Psychiatric Comorbidity Does Not Enhance Prescription Opioid Use in Inflammatory Bowel Disease as It Does in the General Population.

IF 4.5 3区 医学 Q1 GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY Inflammatory Bowel Diseases Pub Date : 2024-09-03 DOI:10.1093/ibd/izae188
Charles N Bernstein, John D Fisk, Randy Walld, James M Bolton, Jitender Sareen, Scott B Patten, Alexander Singer, Lisa M Lix, Carol A Hitchon, Renée El-Gabalawy, Alan Katz, Lesley A Graff, Ruth Ann Marrie
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Abstract

Introduction: Little is known about patterns of opioid prescribing in inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), but pain is common in persons with IBD. We estimated the incidence and prevalence of opioid use in adults with IBD and an unaffected reference cohort and assessed factors that modified opioid use.

Methods: Using population-based health administrative data from Manitoba, Canada, we identified 5233 persons with incident IBD and 26 150 persons without IBD matched 5:1 on sex, birth year, and region from 1997 to 2016. New and prevalent opioid prescription dispensations were quantified, and patterns related to duration of use were identified. Generalized linear models were used to test the association between IBD, psychiatric comorbidity, and opioid use adjusting for sociodemographic characteristics, physical comorbidities, and healthcare use.

Results: Opioids were dispensed to 27% of persons with IBD and to 12.9% of the unaffected reference cohort. The unadjusted crude incidence per 1000 person-years of opioid use was nearly twice as high for the IBD cohort (88.63; 95% CI, 82.73-91.99) vs the reference cohort (45.02; 95% CI, 43.49-45.82; relative risk 1.97; 95% CI, 1.86-2.08). The incidence rate per 1000 person-years was highest in those 18-44 years at diagnosis (98.01; 95% CI, 91.45-104.57). The relative increase in opioid use by persons with IBD compared to reference cohort was lower among persons with psychiatric comorbidity relative to the increased opioid use among persons with IBD and reference cohort without psychiatric comorbidity.

Discussion: The use of opioids is more common in people with IBD than in people without IBD. This does not appear to be driven by psychiatric comorbidity.

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精神疾病合并症不会像普通人群那样加重炎症性肠病患者处方阿片类药物的使用。
导言:人们对炎症性肠病(IBD)患者的阿片类药物处方模式知之甚少,但疼痛在 IBD 患者中很常见。我们估算了成人 IBD 患者和未受影响的参照队列中阿片类药物的使用发生率和流行率,并评估了改变阿片类药物使用的因素:利用加拿大马尼托巴省的人口健康管理数据,我们确定了1997年至2016年期间5233名IBD患者和26150名无IBD患者,他们在性别、出生年份和地区方面的匹配比例为5:1。我们对阿片类药物处方的新配量和普遍配量进行了量化,并确定了与使用时间长短相关的模式。采用广义线性模型检验了IBD、精神疾病合并症和阿片类药物使用之间的关联,并对社会人口特征、身体合并症和医疗保健使用进行了调整:27%的IBD患者和12.9%的未受影响的参照队列中的患者使用了阿片类药物。未经调整的每千人年阿片类药物使用粗发病率在 IBD 队列(88.63;95% CI,82.73-91.99)与参照队列(45.02;95% CI,43.49-45.82;相对风险 1.97;95% CI,1.86-2.08)中几乎是后者的两倍。每千人年的发病率在确诊时年龄为 18-44 岁的人群中最高(98.01;95% CI,91.45-104.57)。与参考队列相比,IBD 患者使用阿片类药物的相对增幅在精神疾病合并症患者中较低,而在 IBD 患者和无精神疾病合并症的参考队列中阿片类药物使用的增幅较高:讨论:与非IBD患者相比,IBD患者使用阿片类药物更为普遍。讨论:与无 IBD 患者相比,IBD 患者使用阿片类药物的情况更为普遍。
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来源期刊
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases
Inflammatory Bowel Diseases 医学-胃肠肝病学
CiteScore
9.70
自引率
6.10%
发文量
462
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Inflammatory Bowel Diseases® supports the mission of the Crohn''s & Colitis Foundation by bringing the most impactful and cutting edge clinical topics and research findings related to inflammatory bowel diseases to clinicians and researchers working in IBD and related fields. The Journal is committed to publishing on innovative topics that influence the future of clinical care, treatment, and research.
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