable adjustment. CONCLUSIONS Higher fetuin-A concentrations were independently associated with an increased risk of developing type 2 diabetes in older women but were not related to diabetes risk in older men. Fetuin-A may provide novel insights into mechanisms underlying sex differences in glucose homeostasis and diabetes risk in old age.


Addictive Behaviors | 2010

Alcohol cue reactivity task development.

Carmen Pulido; Sandra A. Brown; Kevin Cummins; Martin P. Paulus; Susan F. Tapert

BACKGROUND The physiological and cognitive reactions provoked by alcohol cues, as compared to non-alcohol cues, can predict future drinking. Alcohol cue reactivity tasks have been developed; however, most were created for use with alcohol use disordered individuals and utilize limited or only partially standardized stimuli. This project systematically created an alcohol cue reactivity task for studies with non-drinkers, using well-characterized stimuli. OBJECTIVES We comprehensively standardized 60 alcohol and 60 non-alcohol beverage pictures using ratings from young non-drinkers (N=82) on affective and perceptual features. RESULTS A statistical matching approach yielded 26 matched alcohol-non-alcohol picture pairs matched on valence, arousal, image complexity, brightness, and hue. The task was piloted and further refined to 22 picture pairs. An 8-minute, 32-second event-related task was created using a random stimulus function for optimized condition timing and systematic presentation of the images. CONCLUSIONS The long-term objectives of this project are to utilize this task with non-drinking youth to investigate how reactivity to alcohol stimuli may predict alcohol use initiation and escalation, to help identify the role of exposure to alcohol stimuli on the subsequent development of alcohol-related problems.


Cerebral Cortex | 2016

Adolescent Development of Cortical and White Matter Structure in the NCANDA Sample: Role of Sex, Ethnicity, Puberty, and Alcohol Drinking.

Adolf Pfefferbaum; Torsten Rohlfing; Kilian M. Pohl; Barton Lane; Weiwei Chu; Dongjin Kwon; B. Nolan Nichols; Sandra A. Brown; Susan F. Tapert; Kevin Cummins; Wesley K. Thompson; Ty Brumback; M.J. Meloy; Terry L. Jernigan; Anders M. Dale; Ian M. Colrain; Fiona C. Baker; Devin Prouty; Michael D. De Bellis; James T. Voyvodic; Duncan B. Clark; Beatriz Luna; Tammy Chung; Bonnie J. Nagel; Edith V. Sullivan

Brain structural development continues throughout adolescence, when experimentation with alcohol is often initiated. To parse contributions from biological and environmental factors on neurodevelopment, this study used baseline National Consortium on Alcohol and NeuroDevelopment in Adolescence (NCANDA) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data, acquired in 674 adolescents meeting no/low alcohol or drug use criteria and 134 adolescents exceeding criteria. Spatial integrity of images across the 5 recruitment sites was assured by morphological scaling using Alzheimers disease neuroimaging initiative phantom-derived volume scalar metrics. Clinical MRI readings identified structural anomalies in 11.4%. Cortical volume and thickness were smaller and white matter volumes were larger in older than in younger adolescents. Effects of sex (male > female) and ethnicity (majority > minority) were significant for volume and surface but minimal for cortical thickness. Adjusting volume and area for supratentorial volume attenuated or removed sex and ethnicity effects. That cortical thickness showed age-related decline and was unrelated to supratentorial volume is consistent with the radial unit hypothesis, suggesting a universal neural development characteristic robust to sex and ethnicity. Comparison of NCANDA with PING data revealed similar but flatter, age-related declines in cortical volumes and thickness. Smaller, thinner frontal, and temporal cortices in the exceeds-criteria than no/low-drinking group suggested untoward effects of excessive alcohol consumption on brain structural development.


Nicotine & Tobacco Research | 2011

Mediating Influences of Negative Affect and Risk Perception on the Relationship Between Sensation Seeking and Adolescent Cigarette Smoking

Neal Doran; Patricia E. Sanders; Nicole M. Bekman; Matthew J. Worley; Teresa K. Monreal; Elizabeth McGee; Kevin Cummins; Sandra A. Brown

INTRODUCTION A substantial number of adolescents are current and regular cigarette smokers, and there is a need to better understand factors that contribute to smoking behavior during these years. Sensation seeking (SS) is one factor that has consistently been associated with smoking, but less is known about mechanisms that may explain this relationship. METHODS The present study tested the hypothesis that high school students high in SS would report heavier cigarette smoking and that this relationship would be mediated by negative affect and by perceptions about the risks of smoking. Students (n = 1,688) participated in an annual survey of substance use and related attitudes and characteristics. RESULTS As expected, higher SS was associated with greater levels of past 30-day (odds ratio [OR] = 1.46, p = .004) and lifetime (OR = 1.37, p = .004) smoking, particularly for males. Multiple mediation models indicated that effect of SS on both 30-day (combined indirect effect z = 5.38, p < .001) and lifetime (z = 6.14, p < .001) smoking was mediated by both negative affect and risk perception. CONCLUSIONS These findings suggest a need for increasing the sensation value of anti-tobacco messages to increase their efficacy for high SS youth. High SS youth may also benefit from prevention efforts designed to teach healthy ways of coping with negative affect.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 2011

Sex differences in the association of Framingham Cardiac Risk Score with cognitive decline in community-dwelling elders without clinical heart disease.

Gail A. Laughlin; Linda K. McEvoy; Denise von Mühlen; Lori B. Daniels; Donna Kritz-Silverstein; Jaclyn Bergstrom; Kevin Cummins; Claudia Der-Martirosian; Simerjot K. Jassal; Elizabeth Barrett-Connor

Objective: To investigate a possible link between cardiovascular risk factors and age-related cognitive decline, the association of the 1998 Framingham Cardiac Risk Score (FCRS) with the trajectory of cognitive function test (CFT) performance over an 18 year period was examined in adults 50 years and older without clinical heart disease at baseline. Methods: Participants were 985 men and women who had assessments of cognitive function at 3- to 4-year intervals. The association of FCRS category with CFT score trajectory was examined using mixed-effects models stratified by sex and controlling for age, educational level, and number of successive cognitive assessments. Results: At baseline, median FCRS corresponded to a 14% risk of a coronary heart disease event within 10 years for men and an 8% risk for women; 31% of men and 6% of women were at high (>20%) risk. In longitudinal analyses, women with FCRS risk higher than 7% had a higher rate of decline on tests of verbal fluency (p values < .05) and long-term recall (p values < .01) compared with low-risk women; modest, but significant (p values < .05), differences in the trajectory of Mini-Mental State Examination and Trail-Making Test B scores were also apparent. FCRS category was not related to the rate of decline in CFT performance in men. Conclusions: For older women, very low levels of risk of coronary heart disease were associated with preservation of cognitive function for 10 years, suggesting that the maintenance of cardiovascular health may slow cognitive decline. The minimal association in men, who were at higher baseline risk, may be due to the selective attrition of men with greater cognitive decline.CVD = cardiovascular disease; CHD = coronary heart disease; CFT = cognitive function test; FCRS = Framingham Cardiac Risk Score; MMSE = Mini-Mental State Examination; BMI = body mass index; LDL = low-density lipoprotein; HDL = high-density lipoprotein

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