Serious Mental Illness Treatment Resource and Evaluation Center, Center for Clinical Management Research, Health Services Research and Development, VA, Ann Arbor, Mich., USA.
Am J Psychiatry. 2012 Jan;169(1):64-70. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2011.10101476. Epub 2011 Sep 28.
Despite dramatic increases in the rate of fatal accidental overdose in recent years, risk factors for this outcome remain poorly understood, particularly in clinical populations. The authors examined the association of psychiatric and substance use diagnoses with death from accidental overdose.
The study followed a cohort of patients from 2000 to 2006. The cohort included all patients treated in Veterans Health Administration facilities during fiscal year 1999 who were alive at the start of fiscal year 2000 (N=3,291,891). Death by accidental overdose was determined using National Death Index records and defined as a death with underlying cause of death coded to ICD-10 codes X40-X45 (N=4,485). Diagnoses were determined by patient medical records.
Adjusting for demographic and clinical characteristics, hazard ratios of death by accidental overdose associated with prior psychiatric and substance use disorder diagnoses ranged from 1.8 to 8.8. Significant associations of non-substance-related psychiatric disorders with risk of death by accidental overdose persisted after additional adjustment for substance use disorders (hazard ratios from 1.2 to 1.8). Depressive disorders and anxiety disorders other than posttraumatic stress disorder had stronger associations with risk of medication-related overdose death (hazard ratios, 3.02 and 3.07, respectively) than with risk of overdose death related to alcohol or illegal drugs (hazard ratios, 1.89 and 1.23, respectively).
Among patients receiving care from the Veterans Health Administration, death from accidental overdose was found to be associated with psychiatric and substance use disorders. The study findings suggest the importance of risk assessment and overdose prevention for vulnerable clinical subpopulations.
尽管近年来致命意外药物过量的发生率急剧上升,但人们对这一结果的风险因素仍知之甚少,尤其是在临床人群中。作者研究了精神疾病和物质使用诊断与意外药物过量死亡的关系。
本研究对一个从 2000 年至 2006 年的队列进行了随访。该队列包括在 1999 财政年度在退伍军人健康管理局设施接受治疗且在 2000 财政年度开始时仍存活的所有患者(N=3,291,891)。使用国家死亡指数记录确定意外过量死亡,并将其定义为死因编码为 ICD-10 代码 X40-X45 的根本死因(N=4,485)的死亡。诊断是通过患者的病历确定的。
调整人口统计学和临床特征后,与先前的精神疾病和物质使用障碍诊断相关的意外药物过量死亡的风险比为 1.8 至 8.8。在进一步调整物质使用障碍后,非物质相关精神障碍与意外过量死亡风险的显著关联仍然存在(风险比为 1.2 至 1.8)。与酒精或非法药物相关的药物过量死亡风险相比,抑郁障碍和创伤后应激障碍以外的焦虑障碍与药物相关过量死亡风险的相关性更强(风险比分别为 3.02 和 3.07)。
在接受退伍军人健康管理局护理的患者中,意外药物过量死亡与精神疾病和物质使用障碍有关。研究结果表明,对脆弱的临床亚人群进行风险评估和过量预防非常重要。