BC Centre for Disease Control, 655 West 12th Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 4R4, Canada.
Overdose Emergency Response Centre, Ministry of Mental Health and Addictions, 655 West 12th Avenue, Vancouver, BC, V5Z 4R4, Canada.
Subst Abuse Treat Prev Policy. 2023 Jul 7;18(1):42. doi: 10.1186/s13011-023-00544-z.
Encephalopathy can occur from a non-fatal toxic drug event (overdose) which results in a partial or complete loss of oxygen to the brain, or due to long-term substance use issues. It can be categorized as a non-traumatic acquired brain injury or toxic encephalopathy. In the context of the drug toxicity crisis in British Columbia (BC), Canada, measuring the co-occurrence of encephalopathy and drug toxicity is challenging due to lack of standardized screening. We aimed to estimate the prevalence of encephalopathy among people who experienced a toxic drug event and examine the association between toxic drug events and encephalopathy.
Using a 20% random sample of BC residents from administrative health data, we conducted a cross-sectional analysis. Toxic drug events were identified using the BC Provincial Overdose Cohort definition and encephalopathy was identified using ICD codes from hospitalization, emergency department, and primary care records between January 1st 2015 and December 31st 2019. Unadjusted and adjusted log-binomial regression models were employed to estimate the risk of encephalopathy among people who had a toxic drug event compared to people who did not experience a toxic drug event.
Among people with encephalopathy, 14.6% (n = 54) had one or more drug toxicity events between 2015 and 2019. After adjusting for sex, age, and mental illness, people who experienced drug toxicity were 15.3 times (95% CI = 11.3, 20.7) more likely to have encephalopathy compared to people who did not experience a drug toxicity event. People who were 40 years and older, male, and had a mental illness were at increased risk of encephalopathy.
There is a need for collaboration between community members, health care providers, and key stakeholders to develop a standardized approach to define, screen, and detect neurocognitive injury related to drug toxicity.
脑病可能由非致命性药物中毒事件(过量用药)引起,导致大脑部分或完全缺氧,也可能由长期药物使用问题导致。它可以归类为非创伤性获得性脑损伤或中毒性脑病。在加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省(BC)的药物毒性危机背景下,由于缺乏标准化筛查,衡量脑病与药物毒性的共同发生情况具有挑战性。我们旨在估计经历药物中毒事件的人群中脑病的患病率,并研究药物中毒事件与脑病之间的关联。
我们使用行政健康数据中不列颠哥伦比亚省居民的 20%随机样本进行了一项横断面分析。使用不列颠哥伦比亚省省级过量队列定义来识别药物中毒事件,使用住院、急诊和初级保健记录中的 ICD 代码来识别脑病,时间范围为 2015 年 1 月 1 日至 2019 年 12 月 31 日。采用未调整和调整后的对数二项回归模型来估计与未经历药物中毒事件的人群相比,经历药物中毒事件的人群中脑病的风险。
在患有脑病的人群中,14.6%(n=54)在 2015 年至 2019 年间发生了一次或多次药物中毒事件。在调整了性别、年龄和精神疾病后,经历药物中毒的人群发生脑病的风险是未经历药物中毒事件的人群的 15.3 倍(95%CI=11.3, 20.7)。40 岁及以上、男性和患有精神疾病的人群发生脑病的风险增加。
需要社区成员、医疗保健提供者和利益攸关方之间的合作,制定一种标准化的方法来定义、筛查和检测与药物毒性相关的神经认知损伤。