The aim of this study was to examine how reasons for substance use at age 18  relate to alcohol and marijuana use at ages 18 and 35 and to symptoms of alcohol  use disorder and marijuana use disorder at age 35.
Bivariate correlation  and multivariate regression analyses were conducted to examine the prediction of  substance use and misuse by social/recreational, coping with negative affect,  compulsive, and drug effect reasons for alcohol and marijuana use. Control  variables included gender, race/ethnicity, parent education, and previous  substance use (for age 35 outcomes).
Social/recreational, coping, and  drug effect reasons for drinking predicted symptoms of alcohol use disorder 17  years later. Reasons for marijuana use were generally associated only with  concurrent marijuana use; an exception was that drug effect reasons predicted  marijuana use disorder at age 35. 
The long-term longitudinal  predictive power of reasons for alcohol use (and, to a lesser extent, for  marijuana use) suggests that adolescents' self-reported reasons, in particular  those involving regulating emotions and experiences, may be early risk factors  for continued use and misuse of substances into adulthood.
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