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Substance use disorders and COVID-19: An analysis of nation-wide Veterans Health Administration electronic health records

BACKGROUND: Substance use disorders (SUD) elevate the risk for COVID-19 hospitalization, but studies are inconsistent on the relationship of SUD to COVID-19 mortality. METHODS: Veterans Health Administration (VHA) patients treated in 2019 and evaluated in 2020 for COVID-19 (n=5,556,315), of whom 62,...

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Autores principales: Hasin, Deborah S., Fink, David S., Olfson, Mark, Saxon, Andrew J., Malte, Carol, Keyes, Katherine M., Gradus, Jaimie L., Cerdá, Magdalena, Maynard, Charles C., Keyhani, Salomeh, Martins, Silvia S., Livne, Ofir, Mannes, Zachary L., Sherman, Scott E., Wall, Melanie M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Published by Elsevier B.V. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8891118/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35279457
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109383
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author Hasin, Deborah S.
Fink, David S.
Olfson, Mark
Saxon, Andrew J.
Malte, Carol
Keyes, Katherine M.
Gradus, Jaimie L.
Cerdá, Magdalena
Maynard, Charles C.
Keyhani, Salomeh
Martins, Silvia S.
Livne, Ofir
Mannes, Zachary L.
Sherman, Scott E.
Wall, Melanie M.
author_facet Hasin, Deborah S.
Fink, David S.
Olfson, Mark
Saxon, Andrew J.
Malte, Carol
Keyes, Katherine M.
Gradus, Jaimie L.
Cerdá, Magdalena
Maynard, Charles C.
Keyhani, Salomeh
Martins, Silvia S.
Livne, Ofir
Mannes, Zachary L.
Sherman, Scott E.
Wall, Melanie M.
author_sort Hasin, Deborah S.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Substance use disorders (SUD) elevate the risk for COVID-19 hospitalization, but studies are inconsistent on the relationship of SUD to COVID-19 mortality. METHODS: Veterans Health Administration (VHA) patients treated in 2019 and evaluated in 2020 for COVID-19 (n=5,556,315), of whom 62,303 (1.1%) tested positive for COVID-19 (COVID-19+). Outcomes were COVID-19+ by 11/01/20, hospitalization, ICU admission, or death within 60 days of a positive test. Main predictors were any ICD-10-CM SUDs, with substance-specific SUDs (cannabis, cocaine, opioid, stimulant, sedative) explored individually. Logistic regression produced unadjusted and covariate-adjusted odds ratios (OR; aOR). RESULTS: Among COVID-19+ patients, 19.25% were hospitalized, 7.71% admitted to ICU, and 5.84% died. In unadjusted models, any SUD and all substance-specific SUDs except cannabis use disorder were associated with COVID-19+(ORs=1.06–1.85); adjusted models produced similar results. Any SUD and all substance-specific SUDs were associated with hospitalization (aORs: 1.24–1.91). Any SUD, cocaine and opioid disorder were associated with ICU admission in unadjusted but not adjusted models. Any SUD, cannabis, cocaine, and stimulant disorders were inversely associated with mortality in unadjusted models (OR=0.27–0.46). After adjustment, associations with mortality were no longer significant. In ad hoc analyses, adjusted odds of mortality were lower among the 49.9% of COVID-19+ patients with SUD who had SUD treatment in 2019, but not among those without such treatment. CONCLUSIONS: In VHA patients, SUDs are associated with COVID-19 hospitalization but not COVID-19 mortality. SUD treatment may provide closer monitoring of care, ensuring that these patients received needed medical attention, enabling them to ultimately survive serious illness.
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spelling pubmed-88911182022-03-04 Substance use disorders and COVID-19: An analysis of nation-wide Veterans Health Administration electronic health records Hasin, Deborah S. Fink, David S. Olfson, Mark Saxon, Andrew J. Malte, Carol Keyes, Katherine M. Gradus, Jaimie L. Cerdá, Magdalena Maynard, Charles C. Keyhani, Salomeh Martins, Silvia S. Livne, Ofir Mannes, Zachary L. Sherman, Scott E. Wall, Melanie M. Drug Alcohol Depend Article BACKGROUND: Substance use disorders (SUD) elevate the risk for COVID-19 hospitalization, but studies are inconsistent on the relationship of SUD to COVID-19 mortality. METHODS: Veterans Health Administration (VHA) patients treated in 2019 and evaluated in 2020 for COVID-19 (n=5,556,315), of whom 62,303 (1.1%) tested positive for COVID-19 (COVID-19+). Outcomes were COVID-19+ by 11/01/20, hospitalization, ICU admission, or death within 60 days of a positive test. Main predictors were any ICD-10-CM SUDs, with substance-specific SUDs (cannabis, cocaine, opioid, stimulant, sedative) explored individually. Logistic regression produced unadjusted and covariate-adjusted odds ratios (OR; aOR). RESULTS: Among COVID-19+ patients, 19.25% were hospitalized, 7.71% admitted to ICU, and 5.84% died. In unadjusted models, any SUD and all substance-specific SUDs except cannabis use disorder were associated with COVID-19+(ORs=1.06–1.85); adjusted models produced similar results. Any SUD and all substance-specific SUDs were associated with hospitalization (aORs: 1.24–1.91). Any SUD, cocaine and opioid disorder were associated with ICU admission in unadjusted but not adjusted models. Any SUD, cannabis, cocaine, and stimulant disorders were inversely associated with mortality in unadjusted models (OR=0.27–0.46). After adjustment, associations with mortality were no longer significant. In ad hoc analyses, adjusted odds of mortality were lower among the 49.9% of COVID-19+ patients with SUD who had SUD treatment in 2019, but not among those without such treatment. CONCLUSIONS: In VHA patients, SUDs are associated with COVID-19 hospitalization but not COVID-19 mortality. SUD treatment may provide closer monitoring of care, ensuring that these patients received needed medical attention, enabling them to ultimately survive serious illness. Published by Elsevier B.V. 2022-05-01 2022-03-03 /pmc/articles/PMC8891118/ /pubmed/35279457 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109383 Text en © 2022 Published by Elsevier B.V. Since January 2020 Elsevier has created a COVID-19 resource centre with free information in English and Mandarin on the novel coronavirus COVID-19. The COVID-19 resource centre is hosted on Elsevier Connect, the company's public news and information website. Elsevier hereby grants permission to make all its COVID-19-related research that is available on the COVID-19 resource centre - including this research content - immediately available in PubMed Central and other publicly funded repositories, such as the WHO COVID database with rights for unrestricted research re-use and analyses in any form or by any means with acknowledgement of the original source. These permissions are granted for free by Elsevier for as long as the COVID-19 resource centre remains active.
spellingShingle Article
Hasin, Deborah S.
Fink, David S.
Olfson, Mark
Saxon, Andrew J.
Malte, Carol
Keyes, Katherine M.
Gradus, Jaimie L.
Cerdá, Magdalena
Maynard, Charles C.
Keyhani, Salomeh
Martins, Silvia S.
Livne, Ofir
Mannes, Zachary L.
Sherman, Scott E.
Wall, Melanie M.
Substance use disorders and COVID-19: An analysis of nation-wide Veterans Health Administration electronic health records
title Substance use disorders and COVID-19: An analysis of nation-wide Veterans Health Administration electronic health records
title_full Substance use disorders and COVID-19: An analysis of nation-wide Veterans Health Administration electronic health records
title_fullStr Substance use disorders and COVID-19: An analysis of nation-wide Veterans Health Administration electronic health records
title_full_unstemmed Substance use disorders and COVID-19: An analysis of nation-wide Veterans Health Administration electronic health records
title_short Substance use disorders and COVID-19: An analysis of nation-wide Veterans Health Administration electronic health records
title_sort substance use disorders and covid-19: an analysis of nation-wide veterans health administration electronic health records
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8891118/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35279457
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2022.109383
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