| Literature DB >> 32422537 |
Dan Lewer1, Vivian D Hope2, Magdalena Harris3, Michael Kelleher4, Amelia Jewell4, Megan Pritchard4, John Strang5, Katherine I Morley6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: People who inject drugs often get bacterial infections. Few longitudinal studies have reported the incidence and treatment costs of these infections.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial infections; Drug injection; Heroin; Opiates
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32422537 PMCID: PMC7301433 DOI: 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2020.108057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Drug Alcohol Depend ISSN: 0376-8716 Impact factor: 4.492
Cohort characteristics at baseline.
| Variable | Level | Number (%) |
|---|---|---|
| Age at index | 18−24 | 217 (9) |
| 25−34 | 842 (36) | |
| 35−44 | 921 (39) | |
| 45−54 | 314 (13) | |
| 55−64 | 41 (2) | |
| Mean (sd) | 36.3 (8.4) | |
| Age during follow-up | Mean (sd) | 39.9 (8.4) |
| Sex | Male | 1727 (74) |
| Female | 608 (26) | |
| Ethnicity | White | 2065 (88) |
| Black | 119 (5) | |
| Mixed | 66 (3) | |
| Asian | 28 (1) | |
| Other | 57 (2) | |
| Other drugs | Crack cocaine | 1950 (84) |
| Alcohol | 1198 (51) | |
| Cannabis | 513 (22) | |
| Benzodiazepines | 386 (17) | |
| Unstable housing | 1410 (60) | |
| Severe mental health problems | 366 (16) | |
| Total | 2335 (100) |
Fig. 1Rate of hospital admission for severe bacterial infection in a cohort of 2335 people who inject heroin in South London, England, by time after first treatment episode (error bars show 95% confidence intervals).
Hospital admissions and costs of treatment for severe bacterial infections in a cohort of 2335 people who inject heroin in South London, England, with 16,434 years of follow-up.
| Primary diagnosis | Observed admissions | Expected admissions | SAR | Mean cost, £ (sd) | Median cost, £ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abscess | 487 | 9.3 | 52.4 (47.8−57.2) | 4307 (3035) | 3898 (2,660−5,296) |
| Cellulitis | 282 | 7.8 | 36.0 (31.9−40.4) | 3579 (2503) | 2731 (1,880−4,432) |
| Phlebitis and thrombophlebitis | 233 | 2.0 | 115.2 (100.9−131.0) | 3261 (2969) | 2277 (1,772−4,136) |
| Septicaemia and bacteraemia | 56 | 2.3 | 24.3 (18.3−31.5) | 8687 (5060) | 9250 (5,221−9,763) |
| Osteomyelitis and septic arthritis | 42 | 0.2 | 174.4 (125.7−235.8) | 14,134 (52,843) | 5694 (3,980−7,129) |
| Endocarditis | 82 | 1.9 | 43.7 (34.8−54.3) | 12,963 (7765) | 11,951 (6,893−15,197) |
| Necrotising Fasciitis | 9 | <0.1 | 599.4 (274.1−1,137.9) | 10,815 (7159) | 11,926 (4,274−14,839) |
| All bacterial infections | 1180 | 23.6 | 50.0 (47.2−52.9) | 4980 (12,431) | 3022 (2,148−5,296) |
| All-cause | 9274 | 2467.5 | 3.8 (3.7−3.8) |
SAR = Standardised admission ratio.
The total number of bacterial infections is less than the sum of each individual diagnosis because some admissions have two primary diagnoses (resulting from the process of merging hospital admissions that were within two days of each other).
We did not calculate the cost of admissions with primary diagnosis unrelated to bacterial infection.
Fig. 2Rate of hospital admission for severe bacterial infection in a cohort of 2335 people who inject heroin, by primary diagnosis. (error bars show 95% confidence intervals).