目前甲基苯丙胺、大麻和酒精使用者之间的COVID-19治疗结果无差异。

Ann Rydberg, Christopher A Dodoo, Terry D Schneekloth, Osama A Abulseoud
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:据报道,在患有药物使用障碍等医学合并症的老年男性中,COVID-19的预后较差。然而,目前尚不清楚当前大麻使用者、过度饮酒者和使用甲基苯丙胺(冰毒)等已知危险兴奋剂的患者在COVID-19治疗结果方面是否存在差异。方法:回顾性分析当前使用冰毒(n = 32)、大麻(n = 46)和重度酒精(n = 44)的COVID-19患者的电子病历(EMR)。通过SARS-CoV-2 PCR检测阳性确认COVID-19感染,通过尿液药物检测阳性确认当前用药,通过血液酒精浓度大于11 mg/dl确定是否饮酒。使用多元线性回归模型和第五逻辑回归模型来检验物质使用组(冰毒、大麻或酒精)对治疗结果测量的影响。结果:本分析共纳入122例患者。在ICU入院、住院时间、SARS-CoV-2阳性检测到出院的时间间隔、谵妄、插管和死亡率等关键的SARS-CoV-2结局方面,两组药物间无显著差异。约五分之一的患者(冰毒使用者21.9%,大麻使用者15.2%,酒精使用者20.5%)需要进入ICU。多达37.5%的冰毒使用者、23.9%的大麻使用者和29.5%的酒精使用者出现谵妄(P = 0.4)。药物组之间在COVID-19特异性药物需求方面无显著差异。SARS-CoV-2 PCR检测阳性10个月内死亡8例。冰毒组两名患者(6.3%),大麻组两名患者(4.3%),酒精组四名患者(9.1%)死亡。讨论:研究结果可能受到一些限制的影响。其中包括回顾性设计的方法、相对较小的样本量以及缺乏COVID-19阴性对照组。此外,没有物质使用的量化,许多协变量依赖于临床文件或患者自我报告。最后,很难控制所有潜在的混杂因素,特别是考虑到小样本量。结论:尽管存在这些局限性,我们的研究结果表明,在本研究中,目前的甲基安非他明、大麻和重度酒精使用者具有相似的治疗结果,并且在COVID-19后的一年内患有高发病率,包括院内谵妄和高死亡率。在甲基苯丙胺、大麻和酒精使用者中,共病吸烟对负面结果的影响程度仍有待调查。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
No difference in COVID-19 treatment outcomes among current methamphetamine, cannabis and alcohol users.

Background: Poor outcomes of COVID-19 have been reported in older males with medical comorbidities including substance use disorder. However, it is unknown whether there is a difference in COVID-19 treatment outcomes between patients who are current cannabis users, excessive alcohol drinkers and those who use a known hazardous stimulant such as methamphetamine (METH).

Methods: Electronic medical records (EMR) of COVID-19 patients with current METH (n = 32), cannabis (n = 46), and heavy alcohol use (n = 44) were reviewed. COVID-19 infection was confirmed by positive SARS-CoV-2 PCR test, current drug use was confirmed by positive urine drug testing, and alcohol use was identified by a blood alcohol concentration greater than 11 mg/dl. Multivariate linear regression models as well as the firth logistic regression models were used to examine the effect of substance use group (METH, cannabis, or alcohol) on treatment outcome measures.

Results: A total of 122 patients were included in this analysis. There were no significant differences found between drug groups in regards to key SARS-CoV-2 outcomes of interest including ICU admission, length of stay, interval between SARS-CoV-2 positive test and hospital discharge, delirium, intubation and mortality after adjusting for covariates. About one-fifth (21.9% in METH users, 15.2% in cannabis users, and 20.5% in alcohol users) of all patients required ICU admission. As many as 37.5% of METH users, 23.9% of cannabis users, and 29.5% of alcohol users developed delirium (P = 0.4). There were no significant differences between drug groups in COVID-19 specific medication requirements. Eight patients in total died within 10 months of positive SARS-CoV-2 PCR test. Two patients from the METH group (6.3%), two patients from the cannabis group (4.3%), and four patients from the alcohol group (9.1%) died.

Discussion: The study outcomes may have been affected by several limitations. These included the methodology of its retrospective design, relatively small sample size, and the absence of a COVID-19 negative control group. In addition, there was no quantification of substance use and many covariates relied on clinical documentation or patient self-report. Finally, it was difficult to control for all potential confounders particularly given the small sample size.

Conclusion: Despite these limitations, our results show that current METH, cannabis, and heavy alcohol users in this study have similar treatment outcomes and suffer from high morbidity including in-hospital delirium and high mortality rates within the first-year post COVID-19. The extent to which co-morbid tobacco smoking contributed to the negative outcomes in METH, cannabis, and alcohol users remains to be investigated.

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