Opioid Dependence and Associated Health Care Utilization and Cost in Traumatic Spinal Cord Injury Population: Analysis Using Marketscan Database.

IF 2.4 Q1 REHABILITATION Topics in Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Epub Date: 2023-02-15 DOI:10.46292/sci22-00026
Riley L Wilkinson, Camilo Castillo, April Herrity, Dengzhi Wang, Mayur Sharma, Nick Dietz, Shawn Adams, Nicholas Khattar, Miriam Nuno, Doniel Drazin, Maxwell Boakye, Beatrice Ugiliweneza
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Abstract

Background: Postinjury pain is a well-known debilitating complication of spinal cord injury (SCI), often resulting in long-term, high-dose opioid use with the potential for dependence. There is a gap in knowledge about the risk of opioid dependence and the associated health care utilization and cost in SCI.

Objectives: To evaluate the association of SCI with postinjury opioid use and dependence and evaluate the effect of this opioid dependence on postinjury health care utilization.

Methods: Using the MarketScan Database, health care utilization claims data were queried to extract 7187 adults with traumatic SCI from 2000 to 2019. Factors associated with post-SCI opioid use and dependence, postinjury health care utilization, and payments were analyzed with generalized linear regression models.

Results: After SCI, individuals were more likely to become opioid users or transition from nondependent to dependent users (negative change: 31%) than become nonusers or transition from dependent to nondependent users (positive change: 14%, p < .0001). Individuals who were opioid-dependent users pre-SCI had more than 30 times greater odds of becoming dependent after versus not (OR 34; 95% CI, 26-43). Dependent users after injury (regardless of prior use status) had 2 times higher utilization payments and 1.2 to 6 times more health care utilization than nonusers.

Conclusion: Opioid use and dependence were associated with high health care utilization and cost after SCI. Pre-SCI opioid users were more likely to remain users post-SCI and were heavier consumers of health care. Pre- and postopioid use history should be considered for treatment decision-making in all individuals with SCI.

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创伤性脊髓损伤人群中的阿片类药物依赖及相关医疗使用和成本:使用 Marketscan 数据库进行分析。
背景:众所周知,损伤后疼痛是脊髓损伤(SCI)的一种使人衰弱的并发症,通常会导致长期、大剂量使用阿片类药物,并可能产生依赖性。关于 SCI 中阿片类药物依赖的风险以及相关的医疗利用率和成本,目前还存在知识空白:评估 SCI 与伤后阿片类药物使用和依赖的关联,并评估这种阿片类药物依赖对伤后医疗使用的影响:使用 MarketScan 数据库查询医疗保健使用索赔数据,提取 2000 年至 2019 年期间 7187 名患有外伤性 SCI 的成年人。通过广义线性回归模型分析了与SCI后阿片类药物使用和依赖、受伤后医疗保健使用和支付相关的因素:结果:在 SCI 后,个人成为阿片类药物使用者或从非依赖性使用者转变为依赖性使用者的可能性(负变化:31%)高于成为非使用者或从依赖性使用者转变为非依赖性使用者的可能性(正变化:14%,P < .0001)。SCI前为阿片类药物依赖者,SCI后成为依赖者的几率是未成为依赖者的30多倍(OR 34;95% CI,26-43)。受伤后有依赖性的使用者(无论之前的使用状况如何)比未使用者多支付 2 倍的医疗费用,多使用 1.2 到 6 倍的医疗服务:结论:阿片类药物的使用和依赖与损伤后的高医疗使用率和高医疗费用有关。SCI 前阿片类药物使用者更有可能在 SCI 后继续使用阿片类药物,而且医疗费用更高。在对所有 SCI 患者进行治疗决策时,应考虑其使用阿片类药物的前后历史。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
3.40%
发文量
33
期刊介绍: Now in our 22nd year as the leading interdisciplinary journal of SCI rehabilitation techniques and care. TSCIR is peer-reviewed, practical, and features one key topic per issue. Published topics include: mobility, sexuality, genitourinary, functional assessment, skin care, psychosocial, high tetraplegia, physical activity, pediatric, FES, sci/tbi, electronic medicine, orthotics, secondary conditions, research, aging, legal issues, women & sci, pain, environmental effects, life care planning
期刊最新文献
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