Mode
Text Size
Log in / Sign up

Meta-analysis identifies moderators of the bidirectional anxiety-alcohol relationshipAge and peer influence link anxiety and alcohol use

AI-generated summary of the cited source, checked by automated accuracy review. How we work

Key Takeaway
Consider age, externalizing factors, peer perceptions, and family experiences as moderators in the anxiety-alcohol link, but evidence for other factors is inconsistent.

This meta-analysis synthesized data from 55 eligible longitudinal studies (315 unique models) to identify mediating and moderating factors in the bidirectional relationship between anxiety and alcohol use. The review focused on studies assessing a mediator or moderator in the anxiety-to-alcohol or alcohol-to-anxiety pathway.

Key findings revealed several significant moderators. Age positively moderated the relationship (Fisher's z: 0.065, 95% CI: 0.017 to 0.113), while externalizing factors (Fisher's z: -0.186, 95% CI: -0.222 to -0.150), perceptions of peer alcohol use (Fisher's z: -0.076, 95% CI: -0.119 to -0.033), and positive family experiences (Fisher's z: -0.081, 95% CI: -0.098 to -0.064) negatively moderated the association. Experimental manipulation of anxiety also showed a positive moderating effect (Fisher's z: 0.242, 95% CI: 0.103 to 0.382).

For other moderating subthemes and all mediation subthemes, evidence was inconsistent and did not demonstrate conclusive moderated or mediated effects. The authors noted that methodological quality of included studies was suboptimal, which limits the strength of conclusions.

Clinicians should interpret these findings cautiously given the observational nature of the included studies and the inconsistent evidence for many factors. The results highlight potential moderators that may influence the anxiety-alcohol relationship, but further high-quality research is needed to clarify causal pathways.

A new analysis of 55 long-term studies looked at what factors influence the two-way relationship between anxiety and alcohol use. The review found that age plays a role: older age strengthened the link between anxiety and drinking. On the other hand, having positive family experiences and perceiving that peers drink less weakened the connection. Externalizing behaviors, like acting out, also weakened the link. The strongest factor was experimental anxiety, which made the anxiety-alcohol link much stronger.

However, the evidence for many other possible influences was mixed and not conclusive. The studies were observational, so they cannot prove that one thing causes another. Also, the quality of the studies was not always high.

What does this mean for you? The findings suggest that certain personal and social factors, like age and peer influence, may affect how anxiety and alcohol use are related. But more research is needed to understand these connections better. If you are concerned about anxiety or drinking, talk to a healthcare provider.

What this means for you:
Age, peer influence, and family experiences may affect the link between anxiety and alcohol use.

Study Details

Study typeMeta analysis
EvidenceLevel 1
PublishedMay 2026
View Original Abstract ↓
This systematic review provides the first synthesis of mediating and moderating factors in the bidirectional relationship between anxiety and alcohol use and related problems. Six electronic databases were searched for longitudinal studies that assessed a mediator and/or moderator in the anxiety → alcohol or alcohol → anxiety pathway. Risk of bias was assessed with two quality assessment tools developed to assess biases pertaining to mediation and moderation studies, respectively. Of the 14,776 records identified, 55 were eligible, from which effects from 315 unique models were extracted. Effects included 30 mediation analyses, 258 moderation analyses, and 27 other complex analyses (e.g. multiple mediation or three-way moderation). Identified mediating and moderating factors were categorised in line with the biopsychosocial model, with subsequent subtheme classification (e.g. sex, drinking motives). Further to the narrative synthesis, seventeen moderation subthemes provided sufficient data for meta-analysis. Results of the meta-analysis of moderators suggest age (Fisher's z: 0.065 95% CI: 0.017, 0.113), externalising factors (Fisher's z: -0.186, 95% CI: -0.222, -0.150), perceptions of peer alcohol use (Fisher's z: -0.076, 95% CI: -0.119, -0.033), positive family experiences (Fisher's z: -0.081, 95% CI: -0.098, -0.064), and experimental manipulation of anxiety (Fisher's z: 0.242. 95% CI: 0.103, 0.382) significantly moderated the relationship between anxiety and alcohol. Narrative synthesis of other moderating subthemes and all mediation subthemes yielded inconsistent evidence which did not demonstrate conclusive moderated or mediated effects. Across studies, methodological quality was suboptimal, with future directions for research discussed.
Free Newsletter

Clinical research that matters. Delivered to your inbox.

Join thousands of clinicians and researchers. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.