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Association of substance use with outcomes in mildly ill COVID-19 outpatients - 20/11/23

Doi : 10.1016/j.ajem.2023.09.017 
Ruth Pobee a, , Tracy Cable b, David Chan c , Jesica Herrick d , Valerie Durkalski-Mauldin e , Frederick Korley f , Clifton Callaway g , Marina Del Rios a, h
a UI Health/University of Illinois Chicago College of Medicine, Departments of Emergency Medicine, 808 S. Woods St., Chicago, IL 60612, USA 
b University of Cincinnati Medical Center, Infectious Disease, 234, Goodman St Cincinnati, OH 45219, USA 
c University of Illinois Chicago, Department of Pharmacy Practice, 833 S Wood St, Chicago, IL 60612, USA 
d UI Health/University of Illinois Chicago College of Medicine, Medicine Infectious Disease, 1740 W Taylor St, Chicago, IL 60612, USA 
e Medical University of South Carolina, Department of Public Health Sciences, 135 Cannon St, Ste 303, Charleston, SC 29425, USA 
f University of Michigan, Departments of Emergency Medicine, 1500 E Medical Center Dr Spc 5301, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA 
g University of Pittsburgh, Departments of Emergency Medicine, 400A Iroquois, 3600 Forbes Avenue, Pittsburgh, PA 15260, USA 
h University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, Department of Emergency Medicine, Iowa, USA 

Corresponding author.

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Abstract

Background

Smoking, alcohol use, and non-prescription drug use are associated with worsened COVID-19 outcomes in hospitalized patients. Whether there is an association between substance use and outcomes in patients with COVID-19 who visited the Emergency Department (ED) but did not require hospitalization has not been well established. We investigated whether smoking, alcohol, and non-prescription drug use were associated with worsened COVID-19 outcomes among such patients presenting to the ED.

Methods

We conducted a secondary analysis of a clinical trial which sought to determine the effect of early convalescent plasma administration in patients presenting to the ED within 7 days of onset of mild COVID-19 symptoms. The study recruited 511 participants who were aged 50 years or older or had one or more risk factors for severe COVID-19. The primary outcome was disease progression within 15 days after randomization, which was defined as a composite of hospital admission for any reason, seeking emergency or urgent care, or death without hospitalization. Secondary outcomes included: no hospitalization within 30 days post-randomization, symptom worsening on the 5-category COVID-19 outpatient ordinal scale within 15 days post-randomization, and all-cause mortality. Substance use was categorized into either use or never use based on participant self-report. Logistic regression models were used to determine the association between substance use and outcomes.

Results

The mean age of the 511 patients enrolled was 52 years and the majority were females (274, 54%). Approximately 213 (42%) were non-Hispanic Whites, 156 (30%) Hispanics, 100 (20%) non-Hispanic Blacks, 18 (4%) non-Hispanic Asian, 8 (1%) American Indian Alaskan, and 16 (3%) unknown race.

Tobacco 152 (30%) was the most common substance use reported. Alcohol use 36 (7%) and non-prescription drug use 33 (6%) were less common. Tobacco use and non-prescription drug use were associated with an increased risk for meeting the primary outcome ((tobacco: adjusted odds ratio [aOR] =2.08; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.37–3.15) and (drug: aOR =2.41; 95%CI: 1.17–5.00)) and increased risk for symptom worsening on the 5-category COVID-19 outpatient scale ((tobacco: aOR = 1.62; 95%CI: 1.09–2.42) and (drug: aOR = 2.32 95% CI: 1.10–4.87)) compared to non-use after adjusting for age, sex, plasma administration, and comorbidity.

Conclusion

Tobacco and non-prescription drug use but not alcohol use were associated with worsened COVID-19 outcomes in patients who did not require hospitalization on their initial presentation. Future studies should determine the quantity, duration, and type of drug/tobacco use that may worsen COVID-19.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Highlights

Tobacco and drug use are associated with worse outcomes in COVID-19 patients.
Alcohol use was not associated with symptom worsening or hospitalization.
Tobacco, drug, & alcohol use were not associated with increased all-cause mortality.
Substance use should be considered in COVID-19 risk stratification.

Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.

Keywords : Alcohol, Drug, Smoking, COVID-19, Disease progression, Hospitalization


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