Clinical Takeaway
Insomnia symptoms present before a traumatic event may increase the risk of alcohol and cannabis use in the weeks and months that follow, potentially through their influence on early posttraumatic stress symptoms. Clinicians treating trauma survivors should screen for pre-existing sleep disturbances as an early indicator of substance use vulnerability. Addressing insomnia proactively in this population may reduce the likelihood of maladaptive coping through alcohol or cannabis.
#10 Pre-trauma insomnia and posttraumatic alcohol and cannabis use in the AURORA observational cohort study of trauma survivors.
Citation: Short Nicole A et al.. Pre-trauma insomnia and posttraumatic alcohol and cannabis use in the AURORA observational cohort study of trauma survivors.. Journal of psychiatric research. 2025. PMID: 40582081.
Design: 2 Journal: 0 N: 4 Recency: 2 Pop: 2 Human: 1 Risk: 0
This study identifies pre-trauma insomnia as a modifiable predictor of post-trauma substance use, enabling clinicians to stratify risk and implement preventive interventions during the critical early post-trauma window when substance use escalation is most likely. Understanding the insomnia-substance use pathway in trauma survivors could inform targeted sleep interventions that reduce alcohol and cannabis use complications without requiring direct substance abuse treatment. These findings have significant public health implications for emergency department screening and early intervention protocols in trauma populations at highest risk for problematic substance use.
Methodological Considerations:
- Self-reported outcomes — recall and social-desirability bias risk
Abstract: BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Insomnia symptoms are a potential risk factor for alcohol and cannabis use, particularly in trauma-exposed populations. The initial weeks and months after trauma are a period of risk for problematic substance use, however prior research has not examined whether insomnia symptoms predict alcohol or cannabis use after trauma. DESIGN: Using a large-scale, multi-site, prospective study of trauma survivors presenting to emergency departments (EDs), the current study tested direct and indirect associations between pre-trauma insomnia symptoms, two-week posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms, and eight-week post-trauma heavy alcohol and cannabis use and binge drinking. SETTING: Participants were recruited from 23 EDs in the United States and followed up using remote assessments. PARTICIPANTS/CASES: Participants were from the AURORA study (n = 2449). A slight majority were women (63.8 %) and were an average of 37 years old. Participants were racially and ethnically diverse (50.5 % Black, 11.2 % Hispanic). MEASUREMENTS: Participants completed self-report measures during their ED visit, and two- and eight-weeks post-trauma. FINDINGS: Pre-trauma insomnia symptoms significantly predicted eight-week post-trauma heavy alcohol and cannabis use, as well as binge drinking. Associations persisted after covarying for pre-trauma substance use, demographic variables, and trauma severity at the time of emergency care. Further, the association between pre-trauma insomnia symptoms and heavy alcohol and cannabis use at eight-weeks post-trauma was significantly mediated by two-week PTSD symptoms. CONCLUSIONS: Insomnia symptoms may be an important malleable risk factor for heavy alcohol and cannabis use and binge drinking after trauma. Further research is needed to explore the effectiveness of insomnia interventions to mitigate post-trauma substance use and to better understand the complex relationships between sleep, trauma, PTSD, and substance use.
😴 This prospective cohort study adds useful evidence that pre-trauma insomnia may be a measurable risk factor for subsequent problematic alcohol and cannabis use in trauma survivors, though several important caveats warrant consideration in clinical practice. The study’s strength lies in its large multi-site design and prospective methodology, yet we should note that observational data cannot establish causation, and unmeasured confounders such as baseline anxiety, trauma severity heterogeneity, and differences in trauma processing may partially explain the observed associations. Additionally, the generalizability to primary care or non-ED trauma populations remains unclear, and the timing and threshold of insomnia symptoms that actually predict clinically significant substance use disorder versus transient coping behaviors deserves further clarification. Clinically, this research suggests that screening for pre-existing sleep disturbance in trauma survivors presenting acutely may help identify a subset at elevated risk for maladaptive substance use, potentially prompting earlier sleep-focused interventions (cognitive behavioral therapy for insomnia, sleep