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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.
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.