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Hospitalization Trends for Stroke and Opioid Use

Stroke; ePub 2019 Jan 30; Omran, et al

US hospitalization rates for stroke associated with infective endocarditis (IE) and opioid use were stable for ≈2 decades but then sharply increased starting in 2008, coinciding with the emergence of the opioid epidemic, according to a recent study. Researchers used the 1993 to 2015 releases of the National Inpatient Sample and validated International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification codes (ICD-9-CM) to identify hospitalizations with the combination of opioid abuse, IE, and stroke (defined as ischemic stroke, intracerebral hemorrhage, or subarachnoid hemorrhage). They found:

  • From 1993 through 2015, there were 5,283 hospitalizations with stroke associated with IE and opioid use.
  • Across this period, the rate of such hospitalizations increased from 2.4 to 18.8 per 10 million US residents.
  • Joinpoint regression detected 2 segments: no significant change in the hospitalization rate was apparent from 1993 to 2008 (annual percentage change, 1.9%), and then rates significantly increased from 2008 to 2015 (annual percentage change, 20.3%), most dramatically in non-Hispanic white patients in the Northeastern and Southern US.
Citation:

Omran SS, Chatterjee A, Chen ML, Lerario MP, Merkler AE, Kamel H. National trends in hospitalizations for stroke associated with infective endocarditis and opioid use between 1993 and 2015. [Published online ahead of print January 30, 2019]. Stroke. doi:10.1161/STROKEAHA.118.024436.